canberrabirds
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To: | "'martin butterfield'" <>, "'COG List'" <> |
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Subject: | Escaping birds |
From: | "Philip Veerman" <> |
Date: | Sat, 28 Aug 2010 18:31:27 +1000 |
Martin,
That
is curious. I wonder why would anyone want to keep an Eagle Owl. I wonder if
they would cost more to feed than a dog. Most likely they would be fed on rats.
I agree those figures sound like a high escape rate. Or are people not wanting
them any more and releasing them, and calling that an escape. I don't follow the
logic about counting certificates if a bird is sold enabling a suggesting that
the number kept in captivity
is likely to be considerably higher than this. Surely one bird could be
sold many times. They can live a long time. I can imagine people would get bored
with keeping one.
About
your last bit, it is difficult to describe, as we know so little about how long
individual escaped birds survive. Beyond that, as you know, the GBS Report
comments on this issue for Canberra, as our GBS is a probably unique position to
contain relevant (even if patchy) data. I don't know of any study that offers
anything more than the GBS Report does (as minimal as that was), otherwise I
would have cited it in the references................
Philip
-----Original Message----- As a result of reading about an Eagle Owl (in the UK)
atacking a Hen Harrier I checked out the RSPB site to find about Eagle Owls,
which I thought got no closer to the UK than the Alps. It seems there are
quite a few in the UK derived from escapees. I thought it might be of
interest to reproduce the words of the RSPB about this situation.From: martin butterfield [ Sent: Saturday, 28 August 2010 1:57 PM To: COG List Subject: [canberrabirds] Escaping birds "The eagle owl has been known in captivity in this country since at least the 17th century and many were brought from India during the 19th century. Eagle owls are very commonly kept in captivity - often by people who are not falconers. There is no formal requirement to register these birds, but a certificate is required if a captive bird is sold. In the 10 years to 2007, 3,370 such certificates were issued. The number of eagle owls kept in captivity is likely to be considerably higher than this. "Of the 440 captive eagle owls registered with the Independent Bird Register between 1994 and 2007, 123 (28%) were reported to have escaped. Of these, 73 were reported as not having been recovered. This equates to 9-10 escapees per annum, of which 5-6 were not recovered. If the same escape rate is applied to a conservative estimate of the British captive population over the same 13-year period, around 65 birds could be expected to escape each year." This seemed an astonishing number of escapes. I wonder if anyone has
done any studies of the escape rate of Australian captive
birds? |
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