Gamekeepers have said they believe the iconic Capercaillie is headed for extinction and has entered its ‘final phase’ in Scotland’s forests.
A fresh count of the birds’ numbers found that there had been a nine per cent decrease in males at leks – the name given to the distinctive courtship display during breeding season - this year, leading to fears the giant grouse is declining to an unsustainable level.
Only 153 male birds were recorded at leks in key forests this year, 15 less than this time last year.
The land managers said that should the trend continue, it would result in an estimated further decline of 43% by the time the next national survey is undertaken in 2027/28, on top of a 50% decline in the previous one.
Capercaillie are among Scotland largest birds, and the biggest species of grouse. They make their home in forests, but numbers have declined to such an extent they are now on the ‘red’ list of endangered species.
The Scottish Gamekeeper Association say that pressure from the public could be the last remaining hope the Capercaillie has of remaining viable as a breeding species in our woods.
A new Emergency action plan for the species is due to be published shortly by Scottish Government’s nature advisers, NatureScot and the Cairngorms National Park.
However, practitioners within the stakeholder group do not believe it adequately addresses the problem they see as fundamental: the increasing pressure on eggs and chicks from common and protected predators.
Abundant predators such as foxes and crows, which can legally be controlled, are impacting breeding success as are rising populations of protected pine marten, badgers and goshawks.
For decades, deer stalkers and gamekeepers have sat alongside scientists, conservationists, forestry and national park officials on the Capercaillie taskforce, looking at ways to stem declines.
Despite warning at the outset that failure to ease predation pressure would spell disaster, practitioners’ opinions have been treated as peripheral within the Scottish Capercaillie Group.
“We said, 20 years ago, that Capercaillie would become extinct in our lifetime. We were told, then, we had no evidence and that what we were saying was anecdotal,” said a source within the practitioner group.
Their hopes of a more robust conservation approach were raised in 2022 when a report by the Scientific Advisory Group (SAC) of NatureScot to Scottish Ministers backed their observations, stating a reduction in predators would ‘rapidly improve’ breeding success’.
However, since then, former Green Minister Lorna Slater, requested that investment in habitat restoration should continue, to help capercaillie.
This raises concerns that not all the recommendations from the SAC report will be followed and the urgency will be lost.
Furthermore, instead of controlling foxes and crows, many land managers within the Scottish capercaillie range have been encouraged to choose the option of diversionary feeding predators.
Whilst research on artificial nests suggested diversionary feeding has the potential to be successful, there has been no recovery in Capercaillie numbers as a result- and now a further loss of lekking males has been reported.
“When working in these forests every day, we have been involved with populations of Capercaillie all of our lives. We’ve witnessed this dramatic decline with our own eyes and feel compelled to inform the public of the current situation,” said a group practitioner and member of The Scottish Gamekeepers Association (SGA).
“Sadly, everything we said in the past has been borne out in the recent counts. The numbers don’t lie.
“The last chance, therefore, is for the public to know the facts, with no spin.
“Maybe it is only through the public knowing what is happening, and asking questions, that we can save the Capercaillie. That is all we want; that people know the truth.
“By making a plea to the public, maybe a bigger discussion outside of Capercaillie circles can begin, and we can get to the solutions the bird needs to remain here.”
Influential research by leading capercaillie scientists found that, to maintain populations at existing levels, a ratio of 0.6 chicks per hen was required during breeding. That ratio has not been met in Scotland for the last 6 years, suggesting more declines in future.
NatureScot has been approached for comment.
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