RT15: Present and future of scientific bird ringing

Fernando Spina1 & John Tautin2

1Istituto Nazionale per la Fauna Selvatica, Via Ca Fornacetta 9, I-40064 Ozzano Emilia (BO), Italy, e-mail infsmigr@iperbole.bologna.it; 2Bird Banding Laboratory, Patuxent Wildlife Research Centre, 12100 Beech Forest Road, Laurel, MD 20708 USA, e-mail John_Tautin@nbs.gov

Spina, F. & Tautin, J. 1999. Present and future of scientific bird ringing. In: Adams, N.J. & Slotow, R.H. (eds) Proc. 22 Int. Ornithol. Congr., Durban: 3190. Johannesburg: BirdLife South Africa.

In 1999 scientific bird ringing will celebrate its first century of existence. Started mainly to investigate bird movements, bird ringing has become a much more flexible method to study different aspects of bird biology. Bird ringing can only be properly organised if an effective international co-operation exists. In Europe, this co-ordination is ensured by EURING, made of 35 national ringing centres; sister organisations exist in other parts of the world (like Africa, Australia, U.S. and Canada), sharing the same aims and problems. This RTD is mainly targeted to ornithologists involved with the co-ordination of bird ringing stations and national centres world-wide. Common aspects of the organisation of ringing activities, as well as of the potential ringing has and will have in the future in addressing major scientific questions in Ornithology will be taken into account. The advisability of setting up a standing committee on bird ringing within the IOC will be discussed, and the project of creating a world-wide organisation of ringing schemes in order to further improve communication and exchange of experiences will also be addressed. This new organisation would be formally founded in 1999, when an international conference organised by EURING to celebrate the first 100 years of bird ringing will be held in Denmark.