TO what extent - if any - are Curlews at risk from windfarms, both onshore and offshore?
This is one of the questions explored by an authority on the species, Mary Colwell, in a report published in this month's edition of British Birds journal.
"For breeding Curlews, the principal impact of upland windfarms is displacement rather than collision,"she writes. "Birds avoid onshore turbines, access tracks and associated disturbance, reducing the area of otherwise suitable nesting and foraging habitat."
There seems to be a 500-metre rule, with data suggesting that, within this range, breeding density is between 15 and 53 per cent lower than on non-windfarm habitat.
The author continues: "For inland-breeding Curlews, collision risk with turbines is generally considered low compared with the effects of displacement from nesting or feeding areas."
But many of the Curlews that are seen on fields and estuary mudflats in autumn and winter are migrants from Scandinavia, particularly Finland, so how are they disadvantaged by the hundreds of turbines dotted about the North Sea?
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| Mary Colwell is director of Curlew Action and chairperson of Curlew Recovery Partnership England |
"Offshore tracking and migration studies indicate that Curlews may alter flight paths and thus experience limited collision risk during migration," writes Ms Colwell.
What other threats undermine the future, as a breeding species, of Curlews which have been in decline since as far back as the 1950s?
The expansion of silage production, facilitated by fertilisers and technological improvements to cutting machinery, is described as "particularly damaging" because multiple cuts during a season overlap with the nesting and chick-rearing period not just of Curlews but also other ground-nesting species such as Lapwings and Skylarks.
Forestry and woodland expansion are also an issue because trees are now often being grown on land which formerly accommodated ground-nesting birds such as Curlews.
Despite the challenges, the author is cautiously optimistic about the future because of ongoing initiatives such as 'headstarting' which aims to relocate eggs and chicks from unsafe habitats to those where they might flourish.
Ends the author: "Ultimately, the future of the Curlew reflects wider choices about land use and biodiversity."
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| The current edition of British Birds |
* Mary Colwell's books include Curlew Moon and Beak, Tooth and Claw

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