£1,000 reward offer after protected birds disappear

Two of England’s most threatened birds of prey have vanished in Lancashire in unexplained circumstances.
Hope, one of the protected birds who has gone missing.Hope, one of the protected birds who has gone missing.
Hope, one of the protected birds who has gone missing.

Police are investigating and the RSPB has offered a £1,000 reward after the female birds, named Sky and Hope, disappeared.

They both fledged this year from nests on the United Utilities Bowland Estate in the Forest of Bowland, Lancashire, where they had been protected around the clock by RSPB staff and volunteers.

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Hen harriers are England’s most threatened bird of prey and this season there were only four successful nests in the whole country. Sky and Hope were among the first chicks to fledge in England since 2012.

Sky was officially named and adopted by pupils from Brennand’s Endowed Primary School in Slaidburn in Bowland. Hope was given her name by members of the RSPB’s youth groups from Leighton Moss near Silverdale and also Macclesfield.

The birds were both fitted with lightweight solar-powered satellite tags, designed to be operational for around three years.

Satellite tags are frequently used by conservation organisations to find out more about the movements of species. The British Trust for Ornithology has been following the migration of tagged cuckoos since 2011.

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Scientists tracking the movements of the young hen harriers became concerned when their tags stopped transmitting. Sky’s satellite signal stopped suddenly on the evening of Wednesday, September 10 with the data suggesting she was roosting at her last known location, while Hope’s last’s known location was sent on the morning of Saturday, September 13.

Both of the birds had left their nest sites on the United Utilities Estate several weeks earlier but had remained in the Bowland area since fledging. Searches were made but neither Sky nor Hope have been recovered.

Experts think it is improbable that the loss of satellite transmission is due to technical failure.

Only a tiny percentage of hen harriers fitted with satellite tags since 2007 have stopped transmitting when it was known the tracked bird was alive.

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Bob Elliot, RSPB head of investigations, said: “In our experience, this satellite technology is normally very reliable and it is rare for them to fail for technological reasons.

“Losing two birds in such a short time frame and in the same geographical area is strange.

“Based on the last known data and our understanding of the technology, Sky appears to have suffered a catastrophic tag failure at roost suggesting either natural predation or human intervention as the likely causes for her sudden failure to transmit.

“However, we would not expect natural predation to stop the tag transmitting data so suddenly. Hope’s tag was transmitting reliably, with no evidence of any technical problems.”

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TV presenter and hen harrier campaigner Chris Packham said: “It’s incredibly disheartening to discover that two of this year’s chicks have already apparently failed to survive.

“It shows how vulnerable hen harriers are and that four nests are nowhere near enough. Without satellite tagging, these disappearances might never have come to our attention but technology is on our side and we will keep watching.”

Anyone with information about either of the birds should contact Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111 or, alternatively, call the RSPB’s confidential hotline on 0845 466 3636.