18/05/2013
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Hotline for Turtle Doves

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Turtle Dove, like this bird on Scilly in 2011, is becoming a scarcer sight every year. Photo: Steve Young (www.birdsonfilm.com).
Turtle Dove, like this bird on Scilly in 2011, is becoming a scarcer sight every year. Photo: Steve Young (www.birdsonfilm.com).
A radical decline in the population of Turtle Dove breeding in Britain has led to the creation of a telephone hotline to help monitor their numbers.

The gentle turr-turr of Turtle Dove was once the sound of summer, enjoyed for a few brief months from early May until the birds’ departure back to Africa in August. However, their evocative call is becoming increasingly rare following rapid and perpetual population declines.

Turtle doves were once widespread across much of England and Wales, but the most recent figures show that the population in the South-East, one the species' last remaining major stronghold, has fallen by 84 per cent since 1995. Nationally, Turtle Dove have declined by 93 per cent since 1970. At this current rate of change, biologists calculate that there will be fewer than 1,000 pairs by 2020, and complete UK extinction as a breeding species will be a real possibility.

To help reverse the fortunes of Turtle Dove, conservationists have embarked on an urgent mission to save the country's most threatened farmland bird from extinction. Operation Turtle Dove was jointly launched last summer by the RSPB, Conservation Grade, Pensthorpe Conservation Trust and Natural England. Now in its second year, the project partners want to remind members of the public to report their sightings of Turtle Dove to a special hotline, either by phone 01603 697527 or email turtledove@rspb.org.uk. Last year, the hotline had over 425 reports, helping to map where the birds are breeding and highlight any hot-spots on which to focus the project’s conservation efforts.

Bruce Fowkes, RSPB South-East farmland bird advisor, said: “It’s great that so many people are looking out for these birds and supported Operation Turtle Dove last year. Turtle Doves are truly struggling and we are facing the very real possibility of losing this beautiful bird from the UK within the next 10 years. So, we’re hoping for more reports this year and are appealing to anyone who spots the species to call and give us as much information as possible.”

Reasons for Turtle Dove’s population crash are not yet fully understood. However, since the 1960s their diet has changed from the small seeds of wild plants, which are now scarce in our countryside, to one dominated by crop seeds. These seeds are often in short supply in spring, and this lack of food during a crucial period could be resulting in a much shorter breeding season with fewer nesting attempts.
Other factors which might be contributing to the decline of Turtle Dove include hunting in the Mediterranean as the species migrates, agricultural changes on the African wintering grounds and the avian disease trichomoniasis which is common in pigeons and doves.

To report your Turtle Dove sightings, call the Operation Turtle Dove Hotline on 01603 697527 or you can submit your sightings, together with any photos and stories you’d like to share, by emailing turtledove@rspb.org.uk.