Corncrake reintroduction success23/06/2008 09:36:58
June 2008. A reintroduction project to bring the corncrake back to England has met with initial success. This year there are 12 male corncrakes calling at the reintroduction site - the RSPB Nene Washes reserve in Cambridgeshire. The corncrake was formerly a widespread bird of hay meadows and crops across the UK, and Europe, but this dove-sized bird - a distant relative of the crane - has not been able to cope with the mechanization of grass cutting, which destroys nests and young birds. Functionally extinct in England Reintroduction project The project involves releasing hand-reared corncrakes, bred at ZSLWhipsnade Zoo, after acclimatisation in release pens at the Nene Washes. Corncrakes are only summer visitors to the UK, so in autumn the birds migrate to central Africa for the winter. Their return to the release site can only be detected by the loud rasping calls of the adult males trying to attract a mate. Releases began in earnest in 2003 and corncrakes bred in the wild at the Nene Washes for the first time for many decades in 2004. Since then, a total of 23 adult male corncrakes have been counted at the reserve.
Dr Mark Avery is the RSPB's Conservation Director, he said: "It is a small but significant miracle that these birds, raised by keepers in a zoo, are capable of migrating successfully to Africa and back. Restoring lost wildlife is often difficult and it is better not to lose it in the first place. The RSPB-led corncrake conservation programme in Scotland demonstrates that declining populations can be turned around by concerted action. This re-introduction means that we can try to spread that success and return the corncrake to places where its chances of recolonising naturally are slight". Jamie Graham is the senior keeper in charge of corncrake breeding at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo. He said: "This is fantastic news and it's great to know that birds we have bred here have made it back safely from migration. It means the project is showing very promising signs that a sustainable population is being created at the Nene Washes from a captive bred group.
Due to the sensitivity of the area, visitors are not given access to the Nene Washes. Corncrakes In 2007, there were 1,278 corncrakes in Great Britain, up from around 600 calling males in 1998, and up from 1,042 in 2004.
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