Curlews are among our most iconic birds, celebrated in folklore and song. We need to cherish them.
New Year’s Eve 2017. Waves of wind and rain batter our campervan. We’re parked on the North Somerset coast, surrounded by level, sodden farmland and mudflats. Somewhere in the distance a curlew calls, but its cry is whipped away by the wind. “The curlew cannot sleep at all/His voice is shrill above the deep/Reverberations of the storm/ Between the streams he will not sleep,” wrote one medieval monk in Ireland. Known as the storm birds, curlews are even now associated with driving rain off the Atlantic in the minds of many Irish people.
Dawn breaks into quietness. The first rays of light of 2018 are welcomed by a flypast of curlews, calling ‘curlee’ as they head for the fields. A group lands just across the road and begins feeding in the muddy grass. The birds’ long, curved bills probe the substrate, the sensitive tips feeling for earthworms and grubs. They add elegance to a vista of grey and drab green.
It’s best to approach curlews with caution, as they’re flighty and nervous, perhaps the most edgy of all British waders. Stay back about 400m, and move slowly; better still, watch from a parked car. My binoculars can’t pick out any leg rings, so none of this group has been caught and given a unique set of numbers or colours. The birds remain mysterious, like most of the curlews in the UK and Ireland.
Curlews were once numerous breeding birds almost everywhere, yet we still know little about their lives. Perhaps these are locals, spending the winter months close to their breeding grounds on the Somerset Levels, or maybe they’re from further afield, from curlew hotspots in Oxfordshire, the New Forest or the Severn and Avon Vales. But there aren’t many breeding curlews left in southern England – fewer than 300 pairs hang on in small pockets south of a line from Shrewsbury to The Wash.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Summer 2018-Ausgabe von BBC Wildlife.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent ? Anmelden
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Summer 2018-Ausgabe von BBC Wildlife.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
SNAP-CHAT
Justin Gilligan on giant spider crabs and holding hands with an octopus
STEPPE CHANGE
Herds of saiga have returned to Kazakhstan, but there's a fine balance to tread
TREES FOR LIFE
Community is at the heart of conservation in the tropical forests of southern Belize
WHEN DOVES CRY
Turtle doves are now the UK's fastest declining bird species, but the RSPB is on a mission to save them
SURVIVAL OF THE CUTEST
We can't help being drawn to cute creatures, but our aesthetic preferences both help and hinder conservation
LIGHT ON THE NORTH
Spectacular images of Arctic foxes, reindeer and musk oxen reveal the wild beauty and diversity of Scandinavia
ROLLING IN THE DEEP
The super-sized crustacean that lives in the deepest, darkest ocean
LET'S GET TOGETHER
Clay licks deep in the Amazon explode in a riot of colour, with macaws the stars of the show
FEMALE OF THE SPECIES
To sponge or not to sponge? That is the question for the bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) living in Shark Bay, Western Australia.
7 nature encounters for the month ahead
WITH NATURALIST AND AUTHOR BEN HOARE