The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Too wet to woo: Scotland’s barn owls at risk as climate change makes breeding more difficult

Stunning birds in decline as wetter, colder weather becomes the norm

- By Krissy Storrar kstorrar@sundaypost.com

The survival of the iconic barn owl is threatened by wetter, colder weather provoked by climate change, experts warn.

Scotland’s barn owls are the most northerly population in the world, and are one of the most vulnerable species to changes brought about by global warming. Prolonged rain and cold snaps are a killer combinatio­n for the birds as they struggle to catch enough prey in wet, chilly weather to ensure they survive until spring and can breed.

Experts have described the barn owl as an early warning system for the damaging declines caused by climate change and spoken of their fears that the species will not be a long- term feature in the British countrysid­e.

Their plight has also been highlighte­d by Winterwatc­h presenter and zoologist Megan Mccubbin, who last week captivated viewers with footage of barn owls and named them as her favourite birds.

Megan, stepdaught­er of wildlife presenter and conservati­onist Chris Packham, said conservati­on work helped halt a decline in the owls’ population in the 1980s but they now face a far bigger threat.

She told The Sunday Post: “Being able to see a barn owl in the wild, there’s no experience like it. They’ve got a beautiful, almost ghostly presence, and when the sun sets and the golden light comes in and highlights the fields where they hunt, then you see this white figure emerge.

“They are just beautiful to watch, you can’t take your eyes off them. They are absolutely stunning.

“But now they’re facing climate change. A really important message is that no individual is too small to make a difference. Every person counts.

“Climate change does feel like a big issue and for some people it does feel far away, but it’s here, and it is happening right now.”

Barn owls evolved in warmer temperatur­es and primarily hunt at night for small rodents.

They use their hearing rather than their sight to track prey, and rely on having a low body weight and soft feathers – which are not effective at repelling water – to hunt silently.

But long spells of rain mean they can face starvation as they can’t fly quietly enough with wet feathers, and they struggle to hear their prey.

Floodwater or snow can also change the habits of the small mammals they hunt.

Mortality rates for barn owls have peaks in autumn for juvenile birds then at this time of year for adults as they do not have enough body fat to survive if food becomes too scarce.

Even a cold snap of a week to 10 days can kill the birds due to their lack of fat reserves or they may be unable to get into breeding condition.

Wet weather also inhibits breeding, with some pairs having no chicks at all, and increasing numbers of summer storms can mean year- round problems for the owls.

Summer hunting is particular­ly important when there are chicks to be fed, and adults returning to the nest with wet feathers can cause their young to develop lifethreat­ening chills.

The current cold snap coupled with periods of heavy rain is also likely to spell high mortality rates for barn owls.

David Ramsden, head of conservati­on and one of the founders at the Barn Owl Trust, said: “It’s swings and roundabout­s, but at the moment it’s bad. There will be lots of adult barn owls and juveniles dying now, because this is coming into the main winter period.

“It’s a very current story as it’s happening right now.

“Through what’s happening now it’s good to get people to look at what’s going to happen in the future if we don’t cut our emissions.

“They’re a flagship species. You can write about barn owls and people will read it whereas they might not read about a little invertebra­te.

“Because they’ re so sensitive to environmen­tal change as well, they’re a great species to use as a flagship.”

He added: “Barn owls are not really well adapted for coping with cold, wet weather. Hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of years ago, they evolved in a much warmer climate further south.

“The barn owls in Scotland are the northernmo­st barn owls in the world. They do struggle when the weather is cold and wet. It’s not good.

“We not only get more rainfall generally, but we get more extreme weather events, we get record-breaking weather multiple times a year now, so it’s really bad news.

“In the short term, the rain today, the rain yesterday, the snowy weather, now is really bad news for adult barn owls, and for nesting success this coming spring.

“In the longer term, if we don’t seriously reduce carbon emissions every year then wildlife isn’t really going to stand much chance.

“There’s no reason to think barn owls would survive the environmen­tal changes that would happen.”

Barn owls experience­d a long-term decline in numbers from the early 1900s up to the 1980s, mainly due to changes in farming techniques, reduction of hedgerows and demolition or conversion of the traditiona­l barns they nested in.

Conservati­on efforts to create man- made nest boxes from the late ’ 80s onwards saw their population boosted from around 4,000 breeding pairs to an estimated 10,000.

Mike Toms, of the British Trust for Ornitholog­y, said Scotland’s barn owls did not experience such a significan­t boost to numbers.

The owls north of the border are particular­ly vulnerable to the weather, and can be forced further south by severe conditions in the north of the UK.

He said: “The issue of changing climate is important for barn owls.

“The increase in numbers has been a conservati­on success story.

“But particular­ly in Scotland, because they’re on the northern limit of the breeding range, the population probably hasn’t increased as much.

“Just as it is for people, it’s the unpredicta­bility of the weather that has an impact on owls.”

Barn owls have a beautiful, ghostly presence, you can’t take your eyes off them

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Megan Mccubbin

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