Illegal bird-hunting in Malta

Hello folks,

Mr aiki and I recently got back from a week in Malta, where we worked on BirdLife Malta's Springwatch camp along with dozens of others of a wide range of ages and nationalities. I was pretty well-informed about the situation there before I went, but was still shocked by some of the stuff we saw and heard about. There are some 12,000 registered hunters on the islands and nearly 5,000 bird trappers, an incredibly high density (total population on the islands is about 400,000). While some hunters are undoubtedly law-abiding and only shoot the designated quarry species in the open season, many are not and are totally obsessed with killing as many birds of as many different species as possible, throughout the year. Large and spectacular species, such as raptors and herons, are particularly sought after as trophies. This is killing for killing's sake.

Malta has, unsurprisingly, a very impoverished breeding bird fauna. Many species which could and should nest on the islands do not, because of this intense persecution. However, the islands' position on the central Mediterranean flyway means that migrating birds do visit, often in large numbers, on their way to or from northern Europe. Some may be UK-bound. The Springwatch camp (and its autumn equivalent, Raptorwatch) exists to try to deter the illegal hunters, by maintaining a visible presence in the countryside, and by taking video evidence of any illegal hunting activity observed.

During our week we saw many migrants including Golden Oriole, Collared Flycatcher, Montagu's Harrier, Lesser Kestrel and Red-rumped Swallow. Sadly, nearly half of all the birds of prey we observed had obvious gunshot injuries to their legs or wings. All of the teams heard numerous shots fired throughout the day (this was the close season so there should have been none) filmed illegal hunting on numerous occasions and experienced daily abuse and attempts at intimidation from hunters.

Many birders boycott Malta in the hope of shaming the government into tackling this problem. BirdLife Malta takes a different stance, saying that the more birders active in the Maltese countryside, the more rattled the hunters will be and the more they are forced to leave their guns at home. The situation is really bad right now but the efforts of BirdLife Malta do make a real difference.

I've done some blog posts about it here if anyone wants to read more: http://robandmazza.blogspot.com/ and the BirdLife Malta website is here: http://www.birdlifemalta.org/

Thanks!