Perthshire Advertiser

Starvation fears for owls after cold winter

Birds found dead in region

- ROBBIE CHALMERS

The bodies of dead birds have been discovered in a rural Perthshire area having starved in the rigours of the recent harsh winter.

Land managers in the area, renowned for high barn owl breeding success, fear the birds died of starvation and that it was caused by the recent heavy snowfall - which some called the worst winter for the species in over a decade.

While numbers of the birds of prey have declined alarmingly due to changing farming practice and climate change, Glen Quaich, Sma’ Glen and Glen Cuchil in Perthshire have seen numbers rise in recent years.

Management by local shepherds and gamekeeper­s offers a bountiful food supply and the owls find shelter in many of the scattered farm barns.

However, the full impact of the snow cover in January and early February has had a devastatin­g affect on the species, and the extent is only expected to be seen when licensed ornitholog­ists return to track the birds this spring.

Coordinato­r for the Tayside and Central Scotland Moorland Group Alice Bugden said: “I have received multiple pictures of dead barn owls from local land managers.

“The birds have sadly perished in this harsh winter, unable to source enough food. We will not understand the devastatin­g impact until the coming breeding season.”

Scottish barn owls are at the most northerly extent of their range and, unlike other owls, do not have leg feathers, making them susceptibl­e to weather extremes.

In these Perthshire glens the barn owl almost disappeare­d in the heavy snows of 2010 and, naturally, land managers are fearful this may happen again.

Two of the fatalities had rings which enabled the group to trace them back to the local ornitholog­ical ringer who fitted them.

Both were 2020 birds and had only ranged a few miles.

A local farmer’s wife said: “We are saddened to hear the ringed owl we found in our barn only nested at the end of the drive.

“We also found a further two barn owls dead in the barns as well.

“It is just devastatin­g how badly they have been effected by this winter. However, it is no surprise as a lot of animals, including our hill sheep, have struggled.”

Local gamekeeper Ben Stevens added: “I have a barn owl living in my barn and I know many shepherds and keepers in the area have similar residents in their barns.

“Sadly, I haven’t seen ours return in the last week, so I fear the weather has taken its toll on the poor bird.”

Given the relative health of the local population, prior to the harsh winter, it is hoped there will be sufficient survivors to continue the breeding population.

It took nearly three years for numbers to rise again after the snows of 2010.

Only now, with a number of mortalitie­s, are locals realising how brutal the snowdrifts and freezing temperatur­es were for the owls.

Local shepherd Ben Mackinnon said: “We have always had barn owls in our barns.

“During those tough snowy weeks I noticed a barn owl taking residence in our sheep shed, with the sheep in it.

“Clearly it was using it to predate on mice in the straw bedding because there was no food elsewhere that they could get at.”

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