Sector

04 October 2017

New CRRU study monitors UK barn owl breeding

A new Barn Owl Monitoring Study (BOMS) has been published as part of the surveillance being carried out by the UK Rodenticide Stewardship Regime.

The study tracks barn owl breeding success across five areas of the UK for a minimum of three years. Funded by the Campaign for Responsible Rodenticide Use (CRRU) UK, the field work has been delivered by the Wildlife Conservation Partnership (WCP) and data has been analysed at the University of Reading.

barn-owl-1208033 1280

The study's purpose is to provide context for the Predatory Birds Monitoring Scheme (PBMS), which also receives funding from CRRU and tracks liver residues of rodenticides annually in UK barn owls. Both studies are reported to HSE, which leads the Government Oversight Group for rodenticide stewardship, to assess the effectiveness of the regime.

The BOMS report identified barn owl breeding success between 2011 and 2015 fluctuated from year to year. It notes that these were probably caused by factors such as mortality of adults between breeding seasons, recruitment of young owls into the breeding population, availability of prey and, overriding these, climatic conditions. Of the five years studied, breeding was lowest in 2013, when only 23 out of 99 nests produced fledglings, and highest the following year when young owls flew from 78 of 121 nests monitored.

The report says that studies in the UK carried out from 1988 to 2015 indicate that reproductive performance in barn owls has not changed much over this period. Although PBMS shows that many barn owls are exposed to rodenticides, and BOMS shows that breeding success varies from year to year, co-author Colin Shawyer (WCP) says there has been a substantial increase in barn owl numbers since 1997, when the last comprehensive UK survey showed there to be about 4,000 breeding pairs.

The report's authors are Colin Prescott (University of Reading), Alan Buckle (CRRU UK) and Colin Shawyer (WCP). A copy can be downloaded here.

Source:

Highlights View all news

02 May 2025

Latest news

Full steam ahead for entry-Level 3 qualifications on BPCA Qualifications Framework

BPCA has committed to developing new Level 3 pest management qualifications as part of a new industry qualification framework.

Read more

24 March 2025

Latest news

Professional Pest Controller issue 118 (PPC118) out now

PPC118 is out now and packed full of great content.

Read more

29 January 2025

Latest news

Sticky situation: Met Police caught unprepared on Glue Trap law

In December, BPCA received a Freedom of Information (FOI) response from the Metropolitan Police, which revealed that no training had been provided to officers on glue trap protocols. 

Read more
Latest View all news

02 May 2025

Latest news

Full steam ahead for entry-Level 3 qualifications on BPCA Qualifications Framework

BPCA has committed to developing new Level 3 pest management qualifications as part of a new industry qualification framework.

Read more

30 April 2025

Latest news

VIDEO | Digital Forum 30 | Solitary Bees - identification, biology and behaviours for pest professionals

In this video, Paul Westgate from Veritas Pest Consultancy talks about bees and their identification, biology, and behaviour.

Read more

30 April 2025

Latest news

VIDEO | Digital Forum 30 | Biology and behaviour of ants on the trail

In this video we're joined by John Stewart from BPCA member company Pelsis, where he presents his guide to controlling ants.

Read more