Help wanted for 2 bird conservation projects in B.C. - Action News
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British Columbia

Help wanted for 2 bird conservation projects in B.C.

Spring is in the air and so are the birds. Now, the Canadian government is hoping British Columbians can pitch in tracking gulls and counting curlews.

Researchers are looking for people to pitch in tracking gulls and counting curlews

Long-billed curlews, like the one pictured here in San Diego, Calif., fly north in the spring and are the subject of a birdy study currently underway in Prince George, British Columbia that is in need of volunteers. (Shutterstock / Thomas Morris)

If working for free doesn't ruffle your feathers, then the birds of British Columbia could use your help.

There are currently two conservation projects happening in the province and researchers are asking for public participation counting birds. On the South Coast, Environment Canada is asking for help tracking glaucous-winged gulls, and in the Prince George area, Birds Canada needs volunteers to count long-billed curlews.

Glaucous-winged gulls are grey and white seagulls found abundantly along the Salish Sea coastline. Scientists have tagged over 180 of them with coloured leg bands to better understand how the birds are faringand are asking anyone who spots a gull that has been tagged to report back.

"We want to get a better idea of their survival rates, which, of course, is a key demographic trait that determines how healthy the populations are," said Environment Canada research scientistMark Hipfner, speaking Monday to On The Island.

A glaucous-winged gull is pictured in the Victoria harbour. Scientists are currently tracking the birds on the South Coast, along the Salish Sea coastline. (Shutterstock / Marc Bruxelle)

Hipfnersaid a tagged gull will have many different coloured bands on it and the exact combination is important for researchers.

The best way to help, he said, is to snap a picture of the accessorized bird and send that, along withthe date and location of the sightingtothis link,so researchers can then compileand studythe submitted data.

Hipfner said gull health can be an indicator of human health because theirhabitat and diets gulls eat seafood have some overlap.

When scientists were baitingthe birds to catch and tag them in the first place, there was also some snack food overlap.

"We tried a range of natural foods, things like salmon scraps, but we actually found that the most effective bait was Cheezies," said Hipfner with a chuckle.

Counting curlews

Further north and inlandin Prince George, B.C., the long-billed curlew is back in town to breed after wintering in the U.S. and Mexico, and Birds Canadais looking for local volunteers to count how many of the unique-looking bird are hanging around.

Long-billed curlews are the largest shorebird in North America. They are about the size of a chicken, sort of cinnamon in colour, and their bills can measure more than 20 centimetres long. They like grasslands and are prone to hang out in farmer's fields.

David Bradley, B.C.director for Birds Canada, says there is a short window where the curlews can be counted before they start nesting to breed, so counting needs to be wrapped by May 8.

WATCH| A long-billed curlewis caught on candid camera by Birds Canada researchers:

Volunteers are needed to count between now and then. They will be assigned to a roughly 25-kilometre stretch ofroadside in the Prince George area with stops every 800 metres. At each stop, volunteers watch and listen for five minutes for curlews and record each time they detect one.

"There hasn't been an assessment on the population of the species for almost 20 years now, and that really needs to be updated," said Bradley, speaking Monday on Daybreak North.

He said Birds Canada is compiling the data for theCommittee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife, which is anindependent advisory panel to the Minister of Environment and Climate Change Canada.

Interested volunteers can contact Birds Canada onlineand the non-profit will provide route information and other details. The Birds Canada B.C. office can also be reached toll free at1-877-349-2473.

With files from On The Island and Daybreak North