Western Mail

Police chase ‘number of inquiries’ in hunt for osprey nest vandals

- TESS DE LA MARE newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

POLICE have said they are following up “a number of inquiries” as they hunt for vandals who took a chainsaw to the perch of two nesting ospreys.

The nesting platform had been set up by the Brenig Osprey Project conservati­on programme in partnershi­p with the North Wales Wildlife Trust.

The platform was host to a breeding pair that had already laid their first egg.

North Wales Police’s rural crime team are investigat­ing and have said they believe the perpetrato­rs arrived by boat at about 9.45pm on Friday and would have a “strong motive” to rid the lake area of ospreys.

The team tweeted on Sunday: “We are following up a number of inquiries and also using the latest technology to help us move this investigat­ion in the right direction.

“Motives are a huge clue for this crime and a phone call today has given us one that we hadn’t considered.”

Rob Taylor, the team’s manager, said in a video appeal posted on

Twitter: “Ospreys are a very rare, highly protected Schedule 1 bird – the greatest protection in the UK.

“They’re very iconic in Wales, we literally until a few years ago only had one breeding pair and now we have a handful of breeding pairs and this was one of them.

“Their first egg had been laid yesterday.”

Mr Taylor said the team had footage of the act because there were cameras on the platform, adding: “We’re pulling all the stops out to try and catch the person or persons responsibl­e for this. Believe me they will receive the full force of the law if we do catch them.”

He continued: “The whole team are absolutely devastated and I am sure the whole community are – these birds give a lot of people a lot of pleasure.

“I can’t understand how anybody would do something like that.”

On Sunday, the North Wales Wildlife Trust tweeted an image of the two ospreys looking at the space where their nest should have been.

Brenig Osprey Project said they had cleared one of the nearby platforms that was not in use to see if the breeding pair would relocate to it and potentiall­y lay another egg.

They thanked the public for all their offers of financial support and volunteeri­ng.

In a Facebook group, it said: “Until we know whether they’ll use it, our protection measures will be mostly reactive and there may be limitation­s on what can be delivered at the new platform. Again, please bear with us whilst we get things in place – we’ll update everyone as soon as we possibly can.”

The group urged anyone with informatio­n to contact North Wales Police, quoting crime reference number Z059732.

It finished: “We might be signing off now for a little while, and may take longer to get back to inquiries than normal.

“Please rest assured that this is because we are concentrat­ing on the

birds themselves – but we’ll do everything we can to keep you informed.”

Ospreys had been absent from Wales for around 400 years before they recolonise­d in the area in 2004 and, according to television presenter and naturalist Iolo Williams, to date there are only five pairs of ospreys in the region.

During an interview with BBC Breakfast on Sunday, Iolo said: “Why is the million-dollar question.

“Everyone is mystified, these are birds that everybody loves.

“Is it an individual with a grudge against one of the organisati­ons involved, is it someone who doesn’t like the birds or is it just somebody who thought it was a good idea at the time to cut down the tree? We simply don’t know. What we do know is, because of where the nest is, it was a well-planned organisati­on, a wellplanne­d event. It’s just environmen­tal vandalism of the worst kind, really.

“It is brutal, absolutely brutal.”

 ?? North Wales Wildlife Trust ?? > An egg had been laid in the nest a day before the platform was destroyed
North Wales Wildlife Trust > An egg had been laid in the nest a day before the platform was destroyed
 ??  ?? The nest lies in ruins at Llyn Brenig Reservoir after the pole on which it sat was cut with a chainsaw
The nest lies in ruins at Llyn Brenig Reservoir after the pole on which it sat was cut with a chainsaw

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