Latest Channel 4 News:
Row over Malaysian state's coins
'Four shot at abandoned mine shaft'
Rain fails to stop Moscow wildfires
Cancer blow for identical twins
Need for Afghan progress 'signs'

Climate change 'catastrophic' for birds

By Krishnan Guru-Murthy

Updated on 15 January 2008

British birds are facing a potential ecological disaster due to climate change.

Familiar birds like the grouse, snow bunting and osprey could be driven hundreds of miles north - or even face extinction - by the end of the century because of global warming. T

hat's according to a new report by Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and Durham University.

The Scottish Crossbill is one of species under threat. It currently lives only in the Highlands, in pine forests. But by 2100 - global warming would force the bird much further north - into the potentially hostile terrain of Iceland and would cease to exist in Scotland.

But climate change will also bring in new birds to Britain for the first time. With a mixture of black and white stripes, the Hoopoe is one of Europe's most dazzling birds.

At the moment it's only found in southern and central Europe. But by the end of the century - the bird's climate space will move into the UK and will breed in Southern England for the first time.

Send this article by email

More on this story

External Sites

Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.


Watch the Latest Channel 4 News

Watch Channel 4 News when you want

Latest Science Technology & Environment news

More News blogs

View RSS feed

Autism breakthrough

image

A new brain scan could diagnose autism in 15 minutes.

New superbug

image

"Medical tourism" spreads a new superbug to the UK.

Oil spill: BP 'failed'

BP oil spill

Professor Rick Steiner asks why killing the blowout took so long.

A new energy source?

image

Exclusive access inside the UK's first shale gas well.

Most watched

image

Find out which reports and videos are getting people clicking online.




Channel 4 © 2010. Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.