Lapwing Recovery Project, South West Scotland, 2006-2009
Citation
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (2023). Lapwing Recovery Project, South West Scotland, 2006-2009. Occurrence dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/iflvjc accessed via GBIF.org on 2024-12-14.Description
Breeding lapwing data collected as part of the lapwing recovery project. The aim of the project was to determine the effectiveness of agri-environment schemes.
The breeding status was derived from lapwing behaviour (adults behaving like they have young or lapwing flocks present), time of survey visit, and whether there were any young recorded. On some visits breeding birds and a non breeding flock were both present on the same filed, these are recorded separately for accurate breeding status.
The sites were surveyed on a field by field basis. Transforming this site based data to be grid reference based means that some grid squares may hold more than one field, that were originally surveyed separately. This means that there may be a few records that have the same grid reference, and were recorded on the same day, these are not duplicates.
Lapwings have suffered significant declines, primarily because of changes in farming practices, and are now red listed as a species of high conservation concern everywhere in
the UK.
Purpose
Sampling Description
Quality Control
These data have been gathered by trained field-workers and the data are of a high quality. The data have been mapped and checked for sensitivities and geographical errors.Method steps
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Five visits were made to each site during the breeding season at 3-4 weeks intervals, starting in March, although there are some exceptions as surveys weren't conducted in bad weather conditions. Data was collected on number of adults, chicks (newly hatched, partly grown, well grown and fledged).
In order to verify records and validate the dataset, the data have been mapped and thoroughly checked. The dataset recorders were RSPB staff and volunteers.
Taxonomic Coverages
Geographic Coverages
The resolution is 100m for most of the data, but a few records are only available at 2km, 5km or at 10km resolution. The grid references refer to centroids of fields (the average field size is 7.6 hectares).
Bibliographic Citations
Contacts
originatorRoyal Society for the Protection of Birds
metadata author
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
distributor
NBN Atlas
27 Old Gloucester St, Holborn
London
WC1N 3AX
London
GB
email: admin@nbnatlas.org
Conservation Data Management Unit
administrative point of contact
email: dataunit@rspb.org.uk