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Turtle Doves observed in Cemex Quarries

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World Cement,


This year, a joint effort in the UK between Cemex and BirdLife International has produced a welcome festive result. Three juvenile turtle doves have been observed at a Cemex quarry in the UK.

Turtle dove from The RSPB on Vimeo.

The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (IUCN 2015) contained the sad but unsurprising news that the European turtle dove (Streptopelia turtur) has been uplisted to ‘Vulnerable’, meaning it faces a high risk of extinction in the medium-term future. Since the main contributor for the decline of the turtle dove population is thought to be the loss of suitable habitat as well as associated food shortages in their breeding grounds, in 2014 Cemex and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB, the UK partner of BirdLife International) embarked on a 3-year pilot conservation project at nine Cemex quarries in central England.

Now in our second year of the conservation project, Cemex staff along with local volunteers survey a total of 10 Cemex quarries twice each breeding season, four of which have been sowed with a special seed mix - the birds’ ideal food. Turtle doves have since been found at two of our participating quarries, including three juveniles, so it is very likely that they were born on a Cemex quarry this year. With support of RSPB’s conservation scientists, the intervention will be assessed to determine effectiveness.

Encouraged by the success so far, we have looked beyond the UK and launched a pilot site on our Bouafles quarry in France where multiple actions are scheduled to begin in 2016. The Cemex team in France expects to create and maintain dense hedges, devote entire plots for cultivation favorable to the turtle dove, and fence off certain areas previously accessible to the public so that the birds are not disturbed during the breeding season. We intend to further these actions in Spain, at the Biodiversity Action Plan pilot site at Soto Pajares, where the Sociedad Española de Ornitología (BirdLife International’s partner in Spain) is working closely with Cemex on yet another point of the birds’ western-most migratory flyway.


Edited from source by Joseph Green. Source: Cemex

Read the article online at: https://www.worldcement.com/europe-cis/23122015/turtle-doves-observed-cemex-quarries-240/

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