BBC presenter Iolo Williams has given his backing to a Llanidloes conservation group dedicated to taking action for one of the UK’s best-loved birds that is sadly experiencing a dramatic population decline.

Gwenoliaid Duon Llanidloes Swifts is made up of local people who have come together to try to improve the fortunes of the Common Swift which are estimated 72 per cent decline in Wales since 1994.

A community launch event being held on Wednesday, January 24, between 6pm and 7.30pm at The Hanging Gardens in Llanidloes will be the perfect opportunity for people to find out more about swifts, what the group is doing and how they can get involved themselves. Donations will be welcomed to help support the future of these amazing birds.

Powys naturalist, Iolo Williams, said: “Thanks to the group for all the hard work they are doing for swifts”.

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The Common Swift is a bird that visits the UK for only three months of the year. They sleep, eat, drink and mate on the wing, only ever landing to breed. Swifts arrive on the UK’s shores in early May to breed and raise their young, migrating back to Africa late July to early August, following the warmer weather, and their insect food source. In its lifetime, a swift may fly up to four million miles, the equivalent of travelling to the moon and back eight times.

Gwenoliaid Duon Llanidloes Swifts said the main reasons for their decline include the loss of their food source. When feeding young, adult swifts can catch up to 100,000 insects a day. Yet studies suggest that insect populations have declined by 50 per cent since 1970.

Swifts nest in the eaves of houses, entering through small holes. As people are renovating their houses to be more energy efficient, they are blocking up nest sites, often without even knowing it.

A final reason for their decline is thought to be due to an increase in extreme weather events such as storms or droughts.

Gwenoliaid Duon Llanidloes Swifts is a group that has set up to help these birds in the Powys market town, working with local partners such as Montgomeryshire Wildlife Trust, The Wilderness Trust, Zero Carbon Llanidloes Di-Garbon and Powys Nature Partnership. The group aims to raise awareness about swifts in the local area, survey and record current nesting sites, and to provide new nesting opportunities.

Gwenoliaid Duon Llanidloes Swifts would like to invite people to the community launch event where there will be light refreshments available to buy at a small cost, and donations will be welcome.

For more information about the event, or how to get involved with Gwenoliaid Duon Llanidloes Swifts, please email llanidloesswifts@gmail.com.