Natur Cymru
A full version of
this article appears in the magazine.
The hawk of salt water, the osprey Pandion haliaetus,
occurs across Europe, Asia as far as Japan, throughout North
America and, in the southern hemisphere, in Australia, Indonesia
and New Guinea. It is thought to be resident in Cuba but migratory
elsewhere.
So why has it taken so long to colonise Wales?
There is no written evidence of breeding here in the past, though
there are historical and cultural references which seem to suggest
that it may have done. The Swansea Coat of Arms bears an osprey on
its crest, the recently formed rugby club is The Ospreys. Although
I have been unable to discover it, there must be some substance in
the portrayal of the bird in this way.
Ospreys nest
In the late 1990s birds were seen in a variety
of likely breeding places. In an effort to attract their attention,
some artificial nests were erected where there had been regular
sightings. These have proved successful in attracting ospreys at
Rutland Water and are ‘backyard’ features in America where ospreys
seem happy to live alongside people.
In 2003 one of these platforms was erected
beside the river Severn on the Montgomeryshire Wildlife Trust
Reserve of Dolydd Hafren, where there had been many sightings of
birds fishing and carrying sticks, but only a Canada goose, crows
and a kestrel showed passing interest. However, the following year
a fisherman watched an osprey catch a fish then fly to a distant
tree, a dead Douglas fir in which a nest was visible. He reported
this to the Wildlife Trust and, as the site was on private
farmland, with the help of the farmer it was kept under wraps, and
a group of volunteers stood guard.
Amazingly, at the same time, a second nest was
discovered near Glaslyn in north-west Wales. (See Natur
Cymru No. 12) The RSPB and the Countryside Council for Wales
decided to publicise this site and erected a public viewpoint with
cameras and telescopes and, following the example set at Loch
Garten in 1959, invited in the general public. The male of this
pair was found to have been ringed at Rutland in 1998.
The two pairs, however, enjoyed mixed
fortunes. During a storm the Glaslyn nest was blown out of the
tree. The two young did not survive. The Severn valley pair were
now bringing fish to the nest and on 4th July the head
of a single chick could be seen. In the hope of ringing this chick
Roy Denis, the renowned osprey man from Scotland, and ringer Tony
Cross attempted to reach the nest from a hired ‘cherry picker’, but
they were unable to do so because of thick vegetation at the base
of the tree. The growing chick was now flexing its wings and left
the nest on 8th August 2004 – the first recorded
fledging of an osprey chick in Wales. The parent birds were
identified by the rings they carried. The male was ringed at
Rutland Water in 1997 and the female ringed in Perthshire in 2000.
Sadly neither bird returned the following year. The Glaslyn pair
have bred successfully every year since then (2005-09).
A new location
Encouraged by the success at these two sites,
Jim Marshall, warden of the Montgomeryshire Wildlife Trusts Cors
Dyfi Reserve, organised the construction of a nest platform on the
Dyfi Estuary. In the first summer ospreys spent the whole of the
season in the area but did not take to the proffered podium. There
were high expectations for the following year. On 5th
May 2008 we watched a male osprey catch a fish and carry it to the
platform to eat. Hopes were even higher when a female arrived on
the 24th June, but it was too late in the season. There
is a critical date for the laying of the first egg and this was
past.
In 2009, an elevated viewing hide complete
with telescopes was erected under the supervision of Emyr Evans,
who has successfully managed the Glaslyn project for four years.
The hide has panoramic views over the surrounding reserve and
saltmarsh. Cameras and a microphone were mounted on a dead tree
which had been rescued from the river and placed close to the nest
platform. A visitor centre equipped with plasma television screens
and displays of osprey pictures was constructed, and a car park for
the expected visitors was renovated. On cue, on 10th
April a female osprey arrived followed by a male a few days later.
The Dyfi Osprey Project was launched on 25th April.
All summer long the ospreys hung about,
fishing, adding sticks to the nest and mating after a fashion.
Occasionally one would disappear for a few days, and once there
were three birds on the nest! They didn’t seem sure who was who,
the female often taking the male role and trying to initiate
mating. The centre received more than 20,000 visitors, many
attracted by the banners at the car park entrance. Not all were
lucky, but many saw their first osprey. Sadly the birds did not
breed, probably because they were too young and not sure of
themselves. They were not seen again after the end of August. Our
fingers are crossed that 2010 will be the year of the osprey at
Cors Dyfi.
Brayton Holt,
Montgomeryshire County Bird Recorder
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