About the species
Calidris alpina schinzii

Differences between the northern and the southern dunlin

  • Somewhat shorter bill
  • Slightly smaller and slimmer
  • Somewhat more diffuse colours
How could they decline so quickly?

When a species or a subspecies declines at such a fast rate as in the case of the southern dunlin, there is normally more than one reason for it.

In Sweden, and in other countries around the Baltic Sea, a comprehensive system of drainage (reclamation) of the landscape began in the second half of the 1800s and became more widespread in the beginning of the 1900s. This caused a major reduction in natural wetlands and wet coastal meadows and in certain parts of Sweden they disappeared completely. This obviously disadvantaged the wading birds who had evolved over thousands of years to make the best of these environments. It also meant that predators like foxes and badgers quickly appeared in the reclaimed areas. The reduction in the hunting of these predators over the past 100 years has also disadvantaged waders.

In the beginning and the middle of the 1900s, in many places hedgerows with bushes and trees were planted down towards the water meadows, where there had previously been open and wide-stretched areas. These have become the perfect place for predators such as foxes, badgers, and crows to get closer to the waders’ eggs. Checks on nests during the breeding season made in Halland, Skåne and southern Öland over the past 20 years have shown that predation of eggs in some places has been 70-100% per year and even in the best result, around 50%.

The factors that have made the southern dunlin critically endangered around the entire Baltic Sea area have also disadvantaged six other wader species that nest in a similar way and in approximately the same biotope: lapwings, oystercatchers, redshanks, ruffs, curlews and ringed plovers. By trying to save the southern dunlin, we also help other species to adapt themselves to coastal meadows.

Humans have shifted the balance of nature in many ways and this has severely disadvantaged these waders. We will now try to recreate natural wetlands and coastal meadows as well as bringing in measures to restrict predators in order to help the waders again.

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The last stand for the southern dunlin
With financial support from the Swedish Postcode Lottery

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