I have asked our Bowland Project Officer, Jude Lane (pictured), to offer her personal perspective on the death of a hen harrier known as Bowland Betty.  The hen harrier was recovered from a moorland area managed for grouse shooting in the Yorkshire Dales by Stephen Murphy of Natural England on 5 July 2012.  The bird’s death is being investigated by North Yorkshire Police.  Information from a satellite transmitter, a detailed post mortem carried out by the Zoological Society of London helped to prove that the bird had been shot.  Yet more evidence that hen harriers continue to be subject to determined effort to eradicate them from our countryside.  Enough is enough.  We need action now.  Read Jude's personal account and please do support her calls for urgent action by the Government.

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Those of you who followed the Skydancer blog over the spring/summer this year will have been familiar with hearing about the exploits of the female hen harrier 74843 or Bowland Betty as she was known to us locally.

The reason I've been unable to provide you with regular updates since my last post in June is because in July, Betty was found dead in the Yorkshire Dales National Park. She was recovered by the North Yorkshire Police and Natural England after fixes from her tag indicated that something was wrong and since then the Zoological Society London have been undertaking state of the art tests to determine the cause of her death.

We've just received the results, which confirm that she was shot and that the resulting injury was directly responsible for her death.

Gutted. That's how I feel at this news. I was privileged enough to have been present when she had her sat tag fitted. I also had, what I felt to be, the honour of placing her back in the nest once the job had been done. As I placed her back in the nest with her siblings that day, I made sure to wish her luck; silly as it may sound it's something I always do. The natural world is a harsh place for young harriers, even without any threat from illegal persecution. So, superstitious as I may be, in my mind they need all the luck they can get.

Betty was the first harrier I had 'known' to have had a satellite transmitter fitted. I, like so many others had watched her grow from a little (kind of ugly if I'm honest!) vulnerable white ball of down to a fine young female via video footage recorded at her nest in 2011. The prospect of being able to follow her progress for the next few years and learn a little more about hen harrier behaviour from a bird I had actually held was incredibly exciting. 

Normally I never know whether the young birds that have fledged from nests I have monitored survive or not, so knowing she had made it through the winter was fantastic and had me hoping that she would go on to fledge broods of harriers herself, maybe even on the United Utilities estate this year.

In my mind, Betty was England's symbol of hope for hen harriers. She had become quite the celebrity here in Bowland and indeed across northern England, with almost everyone I came in contact with asking what she was up to. No satellite tagged females have ever proved so mobile, especially during the breeding season, so the information she was providing us with was not only entertaining but incredibly valuable. It angers me that someone has taken the life of this beautiful creature and with it our ability to understand more about the behaviours of these incredible birds.

I want the death of Betty, the young bird I was privileged enough to hold in my hands, to have significance. It already has by proving that hen harrier persecution is still occurring - we need Government and its agencies to use this knowledge to redouble efforts to protect and ensure the recovery of this species.

If Betty's death is to have a silver lining, it must be in persuading the Government to take illegal persecution seriously and to act to bring this intolerable Victorian practice to an end. We urgently need Government to implement an emergency recovery plan to bring the hen harrier back from the brink, as extinction in England for a second time beckons. A vital first step is to ensure that the National Wildlife Crime Unit, which works to ensure the laws protecting birds of prey are enforced, has a future beyond this March.

Like so many people, I feel privileged to have known betty in her short life. Her sad, untimely death may not be in vain if it means other young hen harriers avoid a similar fate.

Parents
  • It is all very sad and represents a big blot on this country. It is disgraceful that Governments should not take decisive action to stamp out this illegal persecution once and for all. (Again it reflects badly on our politicians like so many other cases). As you say Martin action is urgently needed and I know the RSPB wil be doing everything it can. Having said that, an overall strategy is need to bring the Hen Harrier back to England. I wonder as part of that strategy a reintroduction programme (similar to the Ospreys at Rutland Water) would be worth considering, to places like the New Forest, and the Dorset Heathlands, where shooting is presumably much less intense if at all. Although the Hen Harrier is naturally thought of as a northern gouse moor species this may not necessarily be have been the case in the distant past. It may have occured quite widely over much of the heathlands of southern England. (What is the information on that point?). Such a reintroduction programme would, in no way, be a substitute for riding the hen harrier of its current persecution on northern grouse moors but merely a further branch of the overall recovery strategy of this iconic bird.

    redkite

Comment
  • It is all very sad and represents a big blot on this country. It is disgraceful that Governments should not take decisive action to stamp out this illegal persecution once and for all. (Again it reflects badly on our politicians like so many other cases). As you say Martin action is urgently needed and I know the RSPB wil be doing everything it can. Having said that, an overall strategy is need to bring the Hen Harrier back to England. I wonder as part of that strategy a reintroduction programme (similar to the Ospreys at Rutland Water) would be worth considering, to places like the New Forest, and the Dorset Heathlands, where shooting is presumably much less intense if at all. Although the Hen Harrier is naturally thought of as a northern gouse moor species this may not necessarily be have been the case in the distant past. It may have occured quite widely over much of the heathlands of southern England. (What is the information on that point?). Such a reintroduction programme would, in no way, be a substitute for riding the hen harrier of its current persecution on northern grouse moors but merely a further branch of the overall recovery strategy of this iconic bird.

    redkite

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