• For ten years, the last weekends of September and May, the LPO and the National Museum of Natural History have offered you, for an hour, to count and identify the birds that land in your gardens.

  • 28,000 French people have played the game since 2012 and nearly a million pieces of data have been collected during these two weekends.

    Enough to establish solid trends on the evolution of bird populations in France.

  • Result, in winter, the counters panic.

    49% of the species present in France during this period have their numbers increasing.

    Good news ?

    Not necessarily, says the LPO.

    Above all, in the spring, the trend is much more worrying.

It can be the fun and soothing activity of this weekend.

Like every end of January, the League for the Protection of Birds (LPO) and the National Museum of Natural History invite us to observe our gardens for an hour.

It also works on balconies or in a public garden.

The instruction is always the same: count and identify all the birds that land, whether on the ground, on a branch, on a fence.

Then send the results to an online platform.

Not so simple, at first sight, when you don't know anything about birds.

There are still online guides to help you.

“And we quickly get caught up in the game,” promises Marjorie Poitevin, who coordinates this “Garden Bird Observatory” for the LPO.



It's been ten years since this operation returns on the last weekends of January and May.

In 2012, 3,000 French people answered the call.

Six thousand the following year, 10,000 in 2017 and up to 40,000 in 2020, when confinement put us all in search of activities to do at home.

Largest participatory science program in France

Since then, participation has fallen somewhat.

They were still more than 28,000 last year again.

Enough to make this observatory the largest participatory science program in France.

In ten years, nearly a million data have been collected in 58,220 gardens, counts the LPO.

From Conquet (Finistère) to Furiani (Haute-Corse) and from Leffrinchouke (Nord) to Cerbère (eastern Pyrenees).

A mine of information for scientists who study the evolution of bird populations in our latitudes.

In the same vein, there is already the Temporal Monitoring of Common Birds (Stoc), another participatory program, launched in 1989 and “supplied, this time, by experts whose observations are mainly made in the countryside”, specifies Benoît Fontaine, biologist at the Mnhn.

The garden bird observatory then provides a very good point of comparison, on spaces more shaped by man, such as our parks and gardens.

Counters that panic in winter

What can we learn from these ten years of observation?

Few good news, to listen to Allain Bougrain-Dubourg, president of the LPO.

However, not all trends are downward.

On the counts made the last weekend of January, it is even quite the opposite.

"There is a very strong increase in populations for 49% of the species observed", notes Allain Bougrain-Dubourg.

The most emblematic example is the ring-necked parakeet, native to Asia and Africa, released by accident in France in the 1970s. The species has acclimatized very well there to the point of reaching nearly 30,000 individuals today and to be very regularly observed in our gardens.

Other species panic the counters in winter.

The European goldfinch, the chaffinch, the blackcap… Allain Bougrain-Dubourg is not happy about it.

"These are often species from northern and eastern Europe that traditionally come to spend the winter in France, in search of milder temperatures," he recalls.

Previously, these birds spread mainly in our countryside.

They find there less and less food resources today, so much so that they refer to the gardens where more and more individuals feed them in winter.

»

In other words, this increase in observations reflects more behavioral changes in these birds than an increase in their populations.

This is obvious for the goldfinch, "easily identifiable and therefore little affected by counting errors", specifies Benoît Fontaine.

"The observatory of the gardens shows a sharp increase in the number of individuals in winter for ten years, when the Stoc program - rather on the countryside therefore - has stable numbers", continues the biologist.


Depopulated gardens in spring

On the other hand, for the spring counts, there is no doubt: the trends are bad.

Only 2% of the species usually encountered in gardens during this period have seen their numbers increase since 2013. For 24%, they are stable.

And for 41%, the populations are in decline.

Sometimes very clearly.

“For the black swift or the European greenfinch, the abundance has dropped by 46% in ten years”, Allain Bougrain-Dubourg is alarmed.

And the trends are just as bad in Stoc for these two volatiles.

It is this spring decline that holds the attention of the president of the LPO, "because it affects the birds "of France", that is to say the species that nest here", he explains. .

"And it no longer reflects changes in behavior but a lot of population declines this time," adds Benoît Fontaine.

These results therefore tend to confirm this general loss of biodiversity abundance already observed in several scientific studies.

For example, the one published in October 2017 in the journal

PlosOne

, which caused a stir by evaluating the drop in the biomass of flying insects at 75% in nearly 30 years in Germany.

The authors suspected the intensification of agriculture, in particular the increased use of pesticides, to be the main cause.

Insects fall, birds follow

It also affects birds, at least indirectly, as these flying insects are their staple food in the spring.

The LPO and the Museum make this scarcity of food resources one of the main causes of the decline in bird numbers from spring onwards.

Added to this are diseases, the degradation of natural habitats (destruction of hedges, for example), increasing artificialization or repeated heat waves.

"Some summers, we measured temperatures of more than 40°C in the nests, forcing the young to leave them hastily," says Allain Bougrain-Dubourg.

Another threat, more surprising: the energy renovation of buildings.

Very often, for insulation issues, it involves filling the cavities in the facades and roofs.

Holes that several species like to set up their nests.

The black swift in particular.

Planet

Fewer and fewer insects: “We are not just talking about a species but an entire animal community”

Planet

“Living planet”: Climate change, a potential factor in species extinctions

Still possible to reverse the trend

Allain Bougrain-Dubourg does not despair in any case.

"We have already won battles over emblematic species in the 1970s," he recalls.

There were almost no more storks, peregrine falcons, herons in France… These birds are much better protected today and their numbers are on the rise again.

The same remains to be done for common birds, certainly less spectacular, but an equally essential link for the preservation of biodiversity.

Alain Bougrain-Dubourg still notes progress, including a major one no later than this Monday.

The Minister of Agriculture announced that France will comply with a European court decision and will not grant new exemptions, in 2023, for the use of neonicotinoids in beet fields,

  • Environment

  • Planet

  • Biodiversity

  • Bird

  • Science

  • LPO

  • Garden