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March 24, 2023

Want to help protect rare birds in nesting season? Keep your dog on its leash

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There are few sights more joyful than a dog bounding through the countryside. But for ground-nesting birds and other wildlife, the experience is quite different.

Letting a dog off its leash can disturb several species without the owner even noticing. And with spring and summer approaching, the breeding season for a vast array of wildlife, some environmental charities are people to keep their dogs under control and to stick to paths when walking in nature reserves.

The already obliges in the UK to keep their pets on a leash no longer than two meters between March 1 and July 31 when on land with public right of access.

To be clear, the destruction of habitats as a result of changes in how the land is used, including and road building, is a far greater cause of wildlife decline than anything the average dog is capable of.

But birds which build their nests and incubate eggs on the ground, such as curlews, yellowhammers and skylark, are put at greater risk of losing their offspring as a result of being disturbed.

A dog bursting through the undergrowth of a woodland or lolloping through tall grass on a moorland can flush out and frighten adult birds incubating their eggs in well-hidden nests.

The unguarded eggs and chicks are an easy target for predators, but even if they escape becoming a fox's next meal, they may be abandoned. While certainly not the biggest threat to wildlife, your overly enthusiastic dog is another risk to the viability of eggs and chicks during a critical time of year.

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Unintended consequences

The vulnerability of ground-nesting birds is reflected in statistics. Around 66% of ground-nesting species are in in the UK, compared to 31% of species which don't nest on the ground, such as robins and blackbirds.

The energy that nesting birds use up to flee their nest can be considerable, especially if they are already under stress from having laid eggs. This may make them more vulnerable to disease or being eaten themselves. shows that birds are less likely to nest near trails in grasslands as a result.

The modern landscape, with its matrix of intensive farms, conifer plantations and roads, generalist predators such as which can swoop in and gobble up abandoned eggs and chicks. Although the exact causes of any species' decline can be difficult to pinpoint, demonstrated that a leading cause of the low survival rate of curlew chicks was fox predation.

A crow, created by a person and their dog, can locate a nest when they otherwise wouldn't have spotted it. Crows also appear to be more tolerant of these kinds of disturbances and will return to a site quicker than other species.

Although the impact on ground-nesting birds is unintended, disturbance by dogs during the is one threat to wildlife that people can easily prevent. Try letting your dog run free on fields or parks away from wild margins where birds may be nesting.

Ground-nesting birds are in in the UK and across Europe. All possible efforts should be made to prevent them declining further, including keeping dogs on leashes in spring and summer. Giving these species the best possible chance to maximize the number of healthy chick they produce is one way you can help.

More tips for wildlife-friendly pet ownership

Provided by The Conversation

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