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  • Overview
  • Objectives
  • Costs to Consider
  • Site Conditions

Grassland bird communities in Transylvania are of high conservation value; monitoring and understand change is important for long-term management of this landscape. Bird point counts using sight and sound have been carried out at 250+ sites annually since 2013 and they will be resurveyed in 2024. This multi-year dataset enables questions relating to avian biodiversity change to be tackled, as well as questions about spatial patterns across the landscape. For example, how and why have bird communities changed in this Natura 2000 landscape? What are the preferred habitats of the main bird species and how has the proportion of these habitats changed over the study period? If farming practices change how could this affect the bird communities? Are there species that could be used as indicators of habitat quality and change? Do some sites contain a greater number of locally rare species than others, and why? This project is data rich and will allow for complex analyses to be performed, which could ultimately inform landscape-scale management.

Extended Dissertation Summary

If you would like to do a dissertation or thesis with us but your university hasn’t started dissertation planning or the project selection process, that’s no problem. You can cancel your expedition with zero cancellation charges up until the 15th of April of if you provide documentation from your university saying that they won’t support completing a dissertation project with us.

Romania Research Objectives

The foothills of the Carpathian Mountains in Transylvania are one of the most spectacular and biodiverse areas in Europe. The species-rich landscape has been nurtured by the low intensity farming practices stretching back up to 900 years. However, since Romania joined the European Union there was a gradual depopulation of the countryside coupled with moves to increase the efficiency of farming by combining fields and more intensive agricultural practices. To mitigate against these areas of outstanding natural beauty in the foothills of the Carpathians being affected by intensification, the EU offered farmers grants to continue farming using traditional techniques to maintain the landscape. The Opwall teams in Transylvania are working with a local NGO called ADEPT and a series of scientists monitoring whether farming practices and biodiversity are changing in a series of eight valleys within the Tarnava Mare region. Changes in farming practices such as any moves to silage production, removal of hedges, usage of fertilisers and pesticides or drainage of wetland areas are being monitored since they could have a big impact on the biodiversity. Direct monitoring of the biodiversity of groups such as meadow plant indicator species, butterflies, birds, small mammals and large mammals such as bears are also being monitored as part of this programme. 

  • Operation Wallacea fee. This includes the expedition itself, food, accommodation, your supervision, and most things from when you set foot at our site to the moment you leave.
  • International flights into and out of Cluj. This can obviously vary dramatically depending on where you’re flying from, or when you book. The average range from the UK is £90 to £160
  • This is transport from the international airport to the start point of the expedition, and then back again. For Romania, packages start from £180 ($233), and includes airport pickup and dropoff at Cluj before and after the expedition, two nights stay in Sighisoara (one night either end of the expedition) and transfers to the village. If you want to stay a bit longer in Sighisoara, we can also add extra nights hotel stays for £30 ($44).
  • Vaccinations and prophylactic medicines – costs can vary.
  • Travel insurance

Most of our volunteers fundraise for their expedition costs. Find out more.

The Romania expedition is a mobile one, spending only a week each in eight different villages scattered through the Tarnarva Mare.

Each village is unique in its own way, and facilities do vary from one to another. For the majority the conditions are relatively basic with tented accommodation and long drop toilets, as you are staying in the gardens and on the properties of local farmers rather than actual campsites. For others however the expedition is in guesthouses or more prepared accommodation and campsites. As the village order is only finalized a couple of months prior to the expedition, we can only give an indication of where you may be going during the training presentation in March/April.

The weather is generally good, averaging the mid-twenties for the majority of the summer – although it can get very hot occasionally. As the expedition is Europe, rain is also a possibility!

Locations

  • Transylvania
  • Romania

Want to get involved with this project?

Preparation

Want to get involved with this project?

Wallace House, Old Bolingbroke, Spilsby, Lincolnshire PE23 4EX, UK
| +44 (0) 1790 763194 | info@opwall.com