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IWC Publications

African Waterbird Census Newsletter No. 4
This newsletter covers outcomes that have resulted from the UNEP-GEF African-Eurasian Flyways Project also known as the Wings Over Wetlands Project (WOW). The newsletter highlights the signing of a Memorandum of Cooperation between the lead project p... Read more...

The Flyway Training Kit
The new Flyway Training Kit is a one-of-a-kind resource in flyway-scale conservation and represents an important step towards meeting core strategic objectives of the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands and AEWA. This innovative co... Read more...

African Waterbird Census Newsletter, December 2009
This newsletter covers some available Single Species Action Plans; reports on two trainings: one in Maputo, Mozambique (on a national wetland and waterbird monitoring course) and the other in Limbe, Cameroon (on a flyway scale capacity building in we... Read more...

AWC Newsletter 17
In this edition, the AWC Coordinator, Dr. Bharat Jethva announces the dates for 2010 census. An update of the 2009 census is provided along with details of milestone 20 year review of the Asian Waterbird Census. News from the region follows.  Read more...

Status of Waterbirds in Asia
The Asian Waterbird Census (AWC), conducted each year in January, is a waterbird and wetland-monitoring programme initiated in 1987 within the framework of the International Waterbird Census. This report summarises the results of the AWC from 1987 to... Read more...

IWC Newsletter 13 - December 2009
Newsletter for national waterbird monitoring coordinators and observers of the International Waterbird Census - Western Palearctic and Southwest Asia.   Read more...

IWC Newsletter 12 - July 2009
Newsletter for national waterbird monitoring coordinators and observers of the International Waterbird Census - Western Palearctic and Southwest Asia. This is the special Slender-billed Curlew issue!   Read more...

African Waterbird Census Newsletter, June 2009
This is the second edition of the African Waterbird Census newsletter. The main purpose of this newsletter is to facilitate communication in the African Waterbird Census (AfWC) network. This newsletter is produced by the Wetlands Inter... Read more...

Outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza in Europe: the risks associated with wild birds
The infection of wild birds by highly pathogenic strains of avian influenza (AI) virus was virtually unknown – apart from one instance of the disease appearing in common terns in South Africa in 1961 – before the Asian strain of highly pathogenic AI ... Read more...

The Wader Atlas
The Wader Atlas is a compilation of current knowledge of the numbers, distribution and movements of one of the most remarkable groups of birds in the region covered by the African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbird Agreement (AEWA). Long-term waterbird cou... Read more...

Western Paleartic counters (Europe, West Asia, North Africa)

This page provides the information for bird counterns in the Western Paleartic region: Europe, Central Asia, the Middle East and North Africa.

See the links on the left side of the page to the forms you will need.

 

The major contributors to waterbird monitoring in western Europe and parts of Southwest Asia are volunteer birdwatchers who participate because they find counting birds enjoyable and rewarding. 

In most countries the census is coordinated professionally, and in many countries, particularly in eastern Europe, professionals also carry out much of the fieldwork (although often on a voluntary basis, in their own time). 

The methodology requires a single count at each site each winter in the month of January. The International waterbird census (IWC) is a so-called look-see survey whereby observers visit a site and make a count of every waterbird species present.

Standardisation

One of the most important principles in the IWC methodology is standardisation, so that the same sites are covered in the same way each winter, maximising the validity of comparisons of counts from site to site and from year to year. 

Standardisation is ensured by the use of rigorously designed recording forms, and by the use of a network of national organisers who liaise with counters and ensure that optimum coverage is maintained. At the national level, responsibility is often divided between a number of local organisers. At large sites which are divided into sub-sites, good organisation and teamwork play an important part of the success of counts. Problems of inconsistency in the data can occur when different boundaries are used for counting the same sites in different years and when sites 'drop in' and 'fall out' of the database over time as site coverage and counters change.

Count and site forms

We use two different types of forms depending on the information that is supplied. The first is the site form, where general descriptions about the site can be entered. 

The second is the count form, where bird counts and conditions occuring at the time of counting can be recorded. On the  right you see the forms available.

Please contact the person listed on the right for further information.

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