Here’s the latest I can provide based on widely cited sources up to 2024–2025.
Short answer
- The common buzzard remains widespread and common across the UK, with populations generally stable or increasing in many areas, though local declines can occur where persecution or habitat issues persist.
Context and details
- Status and distribution: The common buzzard (Buteo buteo) is now one of Britain’s most common birds of prey, occupying a range of habitats from woodlands to farmland and moorland. This widespread presence has been documented in multiple wildlife sources and national trust pages, highlighting its recovery from past declines due to persecution and pesticide use. These sources describe buzzards as the dominant large raptor in many regions and increasing in range and abundance in recent decades.[7][9]
- Population trends: After significant declines in the mid-20th century, buzzard numbers increased markedly, with recent reporting emphasizing a remarkable recovery and ongoing expansion into areas where they were once scarce. This trend is noted by several conservation organizations and wildlife sites. However, some regional concerns persist, including illegal persecution and local conflicts with gamebird interests, which can influence local abundance estimates.[1][2][3][7]
- Ecology and identification: Buzzards are medium-to-large raptors with broad diets and flexible habitat use, enabling them to exploit various food sources, including small mammals, carrion, and roadkill. They are often seen perched in trees or on fence posts or soaring over open countryside, which aligns with common field observations cited by bird monitoring groups. Typical identification features include a broad wingspan, rounded tail, and variable plumage that ranges from brownish to lighter, depending on age and region.[7]
- Conservation context: Legal protections and habitat improvements (reduced pesticide exposure, legal protection under wildlife acts, and conservation measures) have contributed to the buzzard’s recovery, but ongoing threats include habitat loss, persecution, and environmental contaminants, which are issues highlighted in UK wildlife reporting.[3][9]
What this means for you in Los Angeles context
- If you’re observing buzzards in California, you’ll be looking at a different set of species (e.g., red-tailed hawk, white-tailed kite). The term “common buzzard” refers specifically to the European/British species Buteo buteo, which in North America is a separate but related group of raptors. Locally, you’d see analogous trends of urban–suburban adaptation in raptors, but the species and population dynamics differ.
Would you like a short, 1-page summary with the latest UK population estimates and a map of distribution, or a quick compare/contrast between UK buzzard trends and similar raptors in North America? I can also pull a brief annotated bibliography of recent UK sources if that helps.
Sources
Harmonious coexistence between humans, other animals and ecosystem services they support is a complex issue, typically impacted by landscape change, which affects animal distribution and abundance. In the last 30 years, afforestation on grasslands ...
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.govBird of the month: the common buzzard including how to identify, its ecology and recent recoveries after years of persecution
birdsbloomsandbumbles.comCommon Buzzard in flight
www.econorth.co.ukBuzzards, the UK's commonest bird of prey, were once almost hunted out of existence, but they've made a huge comeback.
www.bbc.comThis familiar bird of prey is often seen perched on roadside fence posts or trees, or in soaring flight over open countryside.Our Buzzard population has shown a remarkable recovery since a low point in the middle of the 1900s, and the species may be encountered almost anywhere across Britain and the eastern half of Ireland, with the exception of urban areas and our highest peaks.Buzzards are rather catholic in their diet, favouring whatever prey happens to be locally abundant.
www.bto.orgThe common buzzard is the most common of Britain’s larger birds of prey and it is found in most habitats, particularly woodland, arable, pasture, marsh and scrub. It eats small mammals...
www.norfolkwildlifetrust.org.ukA majestic bird of prey that has made a major comeback across the UK and is now one of our most common birds of prey.
www.woodlandtrust.org.ukLength: 51-57cm Wingspan 113-128cm Average weight: 550-1000g (male), 700-1300g (female) Average lifespan: 12 years (can reach an age of 25 years) Classified in the UK as Green under the Birds of Conservation Concern 4: the Red List for Birds (2015); Protected by The Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. Legal protection and a reduction in pesticides have allowed buzzards to recover from persecution in the mid-20th Century.
scottishwildlifetrust.org.uk