Shooting Times & Country Magazine

War of words as harrier vanishes

A satellite-tagged hen harrier disappeare­d on the Glorious Twelfth and RSPB Scotland has pointed the finger at grouse moor managers

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rural groups have rejected claims that grouse moor managers were responsibl­e for the disappeara­nce of a hen harrier.

rspb scotland says a satellitet­agged bird, named calluna, vanished over an aberdeensh­ire grouse moor near ballater when transmissi­ons from the tag ended abruptly on the glorious twelfth.

Ian thomson at rspb scotland said: “there is a depressing irony that calluna disappeare­d on the first day of the grouse shooting season. this bird joins the lengthenin­g list of satellitet­agged birds of prey that have disappeare­d, in highly suspicious circumstan­ces, almost exclusivel­y in areas intensivel­y managed for grouse shooting.”

calluna was hatched at the national trust for scotland’s mar lodge estate, near braemar, in June this year. she was the result

6 • Shooting Times & Country magazine of only the second successful breeding attempt by hen harriers on the estate in living memory. a spokesman for the national trust commented: “We are not going to let this stop our vital conservati­on work. We are going to carry on at mar lodge and our other properties doing what we can to ensure the survival and recovery of endangered species.

“If calluna’s fate adds to the body of evidence that raptors are being killed we need the scottish parliament to act swiftly and decisively to minimise the risk of this happening again at mar lodge and elsewhere.”

rural groups have dismissed speculatio­n that calluna’s disappeara­nce is down to raptor persecutio­n. the countrysid­e alliance (ca) responded: “the disappeara­nce of a tagged bird is not something new and certainly doesn’t necessaril­y equate to the death of a bird. earlier in 2017 the national press reported the death of a hen harrier, highlander, with the rspb publicisin­g foul play.

“the reappearan­ce of the bird, alive and well, 10 months later was the cause of some embarrassm­ent for the charity. the ca is determined to see an end to the thankfully rare illegal killing of birds of prey, but we question whether sensationa­l media releases followed by embarrassi­ng u-turns are the way to achieve that.”

david Johnstone, chairman of scottish land & estates, said: “local land managers reject the inference that the loss of signal from this tag is connected to grouse moor management and are now offering every assistance in searching the area where the last transmissi­on was recorded.

“they are dismayed that they were not informed earlier that the tag had stopped transmitti­ng nearly three weeks [before it was reported] as this would have assisted the search.”

“The disappeara­nce does not equate to the death of a bird”

 ??  ?? a hen harrier’s (not the one pictured) tag has stopped transmitti­ng
a hen harrier’s (not the one pictured) tag has stopped transmitti­ng

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