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The Cape Bird Club Western Cape Raptor Research Programme The CBC helped part funded this programme. We need more helpers! While securing the funding for research projects, and particularly for raptor studies, is always difficult, we have reached a stage in the development of the WCRRP where perhaps our most limiting factor is the availability of personnel to achieve the tasks that we have set ourselves.
Tish Foyle watching out for Buzzards, Hawks, Kestrels and any other raptors. For Cape Town birders, one way in which you can help is to 'adopt’ one or two raptor nest sites in your area of the Peninsula, and keep an eye on activities there through the breeding season, letting us know if and when the birds appear to have laid eggs or started to feed young. With some initial guidance, this wouldn’t require much more than two or three visits to the relevant area each breeding season. Establishing a network of such observers to keep tabs on at least some of our study sites would free us up for the more hands-on work – nest visits, ringing etc - and allow us to use our time more productively. On a broader front, the harrier project is about to launch a major public-participation campaign, aimed at involving birders, conservators and landowners in collecting data to help us learn more about the nesting and foraging habitat requirements of the Black Harrier.
Part of the volunteer group on an outing in April 2005. The WCRRP is involved with two other local raptor projects that would greatly benefit from some enthusiastic assistance;
Contact Andrew Jenkins if you would like to become involved; tel +27 21 650 4124 The present members of the team; Andrew Jenkins, Anthony van Zyl, Odette Curtis, Rob Simmons, Ann Koeslag and Lucia Rodrigues.
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