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Red kite bird
Red kite bird






red kite bird

Can be confused with Black Kite note overall more reddish coloration, paler face, larger white patches on the underwings, and more deeply forked tail. Flies with easy languid wingbeats and lazy glides, circling gracefully over fields and roadsides.

red kite bird

Further reintroductions went just as well and in 2006, a red kite was spotted over London for the first time in 150 years. Red Kite - eBird Distinctive large, graceful raptor with a fairly long, forked, rusty-orange tail. By 1992 they were breeding successfully and two years later, the first wild-reared Kites reared young of their own. With the population in such a severe genetic bottleneck and struggling against bad weather, lack of food due to myxomatosis in rabbits and eggshell thinning caused by organochlorine pesticides, the odds were stacked against their natural recovery.ĭecisive action was needed and the first reintroductions were made in 1989, when six Swedish birds were released in Scotland and a further four (plus one Welsh) in Buckinghamshire.

red kite bird

Rather belated conservation efforts began in 1903 but by then every surviving bird was descended from a single Welsh female. With a bounty on its head, the species was driven to extinction in England and Scotland by 1879. But attitudes shifted over time and the Red Kite fell from grace when it was mistakenly viewed as a threat to livestock and gamebirds. As scavengers, they picked the filthy streets clean and their highly-valued services earned protection by royal decree. Just a few centuries earlier, Red Kites were as common as pigeons and equally urban, even in London – Shakespeare’s ‘city of kites and crows’. The 1968-72 breeding bird maps deliberately showed a vague, red circle somewhere over mid-Wales, and guards were set on the ground to protect the precious nests from egg collectors and bounty hunters. Just 50 years ago there were only a handful of Red Kites left, clinging on to their last remaining stronghold deep in the wilds of Wales.Their location was a closely guarded secret, both on paper and in person. These magnificent birds are still outnumbered by their Buzzard brethren but they share a similar story, both bouncing back from the brink of extinction. The Red Kite is an increasingly familiar sight in the skies above Sussex, soaring effortlessly over the South Downs on an almost-six-foot wingspan.








Red kite bird