The poor season for hen harriers was covered in yesterday's Daily Telegraph and Guardian.  The Guardian basically rehashes our press release (I'm not complaining!) whereas the Telegraph quibbles a bit about whether the lack of this grouse-eater is the fault of grouse-shooters.  I found the last line in the Telegraph piece very witty - you don't often find jokes in the papers' news coverage.  It says that '...gamekeepers and landowners insist that shooting estates are helping to protect the hen harrier by ensuring grouse moors are well managed and maintaining native moorland.'. That was meant to be a sardonic joke, surely?

I can't find any comment from Natural England on their web page on this sorry state of affairs - although we did offer them a quote in our press release.  In the past Natural England has been commendably outspoken on the subject of raptor persecution.  On 22 December 2008 Natural England were happy to say 'Persecution is prime cause of harrier disappearance.'. On 2 November 2009 Natural England were happy to say '... illegal persecution has led to today’s critically low breeding numbers and patchy distribution.'.  So what has happened since then?  The General Election was held on 6 May 2010.

Maybe in this new age, Defra is the place to look for comment on this subject?  I cannot find any comment on the Defra website - certainly not under 'news'.  Bu then this isn't news is it?  It is the status quo

The Raptor Politics website is naturally concerned about the plight of this fantastic bird. Farmers Guardian and Bird Guides also cover the story.

 

 

A love of the natural world demonstrates that a person is a cultured inhabitant of planet Earth.

Parents
  • Redkite,

    My understanding is that even the research at Langholm Moor shows that harriers can have a very large effect on grouse numbers, essentially eliminating the large surplus population required for shooting. Hence the persecution. There may only be a few at the moment, but if the illegal killing stopped then there would be quite a lot more.

    Regarding Richard Benyon's comments to BBOWT, of course the minister is going to say such things to that audience. It's what they want to hear but it doesn't really mean anything without action.

Comment
  • Redkite,

    My understanding is that even the research at Langholm Moor shows that harriers can have a very large effect on grouse numbers, essentially eliminating the large surplus population required for shooting. Hence the persecution. There may only be a few at the moment, but if the illegal killing stopped then there would be quite a lot more.

    Regarding Richard Benyon's comments to BBOWT, of course the minister is going to say such things to that audience. It's what they want to hear but it doesn't really mean anything without action.

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