Rook
The Rook is one of
our most familiar and widespread birds. With nearly one million pairs
in Britain, it is only absent from upland areas and from treeless islands
off the west coast of Scotland, though it has been able to find suitable
trees to nest on Shetland and on Lewis in the Western Isles.
Rookeries
are among the most conspicuous of colonial nesting sites, not least because
breeding generally starts before any leaves have appeared on the trees.
In Scotland, though, the commonest tree used, holding about 50% of all
nests, is the Scots pine and so the nests are not nearly as visible as
in broad-leaved trees, of which ash, beech, elm, oak and sycamore are
the most regularly used. When I lived in Gloucestershire, I took part
in a long-running annual survey of rookeries in the Severn Vale, an area
dominated by elm trees, planted as windbreaks and growing out of the many
hedgerows. They held the majority (about 85%) of the rookeries, but when
Dutch elm disease wiped out over 99% of the elms in the early 1970s, we
feared that their loss might lead to a severe reduction in Rooks, but
we had underestimated their adaptability and resourcefulness as they shifted
to other species, notably ash and sycamore, and as a result numbers hardly
dropped at all
Although locating
rookeries rarely presents any problems, actually counting their nests
with any degree of accuracy is not all that simple because the bulky twig
nests, placed among the smaller branches and twigs near the tree tops,
often join on to each other. When one is standing on the ground and craning
one's neck upwards it can be quite difficult determining whether a particularly
large assemblage of twigs is the product of just one particularly industrious
pair, or an amalgamation of several nests.
Rook
numbers in Britain were first estimated in the mid-1940s when the BTO
carried out a survey at the request of the Agricultural Research Council.
It didn't cover the whole country, but the extrapolated total was around
three million birds. Although numbers probably increased thereafter, they
fell sharply in the 1960s and early 1970s to no more than two million
(or 900,000 breeding pairs) by the time of the next census, in 1975. Agricultural
pesticides were thought to be the main reason for the decline. This view
has been reinforced by a recent recovery to 1.27 million pairs in 1996,
a 40% increase over 1975 but still below the level of the mid-1940s.
Unable to break the
habit of counting rook nests when I moved here from Gloucestershire, each
spring I go out and survey Islay's ten or eleven rookeries, which together
hold a little over 300 nests. Even in a short span of years I have detected
some changes, numbers declining in one area or building up in another.
There was also the spring when I went to check on one of our largest rookeries,
holding over 60 nests, to find it completely deserted and the Rooks busy
building in another wood half a mile away. The reason for the desertion
wasn't difficult to find: a pair of Buzzards had decided that the old
rookery was an ideal place for them to nest!
.
By Ted Ellis
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Illustrations by
Dave Nurney from - The Pocket Guide to the Birds Of Britain and
North-West Europe By Chris Kightley and Steve Madge
© Pica Press and reproduced with kind permission. |
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