Highs and lows for Irish Red Kites in 201122/01/2012 17:13:46
Red Kite @ showing the solar powered satellite tag that helped locate her carcass © Marc Ruddock January 2011. After an absence of 200 years as a breeding species in Ireland, Red Kites are once again a familiar sight in parts of the east coast, thanks to the success of the Irish Red Kite Reintroduction Project. The Golden Eagle Trust, National Parks and Wildlife Service and Welsh Kite Trust have collected 120 Red Kite chicks from nests in Wales, which have been subsequently reared and released in County Wicklow between 2007 and 2011. The fruits of this labour were confirmed by NPWS ranger, Damian Clarke, who recorded the first brood of "Irish born" kites in Wicklow in 2010. Following this milestone, the project has gone from strength to strength, and in 2011 there were 14 breeding pairs of kites in Wicklow, which produced a minimum of 17 young. ![]() Red kite nest, lined with sheep wool, in Wicklow with Rat prey © Damian Clarke At least 4 kites had poison Dr. Marc Ruddock, Red Kite Project Manager for the Golden Eagle Trust, said, "There is nothing more heart-breaking than having to collect the carcass of a bird after having followed its development from a small, downy chick in Wales and then watching it flying free in Ireland". Analysis of the Red Kite carcasses under a post-mortem protocol operated by the National Parks and Wildlife Service, Department of Agriculture and the State Laboratory revealed that at least four of the kites contained the second generation rat poison, brodifacoum. Dietary analysis of the kites, both in Wicklow and Dublin, has shown that they are hunting and scavenging rats, which puts them at risk from secondary poisoning from rodenticides. Dr. Ruddock further said, "We recognise the requirement for rodent control in terms of human health and food safety, but urge amateur and professional users alike to ensure that rodent control is carefully planned to reduce the risk to non-target wildlife". Best practice rodent eradication strategies record information such as the quantity and location of all baits and require bait stations to be regularly inspected and not left exposed to non-target animals and birds. Furthermore, dead rodents should be collected and disposed of safely and baits should be removed at the end of the treatment. John Lusby, Raptor Conservation Officer with BirdWatch Ireland, noted "the efforts of the Golden Eagle Trust to restore our Red Kite population have been phenomenal. These deaths however highlight an area of serious concern; recent research has also shown that other species such as Barn owls, Kestrels and Long-eared owls are at significant risk". Rodenticide In addition to the problems posed to Red Kites and other wildlife through the legal use of Rat poisons, two other (untagged) Red Kites were confirmed to have been illegally poisoned by Alphachloralose in Wicklow last autumn. Dr. Ruddock continued, "It remains clear there are still serious issues which require further attention and action to protect our Irish raptors".
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