SongBird Survival
SongBird Survival is an independent, UK-wide, environmental bird charity that funds research into the decline in Britain's songbirds. It is a not-for-profit organisation supported by grants, subscriptions and donations, and a registered charity and company.
Governance
SongBird Survival is a non-profit organisation, constituted as a Charitable Company under the laws of England & Wales. The governing document is the Memorandum and Articles of Association. Under the Memorandum and Articles and subsidiary documents, SongBird Survival is run by a Council of up to 21 persons elected by the membership. Council members are elected for 1-year, renewable terms.History
Formed in 1996 as Songbird Survival Action Group, SongBird Survival was registered as a limited company on 26 September 2000. Shortly afterwards, in 2001, the organisation achieved charitable status. In 2006, SBS merged with the Scottish charity Save our Songbirds, founded in 1998 by John Baillie-Hamilton, 13th Earl of Haddington. In 2017 SongBird Survival launched the national awareness day: National Robin DayAims
SongBird Survival's objective is to improve, protect and preserve the population of song and other small birds for the benefit of national biodiversity and the public. It aims to achieve this by commissioning and funding scientific research, supporting the conservation and restoration or habitats, through public education and advocacy where changes in the law may be deemed necessary to protect songbirds.Research
SBS funds scientific research into the reasons why songbird numbers are declining in the UK. By doing so, the charity aims to advance the science of ornithology, and in particular the study of song and other small birds, as well as contribute to the national evidence base by researching areas where scientific evidence is currently sparse, inadequate or lacking.SBS commissions research to add to the evidence base and identify the drivers behind continued songbird declines. Its research to date has encompassed a range of issues, spanning countryside management, population ecology, complex predator-prey dynamics, and predator control, including bringing together previously unpublished research conducted at farms across Britain.
Date | Project | Partner | Outputs |
2003–Present | Long-term farmland study monitoring the effects of environmental stewardship on breeding bird populations | Blackmoor Farm | Study ongoing |
2006 | A review of the impact of mammalian predators on farm songbird population dynamics | Professor Roy Brown, University of London | Published 2006 |
2007 | Correlative analysis of long term data sets seeking negative associations between predator and prey species | British Trust for Ornithology; Centre for Research into Ecological and Environmental Modelling University of St Andrews | Published in the Journal of Applied Ecology 2010, 47, 244–252 |
2010 | Comprehensive review of all predation research carried out in the UK to date | Centre for Agri-Environmental Research University of Reading | Published in Methods in Ecology and Evolution 2010, 1, 300–310 |
2010 | Farm and woodland bird declines and the recolonisation of Britain by sparrowhawks | Dr. Christopher Bell | Awaiting review and publication |
2011 | Corvid Research Project - evaluation of the impact of growing numbers of corvids on the producivity of UK farmland songbird population | Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust | Awaiting publication |
2014 | Corvid population ecology and its effect on songbird predation | University of Exeter, Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust | Awaiting publication |
2014 | The Keith Duckworth Project - Improving the conservation value of urban areas for garden birds | University of Reading | Published in Ibis , 159, 158–167. Published in Journal of Ornithology 2017, 1-15. |
2017 | Cats, cat owners and predation - identifying means of mitigating any negative impacts of cat predation of wildlife | University of Exeter | Study ongoing |