In March, I promised (here) to provide an update on the hen harrier breeding season in England. 

I genuinely hoped that this mid-season update would mark the beginning of a turnaround in the fortunes of England’s hen harriers, driven by the positive partnership approach set out in Defra’s hen harrier action plan. Unfortunately, the news on the ground suggests this is shaping up to be very poor year for England’s hen harriers, with only a tiny handful of nesting attempts to date.

Image courtesy of Dom Greves

This is obviously not what we were hoping to report. There are three principal factors which could, to varying degrees, explain the small number of nests this year.

  • Weather – various late cold snaps may have hindered the birds’ nesting attempts and successes. While it was a relatively mild winter, it has been a rather cold, late spring in some places. There’s a slim chance we may get a run of late nesting attempts.
  • Food supply – in particular, vole numbers. Voles are an important food source for hen harriers early in the breeding season and their populations fluctuate in cycles, with peaks in some years and troughs in others. Fewer voles means fewer successful nests and perhaps fewer territorial pairs. However, vole populations tend to fluctuate on a very local level, so while it may be a factor in some areas, it’s unlikely to be affecting things across the board.
  • Direct human interference – there have been worrying incidents, such as a man with a gun being seen with a plastic hen harrier (link), a man cautioned for the use of three illegal pole traps in North Yorkshire near to where a hen harrier was seen flying and numerous incidents of persecution of other birds of prey (link).  I was pleased that to see that the Moorland Association issued a statement condemning this.  In addition, the sudden and unexplained disappearance of another of our satellite tagged hen harriers, Highlander, is also huge cause for concern. Sister to Sky, who disappeared in 2014, and mate to two of the disappeared males from last year, you can read more about her story on our Skydancer blog (here).

And, of course, we know that persecution is the primary reason hen harriers are on the brink in the first place (link).  This is one of the reasons why we continue to call for licensing of driven grouse shooting.  As our Chairman, Professor Steve Ormerod, wrote recently (here in response to a challenge from my predecessor, Mark Avery) we believe that "a tightening up of regulation, with associated penalties and withdrawal of the opportunity to shoot on all areas if breaches are found, will achieve what we want incrementally". 

Perhaps most worrying of all, is anecdotal feedback highlighting a general lack of hen harriers in England (as well as south and east Scotland). It’s not just that hen harriers aren’t breeding successfully, there seems to be a notable absence of birds in many areas where we would expect to see them. This makes it even more important for people to keep their eyes out for hen harriers. Our hen harrier hotline (link) is there to report any sightings.

First reports are also coming in from other areas of the UK through this year’s national hen harrier survey. It’s too early to draw any meaningful conclusions from this, as we are only half way through the survey period.  Anecdotally, it does appear that the season got underway later than usual in Scotland, although birds are nonetheless present in areas which are free from a history of persecution.

A run of late nests might help to turn the situation around and it will be illuminating to see how the year plays out in northern England and south and west Scotland, compared with areas further north.

However, I must stress that, while this picture remains incomplete, the signs are not encouraging. 

The RSPB (through the dedication of staff and volunteers) will continue to work hard to improve the situation including through the RSPB Hen Harrier Life Project. We also remain committed to Defra’s hen harrier action plan. It would be premature to change tack based on early returns from a late season and it is in everyone’s interest for this plan to succeed. It might yet be that late nests save the day and we’re able to point to positive progress come the end of the season. The suspicious incident with the decoy and the pole trapping case were both disappointing and unhelpful in the extreme.  However, the the action plan must deliver results (link) and that means more hen harriers.  

I’ll report back in September when we have a complete picture of how the year has gone. Here’s hoping I’ll be able to relay some more positive news at that point. We'll continue to follow progress closely but, in the meantime, I’m looking forward to being at our Saltholme reserve on Sunday 7 August for one of several Hen Harrier Day events across the UK (events will also be held at our Rainham and Arne reserves).  

Do check out the Birders Against Wildlife Crime website (link) for your nearest event and please come along to show your support for these magnificent birds. Our hen harriers are missing and we want them back.

  • Your Chairman says that "a tightening up of regulation, with associated penalties and withdrawal of the opportunity to shoot on all areas if breaches are found, will achieve what we want incrementally".

    How does that fit with the man who walked into a Police Station and confessed to setting three illegal pole traps in a place where a female Hen Harrier had been seen (following lengthy investigation by yourselves) and being given a caution by the police and a suspension by his estate? An estate that I believe is still a member of the Moorland Association, who haven't condemned this with any more than empty words.

    What about the man with the decoy and shotgun, whom the police wouldn't even investigate?

    Even where we already have laws and penalties in place, they aren't being enforced or applied.

    At what point will you accept that your approach isn't working? Will there be any Hen Harriers left by then? You're advancing incrementally but Hen Harriers are declining exponentially.

  • Don't worry Martin; Keith Cowieson of anti-raptor group Songbird Survival is backing you up, which must be terribly reassuring. And the Moorland Association are pleasing you, all very jolly indeed. Just how tiny are these tiny hands please? Raptor Persecution UK are suggesting you may be alluding to one pair or none at all.

  • I'm afraid this is very much the reward I expected RSPB to get for trying to work with Grouse shooting interests. There has been nothing in the body language of the vociferous end of shooting to suggest they have seen attempted co-operation as anything other than a sign of weakness. Ultimately, the disaster is for shooting as no one could be doing a better job of promoting the 'ban Grouse shooting' case. There was an opportunity here for a turnaround and whilst I think you got it wrong, I certainly wouldn't dispute that there was a case for giving it  a try - but, with the way shooting interests have been behaving and speaking recently, and  with the increasing intensification of management, this outcome seemed the more likely. I am sure we'll be hearing all about the weather - but it won't be very convincing against the backdrop, growing almost daily, of blatant incidents of persecution - especially when raptors don't even need to leave their RSPB reserve to be persecuted.    

  • Hi Martin!

    Not looking good is it?

    Your update is rather vague. Are there any Hen Harriers currently nesting in England or have there just been attempts? Failed attempts? What is 'a tiny handful'?

    By Hen Harrier day in early August it will be perfectly clear what the situation has been this year. It would be reasonable for the RSPB to set out its next steps then, surely?

    The best Hen Harrier plan remains getting driven grouse shooting banned by signing this e-petition petition.parliament.uk/.../125003 which has already been supported by over 40,000 people (most of them, I guess, RSPB members).

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

  • Thanks for this report Martin. I have to say one remains very deeply suspicious of the shooting industry that they are not keeping and will not keep, to their side of the agreement and stop killing hen harriers. It is also very disappointing when all that a person receives for setting pole traps in this day and age is a caution when a very hefty fine or a prison sentence would be appropriate. Clearly the need for vicarious liability in respect of the land owner cries out as a legal requirement.in England.

    When one looks at the dire state of the hen harriers and the other devastation of our moorlands perpetrated on the majority of driven grouse moors, it must reflect extremely poorly on a Grovenment that steadfastly refuses to take the necessary decisive action in respect of their owners to halt all the abuses being carried out. This lack of action can only be due to the vested interests that this Government and certain members of its Party have in the shooting industry coupled with their lack of any real interest in nature conservation to which they only pay lip service.

    Because of all this it is a very hard battle, but keep persevering and campaigning RSPB. Without you and Mark Avery the hen harriers would be a lot worse off.

    redkite