“Beardies” breeding boom: success celebrated on World Wetlands Day

On World Wetlands Day – 2nd February 2025 – the RSPB is celebrating a remarkable year of breeding success for the Bearded Tit on RSPB nature reserves, with more than 500 chicks raised in 2024 at RSPB Blacktoft Sands – more than double the success rate of previous years
- The RSPB is highlighting the vital role that the UK’s network of wetlands play in supporting precious wildlife, fighting climate change by locking away carbon and helping to protect local communities by reducing the risk of flooding.
- Dedicated conservation efforts to restore and protect wetlands have created the perfect habitat for Bearded Tits and other wetland species including Bittern, Common Crane and Spoonbill, demonstrating how habitat management can benefit a range of wildlife across our wetlands.
On World Wetlands Day (2nd February 2025) the RSPB is celebrating an incredible year for wetland wildlife across the UK, including the breeding success of Bearded Tits on RSPB nature reserves. Figures revealed today demonstrate that 25 years of meticulous reedbed management at RSPB Blacktoft Sands in East Riding of Yorkshire has paid off with around 120 pairs of Bearded Tits producing approximately 500 young in 2024 – more than double the breeding success rate of previous years. Back in 2002, the population had declined to an estimated 45 pairs, raising only about 150 young. Whilst their breeding population once reached a low of just two pairs in England during the 1940s, the nature conservation charity heralds wetland restoration as a key factor in the species’ comeback.
The RSPB is highlighting the importance of wetlands for wildlife and people. These precious habitats play a crucial role in supporting countless species and are globally important for migratory birds along the East Atlantic Flyway migratory route. The vital network of wetlands also combats climate change by locking away carbon and helping to reduce the risk of flooding. Conservation efforts to restore and protect wetlands are essential for safeguarding some of our most threatened species and protecting local communities.

Bearded Tits are orangey-brown, long-tailed birds that are usually seen flying rapidly over reedbeds. Males have distinctive black “moustache like” facial markings, making them easily recognisable and are affectionately called “Beardies” by bird enthusiasts. They are sociable and noisy, with their “ping” calls often being the first clue of their otherwise elusive nature.
The unique-looking birds are totally dependent on reedbeds for survival, but precious coastal reedbeds are vulnerable to the effects of climate change. To improve the ecological condition of reedbeds at Blacktoft Sands, the reserve team embarked on a meticulous programme of reedbed management to restore the deteriorated habitat and their efforts have paid off with the incredible number of Bearded Tits recorded last year.
Nationally, Bearded Tit numbers have increased from 400 pairs in the UK four decades ago to around 700 breeding pairs in the UK by 2021, almost doubling over the last 25 years. The creation and conservation of wetlands has helped drive this success – winter reed cutting has transformed the fortunes of Bearded Tits by providing ideal breeding habitat – however, RSPB conservationists stress that it is still a relatively rare bird in the UK.
Pete Short, RSPB Humber Estuary Reserves Manager, said: “Watching our Bearded Tits darting around the reedbeds is a special nature spectacle. Carefully managing wetlands is important for some of our rarest species and we’re delighted that our management of the reedbeds is paying off. Wetlands are important to us all and without them we would lose so much.
“RSPB Blacktoft Sands hosts England’s largest intertidal reedbed and is a fantastic example of why wetlands are so important and why, on World Wetlands Day, it is urgent that we raise national and global awareness about wetlands in order to reverse their rapid loss and encourage actions to conserve and restore them.”
The success of species like the Bearded Tit shows that we can make a difference and why we need to re-double our efforts to preserve our precious wetlands. We are urging policymakers and government to recognise the critical role of wetlands, not only for wildlife but also for combating climate change”.
The conservation and protection of wetlands is helping our Bearded Tit population go from strength-to-strength – but that’s only part of the story. Habitat management benefits other species too, with continued population increases of rare breeding birds such as Spoonbill, Bittern and Common Crane. Spoonbills had a particularly spectacular year on RSPB nature reserves, with a total of 38 pairs fledging at least 74 young. These numbers came alongside news that Spoonbills nested for the first time since the 17th century at RSPB Ouse Washes, where three pairs fledged three young, a major win for a species previously driven to extinction in the UK.
The UK is also of high international importance for wintering and passage wildfowl and waders, with RSPB nature reserves providing valuable wetland habitat for an estimated 480,000 waterbirds last winter. This included more than 10% of the Great Britain wintering population of nine species of wildfowl and ten species of wader, these including Pink-footed Geese, Knot, Golden Plover and Whooper Swans.
Building on the international importance, England’s east coast wetlands stretch 800 miles along the English coastline. This network of wetland habitat is part of the East Atlantic Flyway, a globally important migratory route running from the Arctic to South Africa and used by 90 million birds annually. Due to its significance, the East Coast Wetlands have been successfully added to the UK’s Tentative List of World Heritage sites.
Wetlands are not only a haven for wildlife, but they can act as a coastal defense and protect sea walls from erosion and damage, sheltering local communities from flooding. Protecting and restoring vital wetlands can further contribute to the fight against climate change through carbon storage and storing water to reduce the risk of drought. This rich landscape also provides space for people to engage with nature, inspiring others to safeguard these precious habitats.
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