logo
Breeding common cranes spotted in Co. Offaly bog

Breeding common cranes spotted in Co. Offaly bog

Agriland03-06-2025

Bord na Móna has confirmed that a pair of common cranes have nested at a bog in Co. Offaly for the seventh consecutive year.
The pair have successfully reared five chicks in the last three years, and have recently been spotted at the nesting spot by a Bord na Móna ecologist.
Following careful monitoring, it has been established that the pair are once again incubating eggs.
According to Bord na Móna, breeding cranes are a 'returning species' in Ireland, as cranes were formerly lost as a breeding bird.
It said that initial breeding attempts were made by a single pair in 2019, 2020, and 2021.
This followed successful breeding in 2022, 2023, and 2024, which marks the first time in several hundred years that the species is part of Ireland's breeding avifauna.
Cranes
An ecologist at Bord na Móna monitoring the birds since 2022, Chris Cullen believes that the birds are benefitting from habitat improvements associated with Bord na Móna's Peatland Climate Action Scheme (PCAS).
He said: 'Over the last two breeding periods, the nesting pair and their young have been seen utilising recently rehabilitated cutaway peatlands for feeding and shelter.
'In addition, over the last number of years, several summering but non-breeding individuals have also been observed on other rehabilitated cutaway bogs in the midlands.'
'It appears a nascent breeding population is possibly becoming established, with clear links to rehabilitated peatlands in terms of usage,' Cullen added.
The PCAS is a large-scale peatlands restoration project administered by the Department of the Environment, Climate, and Communications, and regulated by the National Parks and Wildlife Service.
It is hoped that the ongoing development of wetland habitats following rehabilitation under the present scheme will continue to support the expansion of this newly returned species in Ireland.
The location of the nest is confidential in order to protect and conserve the birds.
However, Bord na Móna has confirmed that the site is situated on a cutaway bog formerly used to harvest peat for energy production.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nature Trail: IVC - A new Irish vegetation classification system for all communities of wild plants
Nature Trail: IVC - A new Irish vegetation classification system for all communities of wild plants

Irish Independent

time9 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Nature Trail: IVC - A new Irish vegetation classification system for all communities of wild plants

IVC is an acronym that was a new one in my vocabulary until it was explained that it stood for the 'Irish Vegetation Classification', a recent concept and a completely new system of classifying vegetation throughout Ireland. In the past, people used the German Braun-Blanquet system or the British NVC system to describe vegetation in Ireland. While both systems are excellent, they presented difficulties in fitting foreign systems to the unique situation that prevails in Ireland. Dr Philip Perrin, a botanist and Director of Ecology at BEC Consultants in Dublin, has now devised a totally new, specifically Irish system and it is explained in a recent publication titled the 'Handbook for the Irish Vegetation Classification'. The 163-page handbook is published by the Waterford-based National Biodiversity Data Centre and is funded by the National Parks and Wildlife Service. The book divides all Irish vegetation types into 14 broad divisions ranging from grasslands to woodlands, sand dunes, bogs, freshwater, and so on, and breaks these down into 186 distinct communities. We are all familiar with the concept of plant communities. Without a need to be able to identify the species that make up a community, we all intuitively recognise that the plant community present in a hay meadow is very different to that found in a wood or in a bog or on sand dunes by the seaside. The new handbook lists and classifies all of these communities in one slim volume. One great advantage of having the new handbook is that everyone interested in nature now has a user-friendly Irish classification system to refer to. Vegetation studies can be difficult as vegetation is dynamic; it changes over time: today's abandoned grassland is destined to be tomorrow's scrub or woodland. Furthermore, vegetation is often not pure; it is often transitional, or part of a continuum, or a ragbag, hotchpotch mosaic that refuses to be categorised in some tidy, artificial pigeonhole. For further information and all you want to know about the IVC go to

Kerry council to roll out pilot scheme to detect deer on roads in bid to prevent accidents
Kerry council to roll out pilot scheme to detect deer on roads in bid to prevent accidents

Irish Examiner

timea day ago

  • Irish Examiner

Kerry council to roll out pilot scheme to detect deer on roads in bid to prevent accidents

Authorities are rolling out new technology in Killarney to tackle collisions with 'marauding deer' whose numbers are out of control. The "deer pilot schemes" are needed in a county which suffers more deer collisions than most, a meeting of Killarney Municipal District was told. A 'detect and alert' scheme, which has been effective in Austria, is to be rolled out on a trial basis. 'It detects deer, it detects vehicles,' Frank Hartnett, director of roads services with Kerry County Council, said. A noise deterring deer is emitted when both vehicles and deer are detected — when there is no car passing the deer could continue to cross the road, he said. The National Parks and Wildlife Service has previously said requests by the council — and by the late south Kerry coroner Terence Casey — to erect fencing in accident prone spots, were unfeasible. A number of fatalities and some serious injuries have been linked to deer in the Killarney area. There is no national strategy to tackle deer on roads and Mr Hartnett had put forward Killarney for the pilot schemes to the Transport Infrastructure Network, on the grounds of road safety. In a second scheme, technology used to deter bird strikes in airports is also being rolled out. The pilot schemes are being operated by Kerry County Council and are in conjunction with the Department of Agriculture and University College Cork, the meeting heard. If successful, the schemes will be adopted in other counties where there is risk from road collisions with deer. The deterrent system used in airports is expected to be rolled out in the coming weeks, subject to GDPR approval on the R569 Kilgarvan Road off the N22 at a point where deer are known to cross. The detection and deterrent scheme will be put in place in Ballydowney on the N70 on the outskirts of Killarney, where deer cross from the national park woodland to farmland. Several collisions, including two fatalities in which two women lost their lives, are suspected to have involved collisions with deer at and near Ballydowney. Cllr John O'Donoghue of Kerry Independent Alliance welcomed the announcement of the technology. He said he was 'sick' of raising accidents involving deer and he had come across how technology had been used elsewhere. 'The problem is not improving. No one is accepting responsibility for the deer," Cllr O'Donoghue said. This article was funded by the Local Democracy Scheme

Illegal peat harvesting uncovered on 38 sites across seven counties
Illegal peat harvesting uncovered on 38 sites across seven counties

Irish Examiner

time2 days ago

  • Irish Examiner

Illegal peat harvesting uncovered on 38 sites across seven counties

Large-scale commercial peat extraction is being carried out illegally across seven counties in Ireland. That's according to a report published by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which revealed that large-scale commercial peat extraction is being carried out without any of the necessary authorisations from local authorities on 38 sites. The sites are located in Offaly, Kildare, Tipperary, Westmeath, Roscommon, Longford, and Sligo. According to the EPA, these illegal operations are contributing to an export trade of 300,000 tonnes of peat annually, valued at almost €40m. Between 2021 and 2024, the EPA allocated significant resources to carry out 170 enforcement inspections. It has also taken legal action in the District Court and High Court against operations exceeding 50 hectares. These legal actions have resulted in the halt of illegal peat extraction on several peatlands in recent years. A number of cases remain ongoing before the courts. Local authorities have the primary responsibility for regulating all commercial peat extraction, specifically ensuring compliance with environmental legislation, including the performance of Environmental Impact Assessments, Appropriate Assessments related to protected habitats, and the granting — or refusal — of necessary planning permissions for these activities. The EPA is directing local authorities to take appropriate enforcement actions against such operations within their jurisdictions. The report notes that proper regulation of peat harvesting can provide important environmental protections. Bord na Móna lawfully operated nine peatland complexes across 11 counties under EPA licence until operations ceased in 2020. Now, following licence conditions and with support from the Peatlands Climate Action Scheme, Bord na Móna is rehabilitating those peatlands. By the end of 2024, nearly 19,000 hectares will have been restored — bringing the land back to life and allowing nature to thrive again. Dr Tom Ryan, Director of the EPA Office of Environmental Enforcement, said: 'Operators engaged in unauthorised peat harvesting activities are in flagrant violation of environmental law. They are destroying our precious natural environments and this needs to stop. "The environmental damage caused by large-scale peat extraction operating outside regulatory control is catastrophic for the environment. It results in the destruction of vital ecosystems for biodiversity, the loss of important carbon sinks for our efforts on climate change and the decimation of an irreplaceable cultural and scientific amenity and resource." Read More Gardaí used decommissioned firearms in sting operations to trap illegal gun buyers

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store