The Scotsman

Numbers of rare corncrakes drop by a fifth in two years

● Conservati­onists fear Brexit could threaten measures to save the species

- By ILONA AMOS

Population­s of one of Scotland’s rarest breeding birds have declined for the second year running, a new survey has revealed.

The latest figures show the number of corncrakes has dropped by 3 per cent in the past 12 months and a massive 20 per cent since 2014.

The 2016 annual count by conservati­on charity RSPB Scotland found there are now 1,059 calling males in Scotland, the last remaining UK stronghold for the species.

Corncrakes breed in Scotland during spring and summer before migrating to Africa for winter.

Today the threatened birds are found in just a few isolated parts of the country, mainly on the islands and the far north-west coast.

The Isle of Tiree was their key stronghold this year, with 346 calling males recorded there.

The species began disappeari­ng in the mid 19th century, coinciding with mechanisat­ion in agricultur­e and earlier hay harvests.

By the 1990s the annual drop in numbers was so great that, had it continued, the species would be extinct in the UK today. At that time just 400 calling males remained.

0 Corncrake numbers reached an all-time low in the 1990s

The good news is corncrakes have recovered considerab­ly.

But conservati­onists fear the UK’S exit from the European Union may jeopardise support for wildlife-friendly farming initiative­s and threaten recent progress in conserving the species.

They are calling for Scottish leaders to safeguard measures to help their survival.

“Effective financial support to crofters and farmers has enabled them to deliver what threatened wildlife needs, benefittin­g nature, farming communitie­s and all of us as a result,” said Stuart Housden, director of RSPB Scotland.

He said existing environmen­tal schemes and payment rates “must remain in place” until new arrangemen­ts are made.

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