
The Bird Observatories Council co-ordinates and promotes the work of the Bird Observatories at a
national level. Individual Observatories are accredited to the Council when they meet specified criteria relating to activities and facilities. Click here to see what is required for accredited status. A bird observatory's primary purpose is to conduct long-term monitoring of bird populations and migration. Individual Observatories are located at prime migration points, where a daily census is taken and other
standardised methods of data collection are used in a defined recording area. An integral part of observatory work is bird ringing, undertaken within the national scheme which is
licensed under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 and coordinated by the British Trust for Ornithology. This provides data for guiding conservation policies of such bodies as English Nature, the
Countryside Council for Wales, Scottish Natural Heritage and their counterparts in Ireland. The Observatories enable and encourage volunteers to participate in scientific studies of birds and the
environment. The results of these studies and more general information are made freely available to researchers and to the public who are welcome to visit Observatories.
All the accredited observatories are listed left. The links take you either to the observatory's own website which will open in a new browser window or a page with further information on this site. For
information about the Bird Observatories Council contact the secretary:
Peter Howlett c/o Dept. of BioSyB, National Museums and Galleries of Wales, Cardiff. CF10 3NP.
Tel. 029 20573 233. E-mail here
|