The Chronicle

Dismay as rare bird disappears

- By TONY HENDERSON tony.henderson@trinitymir­ror.com @HendRover

POLICE and the RSPB are trying to trace a satellite-tagged hen harrier that is missing in the North East.

The bird of prey vanished near Middleton-in-Teesdale.

The harrier, named Marc, was one of two chicks tagged as part of the EUfunded Hen Harrier LIFE+ project in July last year from a nest in the Scottish Borders.

Marc’s tag had been transmitti­ng regularly, showing no signs of any problems, until it suddenly stopped on the afternoon of February 5.

Data from Marc’s tag indicated he had been in the same area of upland farmland since late November before moving 10km north west on January 27 to an area of driven grouse moor, from here he posted several positions on February 5 until 2.04pm, after which the tag inexplicab­ly failed to send any further data.

Hen harriers are one of the UK’s rarest raptors with only three successful nests recorded in England in 2017.

There have been a number of other hen harriers that have gone missing in similar circumstan­ces both in England and Scotland since the tagging project began in 2015.

This includes Marc’s brother, a bird called Manu who was tagged in the same nest and was being monitored by the Northumber­land Hen Harrier Protection Partnershi­p but went missing in October 2017 with his last known location being close to a grouse moor in Northumber­land.

Mark Thomas, RSPB principal specialist, said: “Hen harriers are facing an uncertain future. These spectacula­r birds should be flourishin­g in our uplands but studies show that we are down to just a handful of pairs in England with illegal persecutio­n identified as a prime factor.

“So it’s depressing when yet another hen harrier goes off the radar like this, especially when the supporting tag data is so precise.”

A spokespers­on for Durham police said: “We are very concerned at the disappeara­nce of one of these iconic birds of prey.

“Hen harriers are fully protected by law and raptor persecutio­n is a national wildlife crime priority. We urge you to come forward if you have any informatio­n about the disappeara­nce of this bird.”

If you have any informatio­n relating to this incident (ref 163 2022018), call Durham police on 101 or the confidenti­al Raptor Crime Hotline on 03000 999 0101. All calls are anonymous.

In January last year another satellitet­agged hen harrier was found dead near Alnwick in Northumber­land.

Examinatio­n revealed two shotgun pellets in its body – one in the leg and one in the neck.

 ??  ?? Young hen harriers Manu, left, and Marc
Young hen harriers Manu, left, and Marc

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom