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City's nuisance seagulls to be counted by council
City's nuisance seagulls to be counted by council

The Herald Scotland

time09-05-2025

  • General
  • The Herald Scotland

City's nuisance seagulls to be counted by council

The survey will take place in May and has been designed to coincide with the start of the nesting period when gull numbers will be reaching their peak, and birds are at their most active. The survey will follow an adapted methodology from the Joint Nature Conservation Committee Seabird Monitoring Programme's Urban Gull Census. READ MORE: Public consultation launched to help protect rare birds at Highland loch Temporary road closure for famous mountain pass on NC500 route Council backs plans for major windfarm off west coast of Orkney Covering an area of over 5km2 of central Inverness from Bught Park in the south to the Kessock Bridge in the north, the survey will include the commercial heart of Inverness, the Longman Industrial Estate, Crown Circus and popular riverside locations including Eden Court Theatre, Inverness Cathedral, Inverness Castle and Ness Walk. The survey will also assess an additional 20 key buildings across the wider city, including the Council's school estate. The work will primarily be ground-based and will count all gull species present with their location noted on mobile GIS recording software along with gull behaviour, whether nesting, occupying territory, foraging or resting. Leader of Inverness and Area, Councillor Ian Brown said: 'While Highland Council has no statutory duty to take action against any type of gull, the Council hopes that the findings from this study will provide evidence for and inform any future development of a Gull Management Plan for the City of Inverness.' Information on gulls can be found on the Council's website at this link.

Spring is "fastest-warming" season in the UK
Spring is "fastest-warming" season in the UK

BBC News

time03-03-2025

  • Science
  • BBC News

Spring is "fastest-warming" season in the UK

New analysis shows that spring is the fastest-warming season in the United Kingdom largely down to climate change.A report by Climate Central, external, an independent organisation on climate research, has found that all four seasons are warming but at different average spring temperature has increased by 1.8C since 1970 making it the fastest warming season for all four nations of the is the second fastest at 1.6C. Changing seasons While meteorological and astronomical seasons are known in advance (1 March and this year 20 March respectively) there is another measure we can use to track the course of nature: follows biological events and their response to weather and to the Joint Nature Conservation Committee which advises the Government, key events that herald the start of spring are happening on average nine days earlier, external than a quarter of a century ago. Changing phenology Data given to BBC Weather by Nature's Calendar, external - a citizen science project by the Woodland Trust - demonstrates how climate change is triggering natural 2000 they have used public sightings of plants, animals and fungi to log the effects of weather and climate on Marshall from Nature's Calendar explained how important the data is to "see how nature is responding to our changing climate".Looking at when bluebells and frogspawn start to appear in the spring shows some clear trends over are appearing earlier in April and March sightings were the earliest on record in sightings averaged across the UK on 24 February, 17 days before the benchmark or average date, according to Nature's year, frogspawn has already been spotted in southern England with early indications that when all data is in, the average sightings will be on par with frogspawn of year spotted in Isle of ScillyAlex Marshall from Nature's Calendar said: "In general, spring is getting earlier due to higher temperatures, particularly at the start of the season."We've already had one record of common frog tadpoles from Cornwall on 16 February, the first tadpole record of the year."Warmer weather at the end of winter tricks species like the frog into thinking it's time to start reproducing."That becomes a problem, though, if some early March frosts occur which can kill the developing negative impact of them coming out a bit early." Extreme weather has consequences Phenology from other seasons, such as autumn, is more complicated and may be because of knock-on effects from from all the data gathered by Nature's Calendar, there are clear trends to changing timescales in our phenology in spring and those changes are in part a consequence of warmer spring is the fastest-warming season, all four seasons have warmed since Office analysis suggests for every 1C increase in October temperature, the date at which trees lose all their leaves is delayed by about two or three climate change is leading to more extreme weather which is also causing confusion amongst some species."It's the unpredictability which is the biggest threat at the moment," says Ms each tree, flower, fruit or animal species reacting slightly differently to our changing climate, there may become a mismatch of could lead to a disruption in the food chain to some of our species and put them under pressure in the future.

Spring the fastest warming season in the UK due to climate change
Spring the fastest warming season in the UK due to climate change

BBC News

time01-03-2025

  • Science
  • BBC News

Spring the fastest warming season in the UK due to climate change

New analysis shows that spring is the fastest-warming season in the United Kingdom largely down to climate change.A report by Climate Central, external, an independent organisation on climate research, has found that all four seasons are warming but at different average spring temperature has increased by 1.8C since 1970 making it the fastest warming season for all four nations of the is the second fastest at 1.6C. Changing seasons While meteorological and astronomical seasons are known in advance (1 March and this year 20 March respectively) there is another measure we can use to track the course of nature: follows biological events and their response to weather and climate. According to the Joint Nature Conservation Committee which advises the Government, key events that herald the start of spring are happening on average nine days earlier, external than a quarter of a century ago. Changing phenology Data given to BBC Weather by Nature's Calendar, external - a citizen science project by the Woodland Trust - demonstrates how climate change is triggering natural 2000 they have used public sightings of plants, animals and fungi to log the effects of weather and climate on Marshall from Nature's Calendar explained how important the data is to "see how nature is responding to our changing climate".Looking at when bluebells and frogspawn start to appear in the spring shows some clear trends over are appearing earlier in April and March sightings were the earliest on record in sightings averaged across the UK on 24 February, 17 days before the benchmark or average date, according to Nature's Calendar. This year, frogspawn has already been spotted in southern England with early indications that when all data is in, the average sightings will be on par with last. First frogspawn of year spotted in Isle of ScillyAlex Marshall from Nature's Calendar said: "In general, spring is getting earlier due to higher temperatures, particularly at the start of the season."We've already had one record of common frog tadpoles from Cornwall on 16 February, the first tadpole record of the year."Warmer weather at the end of winter tricks species like the frog into thinking it's time to start reproducing."That becomes a problem, though, if some early March frosts occur which can kill the developing negative impact of them coming out a bit early." Extreme weather has consequences Phenology from other seasons, such as autumn, is more complicated and may be because of knock-on effects from from all the data gathered by Nature's Calendar, there are clear trends to changing timescales in our phenology in spring and those changes are in part a consequence of warmer spring is the fastest-warming season, all four seasons have warmed since Office analysis suggests for every 1C increase in October temperature, the date at which trees lose all their leaves is delayed by about two or three climate change is leading to more extreme weather which is also causing confusion amongst some species."It's the unpredictability which is the biggest threat at the moment," says Ms each tree, flower, fruit or animal species reacting slightly differently to our changing climate, there may become a mismatch of could lead to a disruption in the food chain to some of our species and put them under pressure in the future.

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