The Observer - 11.08.2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

  • The Observer
    14 11.08.19 News


New chicks raise hope


for hen harrier survival


... but shooters take aim


Despite a successful


breeding season, the


endangered birds still


face serious threats


ing pairs and produced 47 chicks


  • improving on the previous high
    point of 46 set in 2006, news that
    was hailed “as a positive result” by
    the organisation.
    “It is very welcome to see this
    improvement,” said Natural
    England’s chairman, Tony Juniper.
    But the announcement was immedi-
    ately condemned by the RSPB.
    “This success is tarnished by the
    clear evidence that illegal killing [of
    hen harriers] continues with no sign
    of it coming to an end,” said Chris
    Corrigan, the RSPB’s director for
    England.
    “By the government’s own fig-
    ures we should have over 300 pairs
    of hen harriers sky dancing above
    the English countryside, and yet the
    species remains on the brink of local
    extinction.”


Hen harriers have been targeted for
decades because the raptors – which
eat mainly small birds and mammals


  • are considered a threat to the prof-
    itability of grouse shooting estates.
    As a result, some gamekeepers trap
    or shoot them illegally.
    In February, Natural England pub-
    lished a study paper that analysed
    the fi ndings of satellite tagging data
    collected over 10 years. The study
    revealed that young hen harriers in
    England suffer abnormally high mor-
    tality , with the most likely cause being
    illegal killing. This point is acknowl-
    edged by Juniper.
    “The hen harrier is still very far
    from where it should be as a breed-
    ing species in England, not least due
    to illegal persecution,” he admitted.
    To maintain hen harrier num-
    bers, Natural England – working


A row has broken out between con-
servation groups over the well being of
one of Britain’s most critically endan-
gered birds of prey: the hen harrier.
The dispute reveals a basic divide
between experts on how to save the
birds from eradication in Britain.
Natural England announces today
that 2019 has been a record year for
breeding success in England. A total
of 15 nests had 12 successful breed-


Robin McKie
Science Editor

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