A survey carried out for the GWCT shows a decline in woodcock numbers
The Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust (GWCT) has published a short guide detailing when and when not to shoot woodcock.
The British breeding population of this wading bird is on the red list of birds of conservation concern, with only an estimated 55,000 male woodcock breeding in the UK in 2013 — a 29 per cent decline on the estimate in 2003.
In contrast, between 800,000 and 1.3million migrant woodcock arrive in the UK from Europe each year and 95 per cent of the woodcock shot in the UK are migrant birds.
The GWCT does not believe a ban on shooting woodcock would reverse declines in the resident population, but in October 2015, with the support of a number of shooting groups, it called for a voluntary moratorium on the shooting of woodcock, following news of a decline in the UK woodcock population.
While it is legal to shoot woodcock during the open season, the GWCT called on people to delay shooting the bird until migrant woodcock arrive, to help protect the native breeding population.
Subscribers to Shooting Times will have received a complimentary copy of the Trust’s A Sportsman’s Guide to Woodcock in the post a few weeks ago, which includes a short list of guidelines for shooters to follow to help the native woodcock population. In the pocket size guide, the GWCT says not to shoot woodcock when:
Instead, the guide suggests that woodcock can be shot when:
A survey carried out for the GWCT shows a decline in woodcock numbers
In an effort to protect the woodcock population, several countryside organisations, including the Scottish Gamekeepers Association, are following the recommendation…
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