Posts Tagged ‘500px’

im Wald by mmeltzer

Posted: March 28, 2015 in landscapes
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My first flying shot i´ve taken 🙂

http://bit.ly/1D7vZVn


ll Rights Reserved. This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media
without the explicit written permission of the photographer. DO NOT SHARE this photograph.
© Trevor Owen photography 2014

Returning from the edge of extinction

Persecution meant that the bird was exterminated in England, Scotland and most of Wales by the end of the last century. The 16th Century saw a series of Vermin Acts, requiring ‘vermin’ including the Red Kite to be killed throughout the parishes of Wales and England -the bird was perceived as a threat to expanding agriculture.

Such persecution continued throughout the 17th and 18th Centuries, and at the end of the 18th Century another devastating blow happened when increasing numbers of gamekeepers were employed on country estates, set up after the initiation of the parliamentary enclosures. These men were responsible for killing far more Red Kites.
By the late 18th Century, Red Kites had bred for the last time in England; the story in Scotland was similar.

Only in rural Mid Wales did Red Kites hang on, their numbers down to just a few pairs. At that point a few local landowners had the foresight to set up an unofficial protection programme to try to safeguard this beautiful bird. Over a period of around 100 years, efforts to maintain a fragile breeding population were made by committed generations of landowners, rural communities, dedicated individuals and organisations.
Thanks to the dedication of individuals and organisatons, and despite severe threats from egg collectors, poisoning and some modern farming practices, Red Kite numbers are now gradually increasing.

How close did the Red Kite get to extinction? It’s hard to give exact figures, but from scientific research at Nottingham University we do know that the entire population of kites in 1977 emanated from just one female bird.
Today Red Kites have a limited geographical range, which, with the exception of small and isolated populations in NW Africa and West Transcaucasia, is entirely confined to Europe. Total world population estimated at around 20,000 – 23,000 breeding pairs with main centres of population in Germany, Spain and France.In recent years young red kites have been taken from nests on the continent and introduced into England and Scotland. Wales now has well over 600 breeding pairs, (data courtesy of The Welsh Kite Trust).

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The sun explodes through the clouds in Redondo Beach with the Hermosa Beach pier in the background.

http://on.fb.me/1NnS7dC

http://bit.ly/1Gzudfl




Abstract Nature

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