Reversing the damage
Peregrine Falcon. Photo: Sean Gray.
For many, the Maltese Falcon may recall the famous 1941 Hollywood production starring Humphrey Bogart or the infamous F-16 Falcon Jet Fighter.
But for many Maltese, the name had a different meaning; the top predator that dominated the Maltese skies for centuries. In times past, the Maltese Falcon (also known as the Peregrine) was so abundant in the Maltese islands that the Knights used to give two live birds to Charles V, one to be sent to the emperor and one to the viceroy in Sicily as a symbolic annual rent.
However, the last know breeding pair was recorded shot by Maltese poachers at Ta' Ċenc in the 1980s. This majestic bird's fate was shared by many other species like the Barn Owl, Common Kestrel, Eurasian Jackdaw and the famous Turtle Dove that could all easily breed in the Maltese islands.
In fact Malta, in spite of its ideal climate and habitat for these birds, is the only country in Europe and the Mediterranean, and probably in the world, that no longer has a single pair of breeding birds of prey thanks to decades of rampant illegal hunting.
Nevertheless, one would hope that the first spring without a legal hunting and trapping season would have started to have a positive impact on these species. To find out how many birds are actually breeding in Malta, BirdLife, together with the Rural Affairs Ministry and the British Trust for Ornithology, has launched an island-wide study on the breeding birds of the Maltese islands, as well as paying special attention to our farmland species which act as an important indicator of the health of the rural environment. The outcome of these surveys will be the first ever Malta Breeding Bird Atlas and the creation of the Farmland Bird Index, which is an EU requirement from all member states.
Farmland birds, such as Turtle Doves, Corn Buntings and Short-toed Larks, are important indicators of the health of the rural environment. They act a lot like the infamous 'canary in the coal mine', when miners in historical times used to take a canary into the mines with them and, if the canary started to act strangely, they knew that trouble, like poisonous gases, was close. This is also true of our farmland birds, as changes in their populations are indicative of the overall health of our rural countryside.
The Breeding Bird Atlas is the second output of the study, and is equally important. It will provide us with a baseline for monitoring the breeding distribution of all of our breeding species, be they common species such as the Spanish Sparrow, or rarer species such as the Spectacled Warbler. The 2008 Atlas will show us the breeding range of every breeding species in Malta.
These can then be compared in future Atlases, to allow us to see how each species is faring. It is only with information like this that we can accurately pin-point conservation problems before they reach the point of no return.
More than 25 Maltese and international ornithologists have spent over four months carrying out observations in Malta, Gozo, Comino and Filfla, making sure that all major habitat types are surveyed. All methods were carried out in a standardised way, using the same methodologies used throughout Europe, as outlined by the European Bird Census Council. By doing this, our results can then be compared with trends for these species throughout Europe as a whole.
The fieldwork is now over, and already interesting data is coming in. For example, this year Common Swifts have been recorded prospecting or breeding in a minimum of eight areas when the species previously was only recorded breeding in two known sites in the Maltese islands. Their colonies are a common sight in neighbouring Sicily, where they can be found breeding in most villages and cities.
Another interesting expansion of breeding distribution is the Collared Dove, a close relative of the Turtle Dove. Previously restricted to a breeding colony in the Santa Marija Estate, this species appears to have benefited from the first spring free of hunting. It has been recorded attempting to colonise several new locations in Malta and has even crossed the channel into Gozo. This year also saw the first confirmed successful breeding attempt by the Common Coot at Simar Nature Reserve and the first confirmed attempt at breeding by Black-winged Stilt at Għadira although unfortunately, the latter pair didn't produce offspring. Recent reports have now come in of up to two pairs of Water Rail exhibiting breeding behaviour in suitable breeding habitat.
This species has never been recorded breeding in Malta before, so we shall have to wait and see whether these birds successfully produce Malta's first ever Water Rail chicks. Reversing the damage caused by humans on wildlife is not an easy task. Before we see our islands being re-colonised by extinct breeders or new species, we will have to make sure that our impact, whether it is agricultural intensification, illegal hunting and trapping or false urbanisation, on our wildlife is taken under control and our much degraded countryside is given the necessary care.
This important survey will surely help us to identify the areas we will need to safeguard and actions we need to take, if we want to wake up one day to the sound of finches singing in the countryside (rather than in cages) or see the return of Maltese Falcons once again soaring over the Ta' Ċenċ cliffs.
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Andrew Gatt
Jul 21st 2008, 17:47
Come off it, Dr. Raine! If all the fabricatons and exaggerations that Birdlife has force-fed the EU and guillible people were REALLY true, Malta and Gozo should be currently in an absolute orgy of bird reproduction! I asked this question (politely and matter-of-factly) last week in a post to Birdlife's Guestbook (which contains the grand total of 90 entries): "How many breeding attempts by Turtle Dove and Quail have been recorded this year, given that Spring Hunting did not take place?"
R.Bajada
Jul 21st 2008, 08:05
Again! Birdlife Malta have been entrusted to contribute for this Atlas and they are trying to blame the hunters for the lack of birds breeding on the island.
If according to Birdlife Malta this Atlas is that much important, why they didn't bother to make such an Atlas long time ago! Instead they are doing it now because it is an EU requisite!
May I ask Dr Raine if there is any financial cotribution towards Birdlife Malta for issuing such an Atlas?
Regarding swallows I cannot refrain from stating that swallows are not hutable species especially in 'towns and villages' so if Malta was as good as Sicily for breeding, they would have stayed over here. One very important difference between Malta and Sicily is the presence of natural water. From my local experience, swallows tend to gather over ponds with water to feed on mosquitos etc....................ponds which Malta has for a limited time while Sicily has streams flowing all year round!
Stefan Azzopardi
Jul 21st 2008, 01:29
Excuse me Formosa, do my eyes decieve me or are you with your comment attempting to deny the fact that Maltese poachers, more commonly known as hunters, did indeed eradicate the Peregrine, Barn Owl and Jackdaw???? And are you also denying that they ruined breeding attempts by Kestrel and Short-Eared Owl, apart from other species, along the years??? If you are then i will personally make sure that a special breeding bird atlas is printed for you which will include the cuckoo, since if ure denying these facts then you must certainly be living in cloud-cuckoo land...
Anthony Formosa
Jul 20th 2008, 19:50
Quite astonishing Dr.Raine, that only a handful of birds out of the millions managed to breed on our Maltese shores, obviously for those who are not familiar with our countryside they think that this is something new, and is happening because spring hunting was banned. What makes you so sure that Peregrine falcon and others were shot by hunters? Hunters did not exist before 1980? Was there any change in habitat? Did the light and noise pollution affect these birds? Or is it just hunters that you always have in mind. Keep it in mind, that the rural countryside is not yours; it's ours, mainly hunters.
G.Grech
Jul 20th 2008, 19:42
It is very interesting to note that the Breeding Bird Atlas will start as from 2008. I am no prophet but I am 100% sure of what will be the outcome of this study. Birdlife will start saying that BEFORE (2008) there was no record of any breeding of this species and that, and NOW (after the first Spring closed season) we are seeing a variety of species trying to breed and also successfully breeding, BUT no one will be able to confirm it scientifically if it is the truth or not. And we will start hearing the usual non sense that breeding was not possible because of hunters, and that Malta is a breeding havean bla bla bla etc etc.
And another thing DR. Raine. This is not "your" country or "your" rural countryside! If you feel so attached to "my" country, maybe you should start limiting your organisation's lies, half-thruths and exaggerations that are hindering "my" country's image and reputation!
Philip Galea
Jul 20th 2008, 17:44
Very soon when this Breeding Bird Atlas is published we will be informed that Malta has suddenly become a haven for birds to breed. And this happened after the first Spring without hunting. What a coincedence.
David Borg Cardona
Jul 20th 2008, 12:47
Dr. Raine, calling it "our" countryside does sound a little off tune and preposterous when said by a bird watcher from Bermuda whose sole intent ,along with your association, is to totally eradicate hunting and trapping from the Maltese Islands !
It seems that you and your Turkish maestro have taken it into your stride that anything Maltese belongs to you, even if it is a centuries old tradition like hunting. Is it not time to maybe have a repeat of AD1565...