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Fwd: English-born osprey back home after 150 years

To: Birding-aus <>
Subject: Fwd: English-born osprey back home after 150 years
From: Paul Taylor <>
Date: Mon, 03 Jul 2006 23:07:11 +1000
Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/07/03/osprey_homecoming/

English-born osprey back home after 150 years
By Lester Haines
Published Monday 3rd July 2006 11:38 GMT

An English osprey chick has returned to its place of birth in Rutland
Water after a 20-month jaunt to western Africa - the first such
homecoming to England in 150 years, The Telegraph reports.

The two-year-old male, dubbed "R5", migrated from his Leicestershire
nest in September 2004, and recently reappeared to the delight of staff
who have toiled for 12 years to establish an osprey colony at Rutland.

Rutland Osprey Project (http://www.ospreys.org.uk/AWOP/Home.htm) supremo
Tim Mackrill enthused: "It was a fantastic moment. He flew back to the
nest where he was hatched, although I don't think his parents were as
pleased to see him as they were in 2004.

"The idea was always to create an environment where the ospreys think of
Rutland Water as their home and this shows it is working."

Fish-eating ospreys were extinct in England by the mid-1800s "because of
the Victorian trend for egg collecting and taxidermy", The Telegraph
notes. Their gradual reintroduction, notably in the Scottish Highlands,
has been a partial success, although of twelve English ospreys hatched
at Rutland since 2001 - when 64 chicks were relocated there from
Scotland - none has made its way back from migration until now.

Ospreys are born between May and June, fledge at around nine weeks and
leave for Africa - generally Senegal or Guinea - at two to three months.

Mackrill explained: "When we started and brought down the ospreys from
Scotland we had no idea if it would be successful. This gives us hope
that we can re-colonise them across the south of England and that one
day you will see them flying up the Thames."

He added: "Rutland Water is brilliant for them. It's got all the natural
infrastructure and of course is stacked with live fish."

The site currently boasts one five males and two females, including one
breeding pair. Yesterday, three chicks were fitted with ID rings in
anticipation of their September departure south. ®

--

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   Paul Taylor                                  Veni, vidi, tici -
                           I came, I saw, I ticked.
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