Sunday 29 October 2017

SECOND MIDDLE EAST SUPERMARKET CHAIN HALTS SALE OF BLACKCAPS



                                            
Bou Khalil supermarket - responsive to protest
 THE sale of blackcaps for consumption has been halted at a second supermarket chain in Lebanon.

Following protests from the Germany-based  Komitee gegen den Vogelmord (Committee against Bird Slaughter), retailers Bou Khalil has ceased selling them at their 12 branches.

Earlier, another chain, Spinneys, also withdrew blackcaps from its shelves.

Following the welcome announcement, CABS issued the following statement: “In response to our protests, the Lebanese supermarket removed the illegally-offered blackcaps.

"This replicates the success of our earlier appeal to  Spinneys.

" Our local partners have inspected some branches in the past few days and can confirm that the birds are no longer available. 

 ”Bou Khalil was significantly more cooperative than Spinneys.

"While the Spinneys Lebanon chief executive had  complained about our initiative, the people at Bou Khalil seemed visibly horrified and very anxious.

“Its management also gave us this message: “Thank you for pointing out this issue.

“We have stopped the sale of blackcaps in all our stores since we do not support the hunting of protected species."

CABS managing director Alexander Heyd says the committee will remain “cautious”.

He comments: “Our local partners will regularly check both the stores of Spinneys and Bou Khalil to establish that the  two supermarket chains are keeping to their word.”


Spinneys supermarket- checks will continue
                                                                 



Friday 27 October 2017

DRONE IS LATEST WEAPON IN CAMPAIGN TO END CYPRUS SONGBIRD SLAUGHTER


Birds trapped on sticky lime are at risk of a painful, lingering death

 “I can’t think of a more insidious way of killing a bird.”

So says broadcaster Chris Packham in his continuing campaign to halt the lime-trapping of migrating songbirds on the sunshine island of Cyprus.

But, after many years of frustration, could the campaign at last be on the verge of success?

In his latest video, published earlier this month, Chris is able to report much diminished trapping this autumn as the British authorities crack down on criminals seeking to catch birds - in the cruellest of manners - for the restaurant trade.
                     
Chris Eyre - determined

There is a particularly encouraging interview with the Chief Constable of the Cyprus Sovereign Base Area, Chris Eyre, who took the helm of operations last year having previously served as  Chief Constable of Nottinghamshire police and, before that, as Deputy Chief Constable of Leicestershire police.

Despite the risks and challenges, father-of-three Mr Eyre is forthright in his determination to bring an end to the barbaric practice.

An overhead drone is the latest tool being employed to track the activities of the trappers.

The video containing Chris Packham's  interview with Mr Eyre  is featured at:
http://www.chrispackham.co.uk/news/cyprus-massacre-on-migration-2017



LINCOLNSHIRE MP HOPEFUL FOR CYPRUS SONGBIRDS - HAVE AUTHORITIES AT LAST GOT A GRIP ON ILLEGAL SLAUGHTER?

The MP- keen to see an end to bird slaughter in Cyprus
                                  
EAST Lincolnshire  MP Matt Warman has expressed confidence that initiatives to end the illegal trapping and slaughter on  Cyprus of songbirds are paying off.

In a parliamentary statement last month,  Mr Warman, who represents the Boston and Skegness constituency, said: “I share concerns which have been raised about wild bird poaching on Cyprus.

“The UK Sovereign Base Areas (SBAs) on Cyprus are covered by the Bern Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats, and adhere to its provisions.

”Combating illegal trapping is a key priority for the SBA police and dedicated patrols are run daily throughout the known trapping season.

“Police have for a number of years put considerable effort into anti-poaching measures and more recently there has been an especially robust campaign, which included expanding the patrols.

“They also work in close co-operation with the Cyprus Game and Fauna Service, the appropriate Cypriot authority.

Trapped on Cyprus - a hapless redstart   

“I understand that base authorities have also acted in conjunction with the Joint Nature Conservation Committee to remove acacia scrub from the site, much of which had been planted illegally by trappers to attract birds for them to catch.

"I was pleased to hear that this move was welcomed as a positive step by Birdlife International.

“I am assured that the SBA authorities will continue to work with the Republic of Cyprus to bring an end to this unpleasant, outlawed practice.”

The MP’s confidence may yet prove to me misplaced, but at least he is speaking up for the birds, many species of which are summer visitors to Britain.

Meanwhile, Mr Warman is the RSPB’s “species champion” in the Commons for the redshank.

Last year, he joined RSPB staff in monitoring breeding redshank on the saltmarsh at the society’s Frampton Marsh reserve which is in his constituency.
                                                  
The reserve at Frampton Marsh where the MP earned his award
This deed earned him the RSPB’ ‘Muddy Welly Award’!


Said he: “I really enjoyed my visit to Frampton Marsh to watch redshank and other waders in their natural habit.

“Winning an award for my efforts was a bonus!”

Redshank - championed by the Lincolnshire MP

Tuesday 24 October 2017

LABOUR MP WHO FLIES THE FLAG FOR THE DUNNOCK


LABOUR MP Jess Phillips has welcomed the opportunity to be the RSPB's "species champion" for the dunnock, a species thought to be in decline in her Birmingham Yardley constituency.
                                                                                                               
.Says she: "“Wildlife needs our help now more than ever.

"I am delighted to help the RSPB highlight the problems our dunnocks face, both here and around the country."







BITTERNS BREEDING AGAIN AT NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE NATURE RESERVE

CHAIRMAN'S POSITIVE UPDATE AT OCTOBER AGM OF COUNTY WILDLIFE TRUST 

Far Ings nature reserve where this year at least one pair bitterns nested successfully


BITTERNS have again nested successfully in North Lincolnshire.

This was confirmed at Saturday’s annual meeting of the Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust where members were provided with the graphic proof - a photo of two young birds making what was their first flight over a reedbed at the Far Ings reserve at Barton-on-Humber.

This 2017 achievement is a welcome pay-off for the Trust which made enhancing reedbed habitat one of its recent priorities following this iconic species’ breeding absence in recent years.
Sadly access to this hide  had to be closed temporarily
following vandalism -  a recurring problem at the Far Ings reserve
It also came against a backdrop of increasing disturbance from vandals, plus dogs and their owners, which continues to prove challenging for reserve staff and volunteers.                                                   
Elsewhere in the Trust’s reserves portfolio, there was a slight dip in nightingale numbers at the Whisby nature park, near Lincoln, while high tides and adverse weather had a devastating impact on breeding little terns at Gibraltar Point.

The 90 or so members and staff who attended the meeting, held at the Whisby education centre, heard an upbeat presentation from chairman David Cohen on the year’s activities.

The new visitor centre and cafe at Gib is proving highly successful as is the new reserve created on the site of the former airfield at Woodhall Spa.

Hobby, osprey and peregrine have been sighted overhead at the latter and whimbrel are occurring on passage.

The reserve is also proving an important habitat for wintering snipe and curlew, and there are high hopes that, before long, it might boast breeding ringed and little ringed plovers.

Breeding hope for ringed plovers at new reserve
                                                         
Since last year’s AGM, the Trust has acquired, thanks to a legacy from former president Ted Smith, of the 50-acre Swinn Wood, near Alford, reckoned to be “one of the finest woodlands in the county”.

The chairman praised the quality of recruitment initiatives which has seen membership rise to 27,000-plus.

Another ongoing success story is that of the grey seals which continue to breed in record numbers at Donna Nook.

When the arrival, earlier this month, of the first 2017 pup was posted on Twitter, the Tweet quickly achieved some 150,000 “hits”.

Before fielding questions, Mr Cohen reminded members of the risks created by Brexit, especially if directives designed to safeguard wildlife are forfeited. However, he noted that departure from the EU could also provide an opportunity for Parliament to draft new, hopefully more effective legislation

It is up to members to lobby their MPs to seek the best possible outcome.

The meeting also heard important contributions from treasurer Peter Stapleton who provided a succinct update on the Trust’s finances and from chief executive Paul Learoyd who provided further insights on the positive work being done by staff and volunteers.

In reply to a question about the sperm whale strandings  of early last year at Skegness, Wainfleet and elsewhere in northern Europe, the latter  noted that research was ongoing.

The whale washed up early last year on the Ministry of Defence site at Wainfleet which is managed by the Trust
                                                      
He further observed  that noise and windfarms were not, at this stage, thought to have been contributory factors in the disorientation of the animals which caused them to swim into the North Sea which is too shallow a habitat for them to survive in.

Another important part of the meeting was a tribute to the later David Robinson, president and long-term stalwart of the Trust, who died on July 24 this year after a short illness.

It was delivered by vice president Geoff Trinder who offered not just an appraisal of the serious academic work, as an author and lecturer, of Mr Robinson, but also a medley of a amusing anecdotes - for instance, when he once drove his car into a dyke at Epworth Turbary.

Rather than observe a minute’s silence, he asked the membership to provide a round of applause.

To conclude the formal part of the meeting, members re-elected Roy Harris and John Redshaw as trustees and elected Matthew Capper, Robert Oates and Amy Rose.
   
Later in the afternoon, there was an informative - and entertaining - illustrated presentation from the Trust’s newly-appointed conservation officer Tammy Smalley, of Skegness, whose previous career included a spell as an ecological consultant and seven years apiece as a marine specialist with Natural England (formerly English Nature) and as The Wash estuary project officer.

In her new role, she will be helping to spearhead the Love Lincolnshire Plants project (which is being financed to the tune of £499,000 by the Heritage Lottery Fund).

This will help not only to safeguard some 9,000 plant specimens (held in storage) but also to promote a greater interest in flora within the county

The ambitious initiative will be supported by a team which will include project manager Aidan Neary and two yet-to-be appointed community and education officers.

The Trust’s partners in this ambitious venture are the Lincolnshire Naturalists’ Union, the Natural History Museum, the Sir Joseph Banks Society with the University of Lincolnshire as an associate partner.

Tammy provided a lively whistlestop tour through the history of plant research and literature in the county, highlighting in particular Joan Gibbons whose Flora of Lincolnshire was published in 1975 and updated 10 years later.

Alarmingly, she noted that some two thirds of the county’s plant species had declined or become extinct between 1970 and 1991.

Notable casualties have included common club moss, matted sea lavender and cranberry, the last of which was once abundant in Wainfleet and Friskney but is now confined to just one or two sites in the county.

On the plus side, greater water parsnip appears to have come back from the brink and meadow saffron has been discovered for the first time since 1836 at a site in South Lincolnshire.

It was an inspiring talk in which Tammy pledged her  commitment to “strategic engagement” in order to persuade the county’s developers and planning authorities of the value of conservation.

She ended by vowing to do all that she could to inspire young people “so that we can find the young botanists of the future”.                                                     

Project partners (left to right): Richard Jefferson (Lincolnshire Naturalists’ Union), Fred Rumsey (senior curator at the Natural History Museum), Aidan Neary (project officer, Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust), Tammy Smalley (head of conservation, Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust) and Liberty Gray (University of Lincoln MSc research student)

Sunday 22 October 2017

TITCHWELL MARSH: THE RSPB'S SHOWCASE NORFOLK RESERVE NEVER FAILS TO DELIGHT


Welcome to RSPB Titchwell Marsh - the visitor centre and shop
                                     

With heavily overcast skies and strong westerly winds, conditions ŵere hardly auspicious for an early-October visit to RSPB Titchwell Marsh, near Hunstanton, in North Norfolk.

Serious birders were lamenting the absence of north and north- easterly winds which was held responsible for the paucity of drift-passage passerines such as redstarts, whinchats, wrynecks and rare warbler species (not to mention bluethroats and  red-flanked bluetails).

Even so there was plenty of interest - with sightings which included yellow-browed warbler, a late cuckoo and a superb range of waders and wildfowl.

Hats off to the RSPB for creating and providing access (including state-of-the-art hides) to such an impressive array of different habitats - reedbed, saltmarsh, copse and both freshwater and saltwater lagoons.


The reserve also has the benefit of stretching to coastal dunes, thence to the shoreline and the vastness of the
North Sea.

There are two feeding stations - one for birds, one for people - plus a shop where the range of products includes not just bird-related gifts, toys and greeting cards but also a selection of books plus ‘scopes and binoculars - not just RSPB-branded kit but also such high end brands as Swarovski and Zeiss.

Also in the shop is a board listing bird sightings of the day as contributed by staff and visitors.

Courses and workshops - suitable for all levels - are held throughout winter and autumn, covering such subjects as wader identification and photography.


RSPB Titchwell Marsh is a real showcase - undoubtedly one of the most impressive in the society’s portfolio of 200-plus reserves.
                                        

Gadwall - an underrated  duck that is common at Titchwell in autumn and winter
                                            
This helpful noticeboard helps newcomers to get their bearings
                                            
As does this more modest signage
A bit of boasting by the RSPB - but who can blame it?
                                       
Black-tailed godwit - a species that always enjoys a good scratch
Can anyone spot the bearded tit?

Even if they are no longer alive, these trees still provide important (and attractive) habitat


For RSPB staff only - this hide  is where the breeding season progress of  bearded tits is  monitored


It's always useful to know the direction of the wind

                                       It's not just about the birds at Titchwell Marsh

   A plug for nearby RSPB Snettisham where geese are the main attraction in winter
                                                 
Sleek stylish and a great place to watch waders and wildfowl - the two Parrinder hides

Somewhere here  there could just be a bittern or a Cetti's warbler

You never have to look far to find dunlin
Externally the Fen hide may look modest
                                                                      
                                                But inside it is mightily impressive

If there are no birds outside, this interior mural helps compensate
                                                                                             
   Feeding station for humans - the restaurant is always busy inside and outside
                                          
Time for a history lesson about the reserve's military heritage

A feeding  pause for this  trio of golden plover as they admire the view





                               

Wednesday 18 October 2017

VAGRANT WADER PREFERS SALTFLEET TO SPURN

The long-billed dowitcher - present in Lincolnshire since mid-September
                                              
 A RARE American wader that was first sighted at Spurn has now made a temporary home for itself on the banks of a muddy haven at Saltfleet on the Lincolnshire Coast.

After initial sightings on the north side of the Humber, it was first reported in Saltfleet on September 16 and has been present ever since. 

The bird feeds in a very aggressive way - aggressive not towards other birds but in the frenzied determination which with  it probes the mud. 

In his Collins Guide to Rare British Birds, Paul Stancliffe, of the BTO, describes this as “a sewing machine like manner”. 

In flight, the white on its back is conspicuous.

Of its status and habitat, he notes that it is a widespread breeder across North America which winters in Central and South America.

“Vagrants here are most likely to turn up in autumn - some individuals stay for extended periods, occasionally into spring.”

It can be distinguished from the short-billed dowitcher, not by length of bill (which is not necessarily diagnostic) but by its short, shrill call note which would somehow seems modest for a bird of its size.

The bird has also been feeding in the company of black-tailed godwit and redshank on the banks of the adjacent Paradise Pool - a notable stopping-off point for migrating waders.
                                      

The bird likes to make full length of its bill as it feeds
 
A bird of distinction - and it knows it
Paradise pool adjacent to the muddy creeks of the haven on the southern edge of the village
A habitat much favoured by migrating waders


Redshank and black-tailed godwit are among the species regularly seen



Tuesday 17 October 2017

MP'S DELIGHT AT REPRIEVE FOR PRECIOUS NIGHTINGALE BREEDING SITE

Kelly Tolhurst: "Once special sites are gone, we cannot get them back."

                                                       
MP Kelly Tolhurst has welcomed the planning  decision which has spared - at least for the time being - the destruction of a Kent woodland which is home to breeding nightingales.

Lodge Hill, which is within the Medway area of the 39-year-old's Rochester and Strood  constituency, had been earmarked for up to 5,000 new homes, but the site's owners, the Ministry of Defence, decided not to pursue the project following a campaign by a residents' action group, Kent Wildlife Trust and the RSPB.

The Conservative MP, who last year agreed to be the RSPB's species 'champion' for the nightingale, described the housing project as "a tick-boxing exercise to please officials and developers".

She said of the reprieve: "This is a victory for common sense.

“It was never right for our natural habitats and communities be sacrificed for poorly thought-out plans that would only bring misery to one of our most beautiful areas.

"While it is clear that housing developments are necessary, I dispute the plans for 5,000 homes at Lodge Hill where there would be a significant impact on our natural environment and local infrastructure. 

"Medway is a densely populated urban area, but we are still lucky to have some amazing pockets of tranquil countryside with an abundance of wildlife. 

"It would be devastating for Medway to lose special sites like these. Once they are gone we cannot get them back!

Ms Tolhurst's stance is all the more creditable because it is  at odds with the Conservative-controlled Medway council which believes the nightingales should be sacrificed in favour of new houses and jobs." 

"We need a realistic vision for the next 20 years that puts the community and prosperity at its heart.

“I will continue to push for a Local Plan that looks to put Medway on the map rather than be a tick-boxing exercise to please officials and developers.”

The MP's attitude to the project is in sharp contrast to that of  Mark Reckless, her Tory-turned-Ukip predecessor whom she ousted from the seat.

Below is a transcript of part of a speech he made  in a Commons debate on
March 26, 2013

"Earlier this month, Natural England declared Ministry of Defence land at Lodge Hill in my constituency to be a site of special scientific interest.

"In numerous plans over 18 years, the site has been clearly designated for 5,000 homes and for employment opportunities for 5,000 people. A total of £35.5 million has been spent to get to the point of planning consent being granted. 

"After all this time and money, the council is concerned, to put it mildly, to be thwarted at the last hurdle by Natural England, which does not consider the economic impacts.

"The reason for this, we are told by Natural England, is that a study of some description has discovered that 84 nightingales might use the site. The comparison to be drawn is between those 84 nightingales and homes for 12,000 people and jobs for a further 5,000 people. 

"We are told by the Prime Minister that we are in a global race, but it is not clear that that message has yet filtered through to bodies such as Natural England.

"It is not surprising that council leaders in the area say that we need to end the absurd situation of a non-elected Government agency dictating to national and local government on how to run things. 

Medway is an example of a council that is pro-development, that wants to show that it is open for business. 

Will the Minister assure me that our local council will be able to decide where it is best for development to go, not Ministers or their inspectors, and still less these quangos? 

"We have heard of the bonfire of the quangos; in the case of Natural England, it appears to have fizzled out."

*Cautionary note: Despite the decision, the future of the Lodge Hill nightingales is far from assured. Medway council may yet include the site in its emerging Local Plan which could prompt a new development initiative.