The
first of three osprey chicks has hatched at a nest being monitored by the RSPB
in north Wales and is thought to be the first in the UK in 2012. RSPB
Warden Geraint Williams said the chick cleared the eggshell at about 10:00 BST
on Friday. Two other eggs on the nest are due to hatch within a few days after
an average incubation period of 37 days. Ospreys began nesting near Croesor in the Glaslyn Valley in 2004 and to date have fledged 18
chicks. "After a wet and windy night, the female had remained low on the
nest. The male arrived with a fish straight away but has been sat patiently
waiting to see the chick," said Mr Williams. "The second egg will
hopefully hatch out on Sunday with the third and final egg hatching early next
week."
Once prolific birds of prey in the UK, osprey numbers were
drastically reduced in the 1840s after years of persecution, including egg
collecting, hunting, taxidermy, and loss of habitat. By the early 1900s there
was only one known breeding pair left in Britain, and it was not until 1954
that ospreys began to repopulate in Scotland thanks to a resilient pair of
Scandinavian birds which were blown off course. Ospreys have a long history in
Wales dating back to Medieval times when they were referenced in the Mabinogion, and the 1316 Coat of Arms for Swansea and West Glamorgan
feature an osprey.
It wasn't until 1997 that osprey began moving south of the
Scottish border thanks to a trans-location programme between Scottish Heritage
and the Leicestershire and Rutland
Wildlife Trust. The two ospreys which ended up at Glaslyn were probably
flying back to Rutland on a similar latitude. It was a miscalculation in
longitude that helped reintroduce ospreys to Wales in 2004 - the first time the
species had been officially recorded as breeding in Wales. Around the same time
in 2004 a second pair of ospreys were discovered breeding on a nest near
Welshpool in Powys which raised a single chick. Glaslyn could comfortably hold
10 pairs of ospreys and there are a number of other suitable habitats to the
south along the mid Wales estuaries, the Burry Inlet on Gower and the Severn
Estuary where osprey have been sighted. Getting migratory birds to stay and
nest is a difficult task according to the RSPB. By building more artificial
nesting towers it is hoped that more birds can be enticed south as migratory
birds fly north, after wintering in Africa. More often than not, male ospreys
will return first to their place of birth.
They then spend a few weeks
exploring the area, often covering large distances, flying over neighbouring
counties. It is on such sorties that young osprey, fresh from migration may discover
a new nest site and take up residence. International osprey expert Roy Dennis
believes "there are now well over 250 pairs, possibly 270 in the UK",
but ospreys are still scarce with only about 12 pairs in England and two
official pairs in Wales, in the Glaslyn Valley and the Dyfi Estuary in mid
Wales. Ospreys have been visiting the Dyfi
Estuary for many years but it
wasn't until 2007 that two artificial nests were built at the Cors Dyfi Reserve.
A year later, a young male nicknamed Monty arrived and has returned ever since.
In April 2011 the pair laid three eggs - the first in over 400 years on the
Dyfi Estuary. The chicks fledged in late summer and were tracked via satellite as they migrated south to Senegal,
Africa for the winter. The Dyfi osprey pair returned in 2012 and are currently
incubating three eggs. The average incubation period for an osprey egg is
around 37 days and they are expected to hatch around 27 May.
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