The Daily Telegraph

Where eagles dare not: birds shift flight path to avoid Ukraine war

- By Sarah Knapton SCIENCE EDITOR

MIGRATING eagles are avoiding flying over war-torn Ukraine, experts have discovered, and it may harm their ability to breed.

Between March and April, the greater spotted eagle leaves its wintering areas in southern Europe and East Africa, and heads north to important breeding grounds in Belarus.

The usual route takes it straight through Ukraine but tracking data shows the birds are making major diversions to avoid the conflict, and are spending less time stopping at their usual refuelling sites in the country.

Experts from the University of East

Anglia (UEA) and the British Trust for Ornitholog­y tagged 19 birds and found they travelled an extra 52 miles on average, with females spending 246 hours in the air compared with 193 hours before the war.

Likewise, males are now taking an average of 181 hours to reach breeding grounds compared with 125 hours pre-conflict.

The study, published in Current Biology is the first to demonstrat­e how war is causing a major disruption to the migratory patterns of rare birds.

Dr Charlie Russell, a postgradua­te researcher in the school of environmen­tal sciences at UEA, said: “We did not expect to be following these birds as they migrated through an active conflict zone.

“Our findings provide a rare window into how conflicts affect wildlife, improving our understand­ing of the potential impacts of exposure to such events or other extreme human activities that are difficult to predict.

“These types of disturbanc­es can have significan­t impacts on the behaviour, and potentiall­y fitness of the eagles. For individual­s breeding in these areas, or other species that are less able to respond to disturbanc­e, the impacts are likely to be much greater.”

Greater spotted eagles are large raptors that are classified as a vulnerable species by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature.

The team was already studying the species when the war started, monitoring the disruption caused to migratory routes by bad weather or drought, and the destructio­n of essential habitats.

However, during the invasion the team found that the eagles, which had previously been fitted with GPS tracking devices, were exposed to artillery fire, jets, tanks and other weaponry, as well as unpreceden­ted numbers of soldiers moving through the landscape.

They discovered the eagles were making large deviations from their traditiona­l migratory routes.

The team also found that fewer birds stopped in Ukraine before returning to their breeding grounds, with just six out of 19 (30 per cent) making stopovers.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom