Western Mail

Things are booming for UK’s bittern population

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GROWING numbers of bitterns in Wales are contributi­ng to record population figures for the wetland bird, once extinct in the UK.

The number of “Britain’s loudest bird” increased in 2017, with experts who use the males’ foghorn-like booming call to survey the species counting at least 164 birds at 71 sites – including two in Wales – compared to 162 booming males at 78 sites last year.

The RSPB said the bird’s success was due to intensive efforts to protect their preferred habitat of dense, wet reedbeds.

Annual monitoring organised by the RSPB found the number of booming males increased by two in Somerset to 49, although there was a slight drop this year in core areas in eastern England such as the Suffolk coast, Norfolk Broads and the Fens.

Booming was reported from three new sites, two in Wales and one in the Ouse Washes, Cambridges­hire, and there was an increase in numbers in Wales, the RSPB said.

Bitterns, heron-like birds which were once prized in medieval banquets, were considered extinct as a breeding species in the UK by the 1870s.

They recolonise­d the UK in the early 20th century, with a peak of around 80 booming males in the 1950s, but then numbers declined to fewer than 20 in the 1990s.

By 1997, the species was facing extinction in the UK again, with just 11 booming males, mainly in Norfolk and Suffolk with a small outlying population at Leighton Moss, Lancashire.

The turnaround in the bird’s fortunes has been helped by legal protection of habitats and funding through two environmen­tal projects under the EU Life scheme to create new reedbed areas for them to live in, the RSPB said.

The wildlife charity called for levels of protection for the homes of species such as bitterns to remain or be improved as the UK leaves the European Union.

RPSB senior conservati­on scientist Simon Wotton said: “In the late 1990s, the bittern was heading towards extinction once again in the UK. But thanks to conservati­on efforts to restore and create its preferred habitat of wet reedbed, the bittern was saved and we’re delighted to see another record year for this amazing bird.”

 ??  ?? > The bittern – back from the brink
> The bittern – back from the brink

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