Not all birds nest in trees and hedges. Some, like the brightly-beaked oystercatcher, ringed plover and little tern, nest on beaches.
Little terns are the UK’s smallest tern and one of the rarest breeding seabirds. Migrating from West Africa to the Essex coastline to breed, this 5,000 km journey is a long one for a bird weighing the same as a tennis ball. However, the little tern is one of the UK’s most vulnerable bird species, with numbers declining since the 1980s.
There are many pressures facing beach-nesting birds. Climate change causes coastal flooding and rising sea levels, flooding nests and washing eggs away. Human disturbance also poses a major threat, as beach users or dog walker disturbance can force birds to abandon nests, leaving chicks and eggs vulnerable to predation and the cold.
In collaboration with RSPB and Essex Marine Police, Essex Wildlife Trust’s campaign ‘Share our Shores’ urges the public to follow simple guidelines whilst they're enjoying the beach this summer to ensure endangered beach-nesting birds can lay their eggs and raise their chicks safely on the Essex coastline.