Hearing the distinctive mating
call on a restored wetland shows the site is being successfully managed, the
RSPB says.
Last updated: 11 May 2018 -
3.00pm
A bittern has been heard
“booming” on the Isle of Wight for the first time, in what conservationists say
is a mark of success for a wetland restoration scheme.
The distinctive mating call was
heard at RSPB Brading Marshes, a recently restored wetland which stretches from
the village of Brading to the sea at Bembridge Harbour on the island.
It is the latest sign of success
for the elusive bird, whose numbers fell to just 11 “booming” males in 1997,
but is now recovering with the help of intensive conservation efforts.
Bitterns are secretive and spend
most of their time living within dense reeds, making them hard to count, but
the loud and distinctive booming call of breeding males is used as a measure of
the population.
The work we have done to manage
the reserve for insects, fish, reptiles and mammals, as well as birds, now
means we have one of the most UK’s most sensitive species choosing the Isle of
Wight as its home.
Despite their revival, there are
still less than 200 bitterns at fewer than 75 sites in the UK, making the first
record on the Isle of Wight something “remarkable”, the RSPB said.
It is also a mark of success for
the restored marshes, the wildlife charity said, as attracting breeding
bitterns is one of the best indicators of successful wetland management.
It is hoped the booming call of
the male will manage to attract a mate, and the pair will breed on the reserve
– which would be another first for the island.
Keith Ballard, warden of RSPB
Brading Marshes, said: “Hearing a booming bittern on a wetland reserve is like
receiving a Michelin star as a restaurant; it’s one of the highest marks of
success we could hope for.
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