Buzzards are still being persecuted in some
areas.
Carbofuran poison used again
January 2013. A Lincolnshire gamekeeper has been convicted of killing two buzzards and possessing a quantity of an illegally-held poison, which the RSPB says would have been enough to destroy all the birds of prey in Lincolnshire.
January 2013. A Lincolnshire gamekeeper has been convicted of killing two buzzards and possessing a quantity of an illegally-held poison, which the RSPB says would have been enough to destroy all the birds of prey in Lincolnshire.
Carbofuran
71-year-old Robert William Hebblewhite, of Appleby, Scunthorpe, was fined a total £1950 after he was convicted of killing two buzzards and possessing Carbofuran, a banned poison. The buzzards were found dead on land at Blyton, where he works as a gamekeeper. Toxicology tests revealed the birds had died from Carbofuran poisoning after the poison was laced on pheasant carcasses which the buzzards tried to feed on.
‘Vicious' methods
In court Hebblewhite heard the judge describe him as an ‘old-fashioned' gamekeeper who resorted to ‘vicious' methods. The judge regretted the death of the two buzzards but added that it was ‘lucky' that no other creature or human had discovered the poisoned baits first.
Hebblewhite had pleaded guilty to possessing Carbofuran at an earlier hearing on 15 October, 2012.
In court Hebblewhite heard the judge describe him as an ‘old-fashioned' gamekeeper who resorted to ‘vicious' methods. The judge regretted the death of the two buzzards but added that it was ‘lucky' that no other creature or human had discovered the poisoned baits first.
Hebblewhite had pleaded guilty to possessing Carbofuran at an earlier hearing on 15 October, 2012.
The RSPB's Mark Thomas, who was at Lincoln
Magistrates Court for the conviction, said: "The possession and use of
Carbofuran is illegal, and yet birds of prey are still being killed by this
poison. This conviction shows this poison is still in circulation in quantities
sufficient to kill huge numbers of birds of prey. A few grains of the poison
will kill a bird of prey; a jar is enough to kill all the birds of prey in a
county. With yet another gamekeeper convicted of poisoning birds of prey, it is
time for this illegal and indiscriminate practise to be consigned to the pages
of history."
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