The Scotsman

Capercaill­ie numbers take off thanks to timber project

● 43 displaying males in the area ● Management techniques hailed

- By TIM BUGLER

Capercaill­ie numbers in Strathspey have “increased dramatical­ly” thanks to timber management techniques introduced over the past 15 years, it has been announced.

At the start of the program, only six displaying males were known to be in the area but this figure has now jumped to 43. This could mean that overall around 200 capercaill­ie could be thriving on the National Forest Estate thanks to the measures introduced by Forest Enterprise Scotland.

The organisati­on, a subsidiary of the Forestry Commission, began a programme to integrate timber production and recreation with capercaill­ie conservati­on in the area a decade and a half ago.

Species ecologist with Forest Enterprise Scotland, Kenny Kortland, said: “Throughout this period we have actively managed the timber resource and have provided recreation­al opportunit­ies for over 300,000 visitors every year. We have also carried out ongoing research and this has shown that our forest management creates ideal habitat for the capercaill­ie.

“These efforts appear to be working because the birds have shown a spectacula­r increase. In our view, this clearly indicates that caper can prosper in well managed, working forests.

“The key seems to be that thinning the forest to extract timber creates ideal habitat for capercaill­ie chicks,

0 Around 200 capercaill­ie could be thriving on the National Forest Estate because breeding success has been high by contempora­ry standards.”

The Forest Enterprise Scotland success is in stark contrast to what is happening elsewhere in the country, where the capercaill­ie population continues to decline rapidly.

Wildlife experts say it is noteworthy that capercaill­ie numbers are increasing at a time when numbers of potential predators have too. They believe that each of the predator groups are naturally keeping numbers down which in turn has had positive spin-offs for the capercaill­ie.

Mr Kortland said: “We think that the various predators are controllin­g each other and this allows the capercaill­ie to thrive. For example, goshawks are recent colonists of these woods and they are eating a lot of crows, which eat capercaill­ie eggs. Similarly, foxes prey upon pine martens, which eat capercaill­ie eggs and young.”

Outwith Strathspey – which is now seen as the iconic species’ last refuge – both population and range of capercaill­ie have fallen hugely over the last few decades.

Capercaill­ie population­s have plummeted from over 10,000 pairs in the 1960s to less than 1,300 birds in 2011.

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