As even KWT would be pushed to give a definitive answer for some of its reserves, it’s unlikely most farmers would have a ready response to that question. Yields per hectare and soil nitrogen content most can recite in their sleep, but the problem with biodiversity is that it’s so, well, diverse.
Turtle Doves are a case in point. For some, it’s just another pigeon - if it’s seen or heard at all. But for others, keen to help the UK’s fastest declining bird, support from local enthusiasts is helping us quantify their presence. Many farmers in the Marden Farmer Cluster create feeding strips of bare soil for supplementary seed as part of an ES option or supplied free from the RSPB, and welcome Marden Wildlife (MW) volunteers to monitor the strips with trailcams to provide important data on their presence, breeding territories and productivity.
This year, our licensed ringers with MW have trapped and colour-ringed five individuals to track their movement around the area and, hopefully, their survival. With KWT ecologist Dr Kirsty Swinnerton and the help of many villagers simply reporting sightings of the birds, we are learning new things about preferred habitat and individuals’ behaviour, as well as how farmers can make simple ‘tweaks’ to field management to help them.