Rutland Ospreys Webcam

Post Reply
Malewitsch

Re: Rutland Ospreys Webcam

Post by Malewitsch »

By Michelle on August 8, 2013 - Nearly six weeks ago, when the Manton Bay chicks were only six weeks old, Tim reported that 2013 has been a record year with at least thirteen chicks in five nests. Excitingly, we now know that there are FOURTEEN chicks this year, and (touch wood) they have all successfully fledged!

5R and his mate have now successfully raised eleven chicks since 2009 and if you follow the website you’ll be well acquainted with the Manton Bay youngsters, 1J (M), 2J (F) and 3J (F)...
Image
Copyright © 2013 Rutland Ospreys
http://www.ospreys.org.uk/meet-the-class-of-2013/

Image
User avatar
Kukelke
Registered user
Posts: 3595
Joined: July 16th, 2012, 3:09 pm
Location: The Netherlands

Post by Kukelke »

14 fledged chicks this year is a great result, even when we take into consideration that the grim statistics tell us that only half of them will return to Britain in 2015. And the sexes are evenly distributed: 7 males and 7 females.
Also, the female at the Dyfi in Wales, Glesni, is just as the former female there, Nora, born at Rutland and other Rutland birds have been sighted in Wales and at other locations. All that gives renewed hope for the future for the further spreading and recolonisation of Britain. Fingers crossed! (and hopefully they will colonize at the other side of the North Sea too, in The Netherlands)
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Exercizes

Image

Image

Image

Image
from fb photo
Jo UK
Site Admin
Posts: 20709
Joined: September 20th, 2008, 1:40 am
Location: Winchester, UK

Post by Jo UK »

BBC news about these Ospreys.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-le ... e-23684463

I hope everyone can see this. Some BBC films are for UK residents only.
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Brilliant photos - especially the last seasons Yellow 09 migration pics from Western Sahara (tragic loss of that tough Youngster)
User avatar
Brit
Registered user
Posts: 6070
Joined: November 28th, 2008, 4:40 pm
Location: Franconia/Germany
Contact:

Post by Brit »

Thank you so much, dear UK for the link to this brilliant BBC film about the Ospreys!!! Gorgeous!
Have a nice day!
Brit
http://www.worldofanimals.eu/
User avatar
Brit
Registered user
Posts: 6070
Joined: November 28th, 2008, 4:40 pm
Location: Franconia/Germany
Contact:

Post by Brit »

Thank you so much, dear Jo UK for the link to this brilliant BBC film about the Ospreys!!! Gorgeous!
Have a nice day!
Brit
http://www.worldofanimals.eu/
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Image

Image
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Rutland Water
Africa calling – or will it be a Spanish winter?
By Tim on September 2, 2013

One of the key things we have learnt from our satellite tracking studies in recent years is that adult Ospreys are able to refine their migration route over successive journeys. By using prominent geographical features such as mountains, rivers and coastlines, they make the most direct flight possible without taking unnecessary risks. They are superb navigators and there is no clearer example of this than 30(05)’s first four days of migration this year.

When 30 wasn’t at her nest site on Thursday evening, we thought she had departed on migration, but it wasn’t until this morning – when we were able to download the latest full batch of satellite data – that we could confirm just that. And what a start she has made – non-GPS signals showed that by yesterday evening she had reached Cadiz in the south of Spain.

30 first bred at a nest close to Rutland Water in 2009 and has continued to do so each year since. Sadly this year her mate, 08(01), failed to return and she has spent much of the summer alone. Having failed to rear a family for the first time in five summers, we wondered how long 30 would linger at her nest site this autumn. She clearly felt the time was right to depart on Thursday morning because by midday she was flying south over Wellingborough, some 36km south of Rutland Water at an altitude of 600m. Over the course of the next four hours she made steady progress south at an average altitude of 750m, passing over Milton Keynes and then to the west of London.

By 4:30pm she had the south coast in her sights, and with conditions good for migration, she continued onwards, passing over Worthing and then out to sea. Her 168mk crossing of the English Channel took almost exactly 3 hours, and she made landfall just to the South-west of the busy shipping port of Le Havre, at 8pm. An hour later as darkness fell she was perched another 48km to the South-west, close to a farm in a typically rural part of Normandy. Under normal circumstances 30 would have roosted there for the night, but evidently still feeling strong, she continued south. We do not know exactly how long she was flying for during the night, but by 2:30am GMT she had covered another 119km and by 6am was another 41km further on, perched in an arable field 16km North of the Loire river. She may well have caught a breakfast fish because two hours later, at 8am, she was perched beside a small farm lake. She certainly deserved a meal because she had covered more than 540km since leaving Rutland Water. An incredible first day of migration....
Image

Image

Image

Image

http://www.ospreys.org.uk/category/sate ... osprey-30/
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Male Osprey 5R and Osprey Chick 3J (F) are still in Manton Bay!

Image
from fb
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Rutland Water
Welcome to Africa
By Tim on September 3, 2013

Yesterday we were wondering whether 30 would linger in the south of Spain, or continue south to Africa. That question has now been answered because at midday today we know she was flying past Marrakesh!

After arriving in Cadiz on Sunday afternoon, 30 remained there for the rest of the evening. Having flown well over 1500km in just three-and-a-half days since leaving Rutland Water she was certainly due a rest. Cadiz harbour offers rich pickings for migrating Ospreys and, having caught a meal 30 settled down for the evening near El Marquesado.

At 7am next morning she was perched 11km further south, perhaps eating breakfast. An hour later though, she was off. Whilst most birds of prey actively avoid long sea-crossings during migration, Ospreys are much more powerful. It was no surprise, therefore, that rather than heading South-east to make the short crossing to Africa across the Strait of Gibraltar, 30 flew due south from Cadiz, direct across the Atlantic. At 8am she was 6.5km off the Spanish coast flying just 10m above the waves and an hour later she was 40km further south, with the Moroccan coast firmly in her sights. She made landfall just after 10am after a flight across the sea of approximately 110km. This is much further than the 14km crossing at Gibraltar, but using the more direct route across the open sea not only saved 30 time, but also kilometres. If she had stuck to the land-based route as species such as Honey Buzzards and Short-toed Eagles would have done, she would have had to have flown 80 kilometres further.

Having made landfall, 30 continued South-west, using the coastline as her guide. She passed Rabat at 2pm, flying powerfully South-west at 49km/h at an altitude of 490 metres and then continued to make steady progress South-west for the rest of the afternoon. By 6pm she had covered another 150km and was still showing no signs of letting up, despite the fact that her day’s flight already totalled 420km.

We don’t know exactly where 30 roosted but at 10am this morning she was 65km south of her position yesterday evening, migrating SSW at an altitude of 1000 metres. Two hours later she had made a distinct turn to the South-west and was passing to the north of Marrakesh. This change in direction was almost certainly due to the fact that the Atlas Mountains would now be appearing on the horizon. This vast mountain chain, which rises to more than 4000 metres in places, presents an obvious barrier to migrating birds. Our other satellite tagged Ospreys have actively avoided flying through the highest peaks and it looks as though 30 is going to do the same.

Once the Atlas Mountains are behind her, 30 will face the most arduous part of her journey. The vast and unforgiving Sahara. When the next batch of data comes in – either later tomorrow or on Friday – she will probably be crossing the desert. We wish her well.
http://www.ospreys.org.uk/category/sate ... osprey-30/

Image

Image
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Rutland Water -Part 1
Around the Atlas and into the Sahara
By Tim on September 5, 2013

In the last update on 30′s migration, I suggested that when we received the next batch of data she’d be setting out across the Sahara. Sure enough, the latest GPS positions show that last night she roosted just north of the disputed Morocco-Western Sahara border, with the vast expanses of desert lying ahead.

We knew that at midday on 3rd September, 30 was passing to the north of Marrakesh. The imposing Atlas Mountains would have been appearing on the horizon, and this clearly prompted a shift in 30′s course. At 1pm, with the mountains looming large in the distance, she made a distinct turn to the South-west; thereby avoiding flying directly through the mountains. She maintained this heading for the next four hours at altitudes of more than 2000 metres. By 5pm she was past the highest of the peaks and she turned almost due south, a course she maintained for two more hours of flying. Finally, at 7pm she settled to roost in an agricultural area to the south of the mountains after a day’s flight of 293km. Here’s a Google Earth video of her day’s flight which demonstrates just why she changed direction as she did. If you like the song in the video, you can find out more about it here.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mj72jRIz ... r_embedded

Image
Next morning, 30 made a slow start. At 7am she had moved 5km south of her roost site and at 9am she was perched again, another 6km to the south. There are no obvious signs of water on Google Earth and it’s more likely that these small movements were as a result of people beginning their day’s work on the agricultural land. By 10am, though, she was migrating again, heading South at an altitude of 370 metres. She made steady progress for the rest of the day, maintaining a South-westerly heading at altitudes of 750-1000 metres. By 5pm she had covered 252km and at that point made another distinct turn in response to a geographical landmark. As our previous satellite-tracking studies have shown, many migrating Ospreys follow the vast ridge which runs South-west along the northern edge of the Sahara; and at 5pm that’s exactly what 30 did. She followed the ridge for two hours, before settling to roost on the desert floor at 7pm after a day’s flight of 324km.
Image

Image

http://www.ospreys.org.uk/around-the-at ... he-sahara/
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Rutland Water - Part 2
30′s isn’t the only Rutland Osprey to have followed the ridge. Both 09 and AW followed the same ridge on their migrations in 2011. Its also very close to the place where 09 sadly died on his autumn migration last year. at 5pm 30 was just 41km from the spot where Farid Lacroix found 09′s remains last September. Let’s hope 30 has better luck as she crosses the Sahara.
Image
Like all Ospreys that are migrating across the desert, 30 had to roost on the desert floor. Google Earth helps gives us an insight into the kind of landscapes that she is experiencing.
Image

Image
With the majority of the Sahara ahead of her, 30 will have to go at least three more days without fish. For an experienced adult Osprey this is something she is well-used to, but it will be a difficult few days of migration nonetheless
http://www.ospreys.org.uk/around-the-at ... he-sahara/
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

A flight across the Sahara - By Tim on September 7, 2013

For any Osprey migrating from the UK to West Africa, the Sahara is undoubtedly the most demanding phase of the journey. For three to four days the birds must battle across one of the most barren, inhospitable places on planet earth without any food. The rewards once they get to West Africa are great, but actually getting there is not easy. As we expected 30 is now in the midst of her crossing of the vast desert. The latest data shows that last night she roosted in the northern part of Mauritania, having flown almost 900 kilometres in two days. The desert is so huge that this means she still has at least one more day's flying before she reaches water again.

Having roosted just north of the Morocco-Western Sahara border on Wednesday night, 30 resumed her migration again shortly after 8am on Thursday. By 9am she had already covered 30km and was maintaining a South-westerly course at an altitude of 380 metres. She continued on almost exactly the same course for the next four hours, perhaps aided by some of the spectacular land forms she was passing over. By 2pm she had flown 270 kilometres from her roost site at an altitude of between 600 and 800 metres.
Image
Over the course of the next hour she gained over 500 metres in altitude; by 3pm she was flying South-West at an altitude of 1220 metres. She maintained this altitude for the next two hours, but by 6pm she was much lower. She was clearly looking for somewhere to roost for the night because at 7pm she was perched on the desert floor after a day's flight of 470 kilometres. She spent the night resting on the spectacular sands of Western Sahara.
Image
Next morning 30 had a slow start to her migration. She moved 9km South-west from her roost site between 7am and 8am, and then rested for more than an hour, before finally setting off at about 9:30am. She covered 125 kilometres South-west over the next three-and-a-half hours at altitudes of between 300 and 600 metres. At 1pm she turned further South-west and maintained that heading for four hours, covering 185 kilometres in the process. An hour later, at 6pm, she was at her highest altitude of her desert crossing – 1920 metres – and still showing no signs of letting up. She finally settled to roost at around 7:15pm having flown a total of 410 kilometres since leaving her roost site.
Image

Image
30 is now 470 kilometres from Senegal, meaning that when we receive the next batch of data she should have completed her crossing of the Sahara. Let's hope so.
http://www.ospreys.org.uk/category/satellite-tracking/
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

A Senegalese sunrise - By Tim on September 9, 2013
She's made it! The last batch of GPS data showed that last night 30 roosted on the banks of the Senegal River, having completed her crossing of the Sahara. Although, strictly speaking, she is still just in Mauritania, she will have enjoyed a Senegalese sunrise this morning.

The previous data had shown that, after flying 900km in two days, 30 had reached the deserts of Western Mauritania. She still had at least one more day's flying to complete the desert crossing, but was making excellent progress.

On Saturday morning 30 began migrating at 9am. Three hours later, at midday, she had already covered 123 kilometres and was continuing on the same the distinctly South-westerly heading that she had maintained the previous afternoon. The direction of her flight suggested she was heading for the Mauritanian coast and her afternoon flight confirmed that. By 7pm she was just 4km from the Mauritanian coast, a few kilometres north of the capital, Nouakchott. Interestingly, the GPS data showed that she was flying due east at 7pm, so there is every chance that, having fished in the sea, she was now flying inland with her first meal for several days. An hour later she was perched 4km further east, and that is where she settled for the night after a day's flight of at least 314km. After three days and 1200km, the majority of the desert was behind her.
Image

Image
Next day she resumed her migration shortly after 9am, initially flying South-east to avoid Nouakchott and then following the coastline south. She made steady progress for the rest of the day at an altitude of around 700 metres. By 5pm she had flown just over 200km and was passing just to the West of the vast Djoudj National Park. This huge wetland is home to many Ospreys each winter as well as hundreds of thousands of wildfowl. Myself, John Wright and Paul Stammers enjoyed a very memorable visit there in 2011. To read about our trip, which included finding an English Osprey, click here.

By 7pm 30 was clearly looking for somewhere to roost for the evening and an hour later she was perched just over a kilometre from the banks of the Senegal River after a day’s flight of 262km. The river forms the border between Senegal and Mauritania and, like, Djoudj, supports a good population of wintering Ospreys.
Image

Image
Having reached Senegal it will be very interesting to see what 30 does now. She could well spend her winter in Northern Senegal, but the speed of her migration – she has only been migrating for 11 days - suggests she is probably going to head further south. The next batch of data will be fascinating.
http://www.ospreys.org.uk/a-senegalese-sunrise/
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

A very familiar winter home
By Tim on September 13, 2013

When 30's last batch of data arrived, we were speculating how far south she would continue to fly. Would she winter in Northern Senegal or would she head further south towards The Gambia or Guinea? Well, it now looks as though we've got an answer. At 3pm on Monday afternoon 30 stopped on the Senegal coast midway between Dakar and St Louis in Northern Senegal. More than 48 hours later, at 9pm on Wednesday evening, she was still there; suggesting she has arrived at her winter home. If her location on the Senegal coast sounds familiar, that's because, remarkably, it is just 2km south of where our previous satellite-tagged Osprey, 09(98) used to winter!

The previous data had shown on Sunday night, 30 roosted just north of the Senegal River. By 8am next morning she had moved 2km south from her overnight spot and was perched beside the river, almost certainly eating breakfast. She was probably disturbed by local fisherman soon afterwards, because an hour later she was perched 8km to the south-east. Then, at 10am she had moved again: a further 1km to the south-east.

She must have resumed her migration sometime after 10:30am because, at 11am, the next GPS position showed that she was 9km to the South-east, flying south at 21kph at an altitude of 500 metres. She continued on this course for another hour, before changing to a more south-westerly heading at midday. She must have know she was now close to her winter home, and three hours later she arrived on the coast after a day's flight of just under 100km.
Image
Having arrived on the coast, 30 has made only short local flights of up to 5km. This behaviour is typical of an adult Osprey on the wintering grounds. They spend most of their day perched in a favoured location and then make short flights to fish once or twice a day. In 30's case her favourite perches seem to be located in an area of scattered trees, less than 100 metres from the beach. From here it is just a short flight out to sea, where a wealth of fish will make hunting very easy for an adult Osprey.

If 30 does remain in this area for the winter, her favourite perches are just 2km south of the ones favoured by 09 during the winter of 2011/12. This means that she and 09 would have been neighbours for seven winters. When you consider that 09 wintered almost 1500km away from the one other Rutland Osprey that we have tracked using a GPS transmitter, this is a truly remarkable coincidence. As the map below shows, 30's daily flights (red dots and yellow lines) are already overlapping with the flights (in orange) of 09 during the winter of 2011/12. If only he was still alive!
Image
Assuming that she has arrived at her winter home, 30's migration is the fastest we have recorded. She flew over 4600km in just 12 days, four days quicker than 09's 16-day migration in autumn 2011. When you compare their migration routes, 30's flight was more direct through Europe, but once they arrived in Africa, they were remarkably similar, particularly through Morocco. The data demonstrates what incredible navigators adult Ospreys really are.
Image
The next batch of data should arrive from 30's transmitter over the weekend, so check back for an update on Monday.
http://www.ospreys.org.uk/a-very-familiar-winter-home/
User avatar
macdoum
Registered user
Posts: 6786
Joined: November 17th, 2008, 12:12 am
Location: Alsace, France

Post by macdoum »

As there is no links page for Loch Garten ospreys,EJ & Odin who kept us enthralled at the start of nesting time with their goings-on. :rotf:
Each year, the ospreys at Loch Garten have people across the world gripped in their tale of violence, adultery and... well... fishing
I'll slip in here a goodbye from the team at Loch Garten ;

http://www.rspb.org.uk/community/places ... fault.aspx
:thumbs: Including a video.
Carmel a member of SHOW .. I hope you love birds too. Its economical. It saves going to heaven.
Emily Dickinson
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Macdoum, thanks for the link to RSPB Lochgarten Ospreys' Blog and EJ & Odin's offsprings amazing migration. I enjoyed to watching these fantastic reports and migration route updates! If you are interested of looking back to the start of Breagha's & Oighrig's migration please feel free to follow my reports on italian bird cam around the world forum: pages 3 ff >>>
http://www.birdcam.it/forum/viewtopic.p ... 4&start=30

In August it was to late for opening a Loch Garten topic in this forum...
8-)

Rutlands 30 - Settled at her winter home
By Tim on October 8, 2013

Since arriving in Senegal almost a month ago, 30 has remained faithful to a short section of coastline, midway between Saint Louis and Dakar. It's just 2km south of where 09(98) used to winter, and like 09, 30 has made only short local flights since arriving. In fact her latest ten days' of data shows that the furthest she has ventured from her favourite perches is just over one-and-a-half miles! This is easy to understand. The sea provides a rich food supply, and Google Earth suggests that the area is relatively undisturbed; the ideal combination for a wintering Osprey.
Image
As we have come to expect from our satellite tracking studies, most adult Ospreys are extremely sedentary in the winter, and that is certainly the case with 30. She is fishing in the sea once or twice every day, and then perching either on the beach or in a scrubby area less than 100 metres inland. Although the Google Earth imagery for this part of the coast is not of the best definition, I wouldn't bet against her favourite perches being isolated tress in amongst the scrub.
Image
We’ll continue to report on 30's progress over the course of the winter. Let's hope it remains as peaceful as her first month in Senegal.
http://www.ospreys.org.uk/settled-at-her-winter-home/
User avatar
macdoum
Registered user
Posts: 6786
Joined: November 17th, 2008, 12:12 am
Location: Alsace, France

Post by macdoum »

Ferenz Thanks for the link. :wave:
Carmel a member of SHOW .. I hope you love birds too. Its economical. It saves going to heaven.
Emily Dickinson
User avatar
macdoum
Registered user
Posts: 6786
Joined: November 17th, 2008, 12:12 am
Location: Alsace, France

Post by macdoum »

Blog from Rutland:
Translocating Ospreys
international success story…but its only the start

By Tim on October 4, 2013


It is a well-known fact that the recovery of the Osprey in the UK is a real conservation success story. Following centuries of persecution, the Scottish population has risen from a single pair in 1954, to more than 270 pairs today. Encouraged by the provision of artificial nest, a few pairs have spread to northern England, and, more significantly still, the Osprey geography of Britain has been completely changed thanks to the Rutland Osprey Project. Breeding populations are now well-established in central England and Wales as a direct result of our translocation project at Rutland Water. But its not just in Britain that Ospreys are on the increase. Last weekend I was an invited speaker at an international symposium on the Osprey in France; and I went away thinking that the future is looking very bright.

One of the most pleasing aspects of the Rutland translocation is that it has led to similar projects elsewhere in Europe. It was great to hear from Roberto Muriel and Andrea Sforzi that Ospreys are now breeding in Spain and Italy, thanks to translocation projects. This summer 9 pairs raised a total of 15 chicks in southern Spain and, in Italy, a single breeding pair were successful for the third successive summer. Elsewhere, a translocation project involving Swedish and Finnish Ospreys began in eastern Portugal in 2011 and, earlier this year, Roy Dennis translocated 12 Scottish Ospreys to the Basque Country in northern Spain. Like in Britain, these projects are restoring Ospreys to areas where they have been lost; helping them to spread through southern Europe. When you look at a distribution map of European Ospreys, there is still very much a northern bias, with the stronghold in Scandinavia. However, this should not be the case and these translocation projects are helping to change that..
Scottish Ospreys were released in the Basque Country this year for the first time

As you might expect, the people running these projects are faced with the same questions that we were repeatedly (and still are) asked at Rutland Water. Shouldn’t we let the birds spread naturally? Shouldn’t the money be spend on more ‘worthy’ projects. Well, in a word, no! And here’s why. Undoubtedly the most inspiring talk of the weekend was given by Roy Dennis. Roy has been working with Ospreys in Scotland since the early 1960s and was instrumental, along with Tim Appleton, in getting the Rutland project underway. Roy and Tim have always been advocates of pro-active conservation and they saw a unique opportunity at Rutland Water to do something that would have a lasting legacy, not just in the UK, but further a field, too. Yes we could have waited another century for Ospreys to reach central England naturally (the annual rate of spread of the Scottish population is 4km per year), but who knows what may have happened in the intervening years? Furthermore, thousands of people, old and young, would not have been able to enjoy the spectacular views of breeding Ospreys that you can now get at Rutland Water and Cors Dyfi, if Roy and Tim, with the help of Anglian Water hadn’t got the project off the ground. There is a scientific justification too. Roy’s research in Scotland has shown that in ‘full-up’ areas of north-eastern Scotland where Ospreys are at their carrying capacity, young birds have to wait much longer to breed. However, by establishing populations further south, where there is less competition for nest sites and mates, the birds have the opportunity to breed at a younger age; and the UK breeding population increases at a faster rate. At Rutland Water in 2003, a two year-old translocated female raised two chicks, and, this past summer, two three-year-olds reared a family of three at the same site. Had these birds tried to breed in Scotland, it is likely to have been a very different story. Just look at Roy’s four year-old satellite-tagged Osprey, Rothiemurchus, who still hasn’t settled down to breed north of the border.

Then there is the matter of worthiness. There are still many people in the UK who feel that conservation effort should be focused on rarer, more threatened species than the Osprey. The reality, though, is that the ‘Osprey money’,simply isn’t available to other projects. Charismatic species, like the Osprey, have the potential to attract funding that may not otherwise end up in conservation. As Roy said on Saturday, wealthy funders are just as likely to end up putting their money into a Formula 1 racing team than conservation, so if we can find a conservation project that excites them – and what excites people more than Ospreys – then, surely, that can only be a good thing? If it is Ospreys that act as the hook to get these people interested in conservation, then who knows what they may be prepared to fund in the future?
that can only be a good thing? If it is Ospreys that act as the hook to get these people interested in conservation, then who knows what they may be prepared to fund in the future?

Feeling suitably inspired by what Roy had said, I continued on theme by discussing the Osprey Flyways Project – the project that myself and the team set-up after our first visit to West Africa in 2011. Over the past three years we have been working with five Gambian schools to provide a wildlife education experience that they wouldn’t get under the usual teaching curriculum. Using Ospreys as the flagship species they have been learning about the wildlife around them, and the need to protect it. Millions of migratory birds make the 3000 mile journey from northern Europe to west Africa each winter, but few could inspire interest among these young people, like the Ospreys can. If we can encourage young people in Africa to take an interest in wildlife and conservation as a result of the migratory journeys of Ospreys, then many other species will benefit. The same is true across the whole of the migratory range; and it is this theory that underpins the other aspect of the Osprey Flyways Project. By using Ospreys as the flagship species we are linking schools along the migratory flyway, enabling the students to learn about bird migration and conservation in a new and exciting way. A great example is the music video made by staff and children at Montorre and Urretxindorra schools in the Basque Country. I finished my talk by showing this video and asking whether, after watching it, the audience felt Osprey conservation was a worthy cause. I don’t think I need to tell you the answer.



And so what of the future? With Ospreys now increasing in most parts of Europe, the future looks bright. We have shown that translocation is the best way of restoring the birds to their former range, and Roy and I firmly believe that it should be easier for these projects to get the necessary licences. We have now refined the translocation techniques, and can run projects in an extremely cost-effective way. There are now around 35 pairs of Ospreys breeding in mainland France and small-scale translocation projects would be an excellent way to encourage the population to spread away from its stronghold in Orleans Forest. It was discussed how several individual Ospreys have attempted to breed in isolated areas, well away from Orleans. In each case, these breeding attempts have come to nothing because other birds have been reluctant to join them. This would not be the case with translocations. Small populations could be established easily in areas where productivity is likely to be high. The same is true of East Anglia and the south coast of England and several parts of Spain. Surely this is just sensible, pro-active conservation?

So, although we are doing well, there is still much to do. As Roberto Muriel explained, there are well over 1000 reservoirs in Spain. If each reservoir supported two or three pairs of breeding Ospreys, then you realise that the current 9 pairs, is only the tip of the iceberg. Likewise, whilst the UK population is now approaching 300 breeding pairs, there is sufficient habitat for the population to increase to six or seven times that. At a time when the recent State of Nature Report showed that many species are in decline, surely we should do everything we can to encourage the continued spread of Ospreys. As Roy said in his talk, rarity is a failure of conservation. Let’s make sure Ospreys do not become rare once again.

Ospreys are breeding in Spain again, with 9 pairs rearing 15 chicks in 2013
Thanks to WVF for the link. :2thumbsup:
Carmel a member of SHOW .. I hope you love birds too. Its economical. It saves going to heaven.
Emily Dickinson
Post Reply

Return to “Osprey”