Goshawks and peregrines wiped out as killing goes on in Dark Peak29/08/2006 00:00:00 The worst year on record for suspected cases of bird of prey persecution in the Dark Peak area of the Peak District has been highlighted in a newly-published RSPB report. Peak Malpractice Update 2007 unveils a catalogue of suspicious incidents discovered last summer.The report reveals that goshawks and peregrines are now extinct as breeding species in the north-east Peak moors. He added: ‘The list of sickening incidents of apparent persecution in the Dark Peak continues to rise. In 2006, we recorded 17 incidents of suspected illegal persecution in the Peak District. It is shocking also to have to report that birds such as goshawks and peregrines are now extinct as breeding species in the north-east Peak moors – an appalling state of affairs that cannot be allowed to continue.’ 2006 incidents Among the horrific list of incidents last year, a female peregrine was found dead after being shot on two separate occasions; laboratory tests showed that a raven had been poisoned; and goshawk chicks disappeared from a traditional nest site after the tree was climbed by someone using climbing irons. Dr Avery went on: ‘Even the heartening news that 10 hen harrier chicks fledged from two nests in the Dark Peak was tainted by the knowledge that both adult males suspiciously disappeared. It was only intervention by conservationists providing food and round-the-clock monitoring that enabled the young birds to survive and safely leave the nests.’ Copies of Peak Malpractice Update 2007 can be downloaded from the RSPB website on http://www.rspb.org.uk/peakmalpractice
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