Wetland Bird Survey

WeBS counting. Photograph by Teresa Frost

The Wetland Bird Survey (WeBS) monitors non-breeding waterbirds in the UK.

WeBS surveyors monitor the UK's internationally important non-breeding waterbirds. Following a tradition begun in 1947, wetland sites are counted once per month, providing data for population and trends in abundance and distribution. The network of sites legally protected for their importance to wintering waterbirds depends fundamentally on the WeBS counts.   "Waterbirds" includes wildfowl (ducks, geese and swans), waders, rails, divers, grebes, cormorants and herons. Gulls and terns are optionally included. In a typical year over 220 waterbird species, races or populations are counted in WeBS, including non-native, feral and vagrant species. National trends are produced for the most numerous 110 of these.

Detail

Time / Skill Required

  • One visit per month, preferably on the Sunday Core Count priority date.
  • Identify waterbirds that regularly occur at your allocated WeBS site.
  • Contact your local organiser for information on training and mentoring opportunities in your area, or join one of the BTO WeBS training courses.
Email Contact
webs@bto.org
Follow this project

Project timeline, contributions & findings

Project timeline

  • 1947/48 Start of national wildfowl counting
  • 1966/67 Year from which all counts have been computerised
  • 1969/70 Start of the Birds of Estuaries Enquiry
  • 1993/94 Wildfowl and Estuary counts brought together in the Wetland Bird Survey (WeBS)
  • 2006 WeBS Online data entry is launched
  • 2014 WeBS Report Online interactive reporting system is launched
  • 2020 Age/Sex recording feature added to WeBS online

Contributions & findings

  • 3.75 million waterbirds are counted for WeBS each year.
  • WeBS produces annual indices for 110 waterbird species or populations
  • Species totals published annually for over 2,700 sites as open data on the WeBS Report Online

View the latest data from the WeBS report

Waterbirds in the UK presents the results of the annual WeBS report. It provides a single, comprehensive source of information on the current status and distribution of waterbirds in the UK for those interested in the conservation of the populations of these species and the wetland sites they use.



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