http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/environment/story.jsp?story=537642
Farms reap healthy crop of the ugly bird that faced extinction
By Michael McCarthy, Environment Editor
03 July 2004
 Bulging eyes. Knobbly knees. The distinctive stone curlew is one of 
Britain's most peculiar-looking birds. But now it has a distinction of 
another sort: it's doing better at recovering its once-falling numbers 
than any of Britain's much-threatened farmland bird species, having 
increased its population by more than half in 20 years.
 While skylarks, grey partridges, lapwings and turtle doves have plunged 
catastrophically over recent decades, a conservation programme for the 
stone curlew has borne significant fruit - and its success is largely 
down to co-operation from farmers themselves.
 The key has been finding the birds' nests early in the breeding season, 
then notifying farmers so agricultural operations can take account of 
them. As a result, numbers have gone from about 170 pairs in Britain in 
the mid-1980s - the bird's low point - to about 260 pairs today.
 It has to be said that Burhinus oedicnemus does not look like a typical 
inhabitant of the English countryside. It is more like the roadrunner 
bird from the old cartoons, a scrawny inhabitant of a scrawny 
landscape, and indeed, its typical Eurasian habitat is bare steppeland.
 It is the only European member of the thick-knees, a very distinctive 
bird family, but its eyes are even more noticeable. As one bird guide 
puts it: "Prominent yellow and black eye appears to glare malevolently 
on pale striped head."
 Across Europe the bird's numbers are dropping steadily as intensive 
farming takes away its living room, and this was formerly the case in 
Britain too.
 From between 1,000 and 2,000 pairs scattered across the UK in the 
1930s, the stone curlew's range shrank to two widely-separated pockets 
- the chalk downlands of Wiltshire, and the Brecklands of Norfolk, the 
sandy, pine-covered terrain near Thetford Forest. There, the bird has 
come to favour nesting in fields of young crops, and it is there that 
work by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) and 
English Nature has had the most success. Each spring the RSPB project 
officer, Tim Cowan, helped by three assistants, combs more than 30,000 
acres of farmland between Swaffham in the north and Bury St Edmunds in 
the south, first looking for the birds, and then looking for their 
nests. Their locations are then notified to the farmers concerned - and 
almost universally they are spared from the destruction that ploughing, 
hoeing or harvesting would otherwise bring.
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