at the RSPB's
Minsmere reserve. This species is used in the RSPB's logo. Today, the RSPB works with both the
civil service and the
Government to advise Government policies on conservation and
environmentalism. It is one of several organisations that determine the official
conservation status list for all birds found in the UK. The RSPB does not run bird hospitals nor offer animal rescue services. The RSPB entered into a partnership with UK housebuilder
Barratt Developments in 2014.
Reserves reserve,
Anglesey, with Ellin's Tower, housing a
visitor centre installed near
Sumburgh Head lighthouse, Shetland. The cliffs are home to large numbers of seabirds and the area is an RSPB nature reserve. The RSPB maintains over
200 reserves throughout the United Kingdom, covering a wide range of
habitats, from
estuaries and
mudflats to
forests and
urban habitats. The reserves often have
bird hides provided for
birdwatchers and many provide
visitor centres, which include information about the wildlife that can be seen there.
Awards The RSPB confers awards, including the President's Award, for volunteers who make a notable contribution to the work of the society.
RSPB Medal According to the RSPB: The RSPB Medal is the Society's most prestigious award. It is presented to an individual in recognition of wild bird protection and countryside conservation. It is usually awarded annually to one or occasionally two people.
Magazines The RSPB has published a members-only magazine for over a century.
Bird Notes Bird Notes and News () was first published in April 1903. The title changed to
Bird Notes in 1947. In the 1950s, there were four copies per year (one for each season, published on the 1st of each third month, March, June, September and December). Each volume covered two years, spread over three calendar years. For example, volume XXV (25), number one was dated Winter 1951, and number eight in the same volume was dated Autumn 1953. From the mid-1950s, many of the covers were by
Charles Tunnicliffe. Two of the originals are on long-term loan to the Tunnicliffe gallery at
Oriel Ynys Môn, but in 1995 the RSPB sold 114 at a
Sotheby's auction, raising £210,000, the most expensive being a picture of a partridge which sold for £6,440. From January 1964 (vol. 31, no. 1), publication increased to six per year, (issued in the odd-numbered months, January, March and so on, but dated "January–February", "March–April", etc.). Volumes again covered two years, so vol. 30, covering 1962–63, therefore included nine issues, ending with the "Winter 1963–64" edition instead of eight. The final edition, vol. 31 no. 12, was published in late 1965.
Editors • Miss M. G. Davies, BA, MBOU (for many years, until vol. 30 no. 9) • John Clegg (from vol. 31 No. 1 – vol. 31 no. 3) • Jeremy Boswell (from vol. 31 no. 4 – vol. 31 no. 12)
Birds Bird Notes' successor
Birds () replaced it immediately, with volume 1, number 1 being the January–February 1966 edition. Issues were published quarterly, numbered so that a new volume started every other year. The Autumn 2013 edition, dated August–October 2013, being vol. 25 no. 7, was the last.
''Nature's Home'' In Winter 2013
Birds was replaced by a new magazine, ''Nature's Home''. The editor was Mark Ward. The magazine had an ABC-certified circulation of 600,885.
The RSPB Magazine With the Summer/Autumn 2022 issue, the magazine has been re-titled. As of the Winter/Spring 2026 edition, its editor is Jamie Wyver.
Junior divisions The RSPB has two separate groups for children and teenagers: Wildlife Explorers (founded in 1943 as the Junior Bird Recorders' Club; from 1965 to 2000 the Young
Ornithologists' Club or YOC and has two different magazines:
Wild Times for 0–7-year-olds, and
Wild Explorer for 8–12-year-olds. RSPB Phoenix is aimed at teenagers, and produces
Wingbeat magazine, which is primarily written by young people for young people. The RSPB is a member of The
National Council for Voluntary Youth Services.
Big Garden Birdwatch RSPB organises bird record data collection in annual collective birdwatching days in Britain. The RSPB describes this as the "world's biggest wildlife survey" and helps inform conservationists to gain a better knowledge on bird population trends in gardens in Britain. The Big Garden Birdwatch was launched as a children's activity in 1979, but from 2001 it encouraged adults to partake as well. In 2011, over 600,000 people took part, only 37% of whom were RSPB members. This event usually takes place in the last weekend of January. From the start of this annual survey records for
house sparrows showed a decline of 60%, while
starling populations declined by about 80% from 1979 to 2012.
BirdTrack BirdTrack is an online
citizen science website, operated by the
British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) on behalf of a partnership of the BTO, the RSPB,
BirdWatch Ireland, the
Scottish Ornithologists' Club and the
Welsh Ornithological Society (). ==Finances==