Russell Hayes reported from Nocton Fen on LBC Bird Reports on Sunday 4 December that :
" At least 3 Swans have hit the wires there this winter, making a total of about 23 dead in the last 3 years. Unfortunately, the bird scarers that were put in place last year do not stop them hitting the wires in the dark. "
Clearly as Swans leave the Fen at dusk to roost, some fail to see the bird scarers which serve them well during daylight hours. These reported deaths are occurring in a very small part of Lincolnshire but the problem must be compounded throughout the UK as a whole, and other birds flying at dusk or at night are also affected, of course. However, my researching the web has produced little evidence of any recent progress in preventing these nocturnal wire-deaths.....we have the daytime deterrents (discs, strips, etc) but, apparently, none for dusk/after dark.
Does any member know if the relevant authorities.... RSPB, Wildlife Trusts, Environmental Agencies, etc..... are actively involved in attempting to find a solution to this urgent problem ? Surely something is being done or has been done ?.....and results published. Some effective solution should already exist somewhere even if it hasn't yet reached Nocton Fen.
After all, it's not exactly rocket science to come up with a relatively cheap photo-luminescent technological answer. Contortionately, putting my head over the proverbial LBC parapet, and then sticking my amateur neck out, what about, for example :
Where the present wire problem exists, add an extra thick wire/cable, covered with a durability enhancing all-weather and non-fade luminescent/ self-luminous "glow in the dark" coat plus intermittent luminescent strips/discs strung across with the existing wires/cables and daytime bird deterrents, assuming , of course, Swan vision can detect luminescent items. ( Presumably, basic research has already established or could easily establish this point.) If Swans can't, then we move to a different drawing-board. If they can, there are several long-lasting, all-weather, etc., luminous paints, that glow in the dark after daylight exposure to light, on the market and being used widely to identify escape routes when lights fail, or at night......eg. sold under the trade names Glowtec/Starglow; Promain.
I may well have put forward a naive and intrinsically-flawed suggestion but other LBC members might wish to add to the debate, especially re positive information as to what the relevant authorities are already doing/have done to combat the problem.
Freddy
|