For the first time in over two hundred years, the Red-billed Chough has bred in the wild in Kent. This is a fantastic early breeding success by two of the choughs in our Southern England chough restoration project.
It is also a wonderful birthday present for Operation Chough – launched on August 4th 1987.
This is amazing work by all the project partners. Twenty choughs are now flying around the Dover area – and the first wild nest and chick! Congratulations to Wildwood Kent, Kent Wildlife Trust and the staff here at Paradise Park in Cornwall.
If you are not on Facebook you can see the video below…
…and here is the text:
“Breaking news! First wild Kentish #Chough to breed in over 200 years!
With year two of the Chough Reintroduction project in full flight we’re delighted to confirm that our first cohort have been breeding at the iconic Dover Castle. After finding a cosy hollow our clever pair of young chough collected twigs, built a nest, laid an egg and supported the chick as it fledged.
Unfortunately we suspect the British weather got the better of this little bundle of feathers but it’s a real testament to the teams at Kent Wildlife Trust, wildwoodtrustuk paradiseparkcornwall and all our project partners, funders and members to reach this milestone so soon.
But the journey is far from over, together we’ll be releasing more Chough over the next 4-5 years to establish a stable, healthy, thriving population in Kent and beyond.
If you’d like to be a chough champion and keep the chough flying high please support the project by donating, buying or joining.”
For more information from Kent Wildlife Trust click the link below:
Spring has sprung – despite the almost continual rain in Cornwall – and birds everywhere are starting to carry twigs and nesting materials. Our breeding choughs have now been moved into secluded aviaries, and are happily building nests.
To celebrate the 35th birthday we thought we would take a look back in time…
In 1987 Operation Chough was officially launched. Much work with Red-billed Choughs had been done at Paradise Park and the Tropical Bird Gardens, Padstow (now closed), before this time. Paradise Park’s founder, Mike Reynolds, became very interested in choughs and the first birds came to the Park in 1973. They were captive bred and originally from Welsh stock. This date was very sadly also the time when the last wild birds from the original Cornish population disappeared after decades of decline.
Much of the early work at Paradise Park involved developing breeding methods and improving aviary and nest box designs. Although we preferred to have parent-reared chicks, this also involved hand-rearing some, which proved to be extremely difficult, but some successes were achieved.
Nest boxes were fitted with inspection hatches and cameras to monitor eggs and chicks – this proved to be invaluable.
We produced a ‘Red-billed chough captive management and husbandry manual’ and a version of this was published in Zoo Biology with lead author Dr Malcolm Burgess.
Back in 1987 we sponsored a five year long study by Richard Meyer on the feasibility of the re-establishment of the chough in Cornwall. As well as researching historic sites in Cornwall, he used chough populations in Wales for much of his research.
A trial release of captive-bred birds took place in 2003 on the north coast of Cornwall.
In 2010 we developed a partnership with the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust in Jersey, where Red-billed Choughs had been extinct for over a hundred years.
Initially two pairs bred at Paradise Park had been flown to Jersey for the breeding and release project, and by 2013 a total of eleven birds.
Birds bred at Paradise Park and at Jersey Zoo were released over 6 years. Within 2 years they had bred in the wild and now there are 43 birds, about half of them hatched in the wild.
Our focus now is on establishing new release projects in southern England. We are working with partners in Kent (choughs used to live along the white cliffs of Dover), also the Isle of Wight and Hampshire coast. In the long term these have the potential to spread along the coast, join up and re-establish the chough in parts of England where it has been missing for two hundred years.
The female in Nest 3 was seen sitting in her beautifully-built nest just after 5pm on 31st March. Over the next 20 minutes she sat, straining a bit as she produced the egg, and then recovered for a few minutes before going outside. The image above shows her mate coming into the nest to check out the egg, gently touching it with his bill.
The first chough egg for 2016 is laid in Nest 3.
In 2015 the first egg of the season was laid by the same pair at lunchtime on 1st April, so they are just about a day ahead this year.
We’re looking forward to lots more eggs, and then lots of early mornings and long days to provide food for the chough families.