The Scotsman

Tagged bird of prey goes missing on grouse estate

● Rare hen harrier vanishes a month after flying the nest

- By ILONA AMOS Environmen­t Correspoen­det

Conservati­onists are appealing for informatio­n after a rare hen harrier disappeare­d on a shooting estate in Aberdeensh­ire earlier this month.

Data shows the young bird, which was fitted with a satellite tag, left its nest near Braemar in July. The female, called Calluna, was then tracked flying east over Deeside.

But the tag went dead on 12 August, which marks the start of the grouse shooting season.

The bird’s last recorded position was on a grouse moor a few miles north of Ballater, in the Cairngorms National Park.

The hen harrier is the UK’S most intensivel­y persecuted bird of prey. It is globally threatened and red-listed as a top priority for conservati­on.

Scotland is its UK stronghold, but numbers have fallen by 27 per cent since 2004. Only 460 breeding pairs remain.

The raptors live primarily on heather moorland and feed on voles and ground-nesting birds such as grouse, which has sparked conflict with managers of sporting estates.

Illegal killing is a key threat to the species’ survival.

Calluna was tagged as part of the Eu-funded Hen Harrier LIFE project, run by wildlife charity RSPB Scotland. She hatched from a nest on Mar Lodge Estate, owned by the National Trust for Scotland.

“This bird joins the lengthenin­g list of satellite-tagged birds of prey that have disappeare­d in highly suspicious circumstan­ces, almost exclusivel­y in areasinare­asintensiv­elymanaged for grouse shooting,” said Ian Thomson, head of investigat­ions for RSPB Scotland.

“The transmitte­rs used in this project are incredibly reliable and the sudden halt in data being received from it, with no hint of a malfunctio­n, is very concerning.”

David Frew, operations manager at Mar Lodge, said: “It is deeply saddening to learn that Calluna appears to have been lost, so soon after fledging.”

But conservati­onists have come under fire over their handling of the case.

David Johnstone, chairman of membership organisati­on 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 ago, as this would have assisted the search.” 0 The final satellite transmissi­on from a tag on the hen harrier, named Calluna, came from a grouse shooting estate near Ballater

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