
Cork's barn owls on the rise thanks to nest boxes
However, there are grounds for hope. In Cork, barn owl numbers are slowly recovering, with nest boxes built by volunteers playing an important role. The plywood boxes are installed high up near the roof inside the galvanised farm sheds that have largely replaced traditional barns, in derelict buildings, and also on trees. Built to a design approved by BirdWatch Ireland, the boxes give the owls extra sites in which to raise their annual brood.
And in Cork the birds are taking full advantage of their new accommodation. In a recent check of three nest boxes in the farmland around the East Cork villages of Mogeely and Killeagh, Dr Alan McCarthy of Birdwatch Ireland discovered seven thriving barn owl chicks. He told the Irish Independent that the nest box project has been a resounding success in Cork.
'Year on year we're seeing more boxes have become occupied for nesting. So last year the occupancy rate was up to 25% of boxes, which for a Red-Listed species is very good, and this year we're still getting the numbers in but so far it looks like even more boxes will be occupied,' he said.
'The project is definitely producing the goods. Without nest boxes in these modern farm buildings, there would be no suitable cavities for barn owls to nest within, so it's providing new homes for new pairs for the population to expand.'
In the past 10 years there's been an increase of around 130% in the barn owl breeding distribution in Cork, with the highest number of known nest sites in any county. In 2023, the highest density of barn owls in Ireland were recorded within a 10-kilometre square in East Cork.
It's good news for farmers too as the owls feed on rats and mice as well as shrews and voles. A pair of barn owls can predate over 2,000 small mammals during the breeding season, Dr McCarthy said.
Science teacher and BirdWatch Ireland volunteer Donncha Ó'Teangana has built and installed around 100 barn owl nesting boxes in County Cork over the past five years, with Cork County Council providing funding for the materials. He has since had the satisfaction of seeing many of them used to raise the next generation.
'When the first box got taken, I was delighted. When you're putting them up and nothing's happening and you're wondering, are you doing it right? Now I'm kind of disappointed when I arrive at a box and there's nothing in it!' he said.
So the picture is looking somewhat better for the barn owl, at least in Cork. This year Cork County Council will receive €8,585 from the National Parks and Wildlife Service's Local Biodiversity Action Fund for barn owl and kestrel monitoring and conservation in the county.
Even so, the barn owl remains endangered. 'We need more hedgerows that are managed sympathetically with wildlife in mind, a hedgerow that isn't cut every year and where the hedge is allowed to develop flowers, seeds and berries. Just leaving a one or two-metre grass margin along the base of a hedgerow could make the world of difference by providing good hunting for barn owls,' Dr McCarthy said.
Funded by the Local Democracy Reporting Scheme.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
2 days ago
- Irish Independent
Map initiative calls for protection of Ireland's endangered seabirds
But despite laws being passed 46 years ago to safeguard them, the places they feed, roam and spend most of their time are largely unprotected. Birdwatch Ireland now wants the Government to make up for lost time and officially designate key locations around and off the coast as protected areas. The charity has identified 73 strips of coastline and stretches of sea it said meet the criteria for Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas (IBAs) and is calling on the Government to recognise them as a first step towards formal protections. Oonagh Duggan, of Birdwatch Ireland, said such protections were long overdue. 'The European Union Birds Directive dates back to 1979, so that's how long we're waiting,' she said. 'Article four of the directive says sites should be designated for all phases of a bird's life cycle. On land we have some legally created Special Protected Areas [SPAs] for breeding birds but we don't designate out to sea, which is where they feed, winter and generally hang out the rest of the time.' Birdwatch Ireland is proposing that 49 coastal IBAs be created for vital breeding sites and established colonies of birds, with a further 24 marine IBAs out at sea. Marine IBAs are areas where birds have regular feeding grounds and where they exhibit 'rafting' behaviour – gathering in floating groups to socialise and preen under the safety of numbers. IBAs would support 24 species of seabird of all shapes and sizes, from the compact puffin to the hefty gannet, from the little tern to the great skua, from the well-known herring gull to less familiar manx shearwater. The others are black guillemot, common guillemot, Arctic tern, roseate tern, sandwich tern, common tern, kittiwake, shag, cormorant, European storm petrel, Leach's storm petrel, northern fulmar, razorbill, Mediterranean gull, black-headed gull, great black-backed gull, lesser black-backed gull and common gull. All but the great black-backed gull have an unfavourable conservation status, which means their populations are under threat. Pressures include loss of food sources from overfishing, entanglement in fishing nets, predation of nests and chicks by rats and other invasive species and marine pollution, including plastics. They are also suffering from the spread of avian flu, human interference with breeding sites and increasing extreme weather events caused by climate change. Future threats are also identified – including intensification of development at sea when offshore wind projects are built. Birdwatch Ireland is calling on the Government to accept the IBAs and designate all of them as formal SPAs. The organisation is also asking that existing SPAs be reviewed and updated using the new IBA data. It also said management plans must be developed for all IBAs/SPAs with 'clearly defined and quantifiable science-based conservation objectives' and 'conservation measures necessary to achieve these objectives'. It said accompanying 'avian sensitivity maps' should be drawn up to guide activities at sea, in particular the location of offshore renewable projects. While they are not a legal designation, thousands of IBAs are already recognised in many countries and used to inform policymakers in the process of formally declaring protected areas. The EU accepts their validity, as does the European Court of Justice. Global conservation organisation BirdLife International has devised the criteria for declaring an IBA, setting out the research that must be carried out to ensure they are scientifically robust. A detailed report being published today by Birdwatch Ireland was compiled with help from experts at the National Parks and Wildlife Service, University College Cork, University College Dublin, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, and universities and research institutes in England, Scotland and Norway. Extensive surveys were carried out and tracking data collated to piece together the most up-to-date picture of the places our seabirds depend on for survival. The public will be able to check out the areas and birds for themselves when Birdwatch Ireland launches an interactive map on its website today. It stressed the initiative is not just critical for Ireland's wildlife but for global biodiversity, as some of the sites host some of the most significant colonies of species in the world. The initiative comes as concern grows over the fate of Government promises to designate 30pc of Ireland's seas as marine protected areas (MPAs). Just 10pc is designated so far and practical protections have not been put in place. Legislation to formally create MPAs has been delayed and Environment Minister Darragh O'Brien indicated this week that he may change tack.


RTÉ News
3 days ago
- RTÉ News
Crucial areas for conserving Irish seabirds identified by BirdWatch Ireland
A map identifying the 73 most important areas for Ireland's seabirds is being launched by BirdWatch Ireland. The wildlife NGO used the international criteria outlined by BirdLife International to identify the most crucial areas used by seabirds in Ireland. Areas designated using this criteria, for Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas (IBAs), are recognised by the European Court of Justice and the European Commission as sites that should be designated by Special Protection Areas by EU member states. The map identifies 73 important areas for Ireland's sea birds, 49 of which are colony/breeding areas and 24 of which are marine areas used by birds for feeding and wintering. A total of 41 of the colony areas are already designated as Special Protection Areas (SPAs). While two areas of the marine have been identified by the National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) as potential SPAs. These are in the northwest Irish Sea and in the sea off Wexford. Jim Wilson has been observing the birds on the Old Head of Kinsale in Cork for more than 50 years. Mr Wilson described the location as a noisy place due to being in the middle of breeding season, with the sounds of Kittiwakes and other birds including guillemots and razorbills. However, he has noticed that the numbers of Kittiwakes are dwindling at the Old Head of Kinsale at "an alarming rate". The numbers of auk, guillemot and razorbill are also decreasing. He said protecting the sea areas for birds where they hunt is "something we need to do fast". IBAs are not a legal protection mechanism but are used to inform the designation of SPAs for birds under the EU Birds Directive. These Irish sites now form part of a global network of IBAs across 243 countries. Ireland is legally obliged to designate areas that protect the lifecycle of birds as SPAs under Article 4 of the Birds Directive, which is an EU legislation. Ireland has had designated areas for the protection of birds since 1998. A total of 24 species of breeding seabirds are hosted by Ireland's marine area, with 23 of them under a red or amber conservation status. Ireland has committed to designate 30% of its seawaters as marine protected areas by 2030. Around 9.8% have this designation. If all IBAs identified by BirdWatch Ireland on this list were designated as SPAs, that would bring the total are covered up to 17.5%. BirdWatch Ireland said it is conservative in its designation and the areas identified are the most crucial ones for Irish seabirds. Ireland's marine waters represent 8% of the total marine area of the European Union's marine area. Issues impacting the birds include a lack of protection at breeding and colony sites, bird flu, overfishing, predation by invasive species, marine pollution and climate change. Ireland began designating marine SPAs three years ago. Less than 2% of Ireland's Exclusive Economic Zone, the offshore area it has jurisdiction over living and non-living resources, is designated for seabirds. The expansion of human activities at sea, including the development of offshore wind projects, pose potential future threats to the birds. BirdWatch Ireland is calling on the Irish Government to designate the areas identified by the NGO as crucial for seabirds as SPAs. They are also calling for management plans to be developed for all SPAs so that conservation efforts can be measured and for funding to measure the potential impact of offshore renewable energy projects on Irish seabirds.


Irish Independent
4 days ago
- Irish Independent
Cork's barn owls on the rise thanks to nest boxes
The barn owl, one of Ireland's native birds of prey, is an elusive nocturnal hunter, scouring verges and hedgerows for the rodents they survive on. And like many of the country's other raptors, they're on the Red List of high conservation concern. Rodenticide and road kills have whittled away their numbers but the greatest threat they face is loss of habitat as farming becomes ever more intensive. However, there are grounds for hope. In Cork, barn owl numbers are slowly recovering, with nest boxes built by volunteers playing an important role. The plywood boxes are installed high up near the roof inside the galvanised farm sheds that have largely replaced traditional barns, in derelict buildings, and also on trees. Built to a design approved by BirdWatch Ireland, the boxes give the owls extra sites in which to raise their annual brood. And in Cork the birds are taking full advantage of their new accommodation. In a recent check of three nest boxes in the farmland around the East Cork villages of Mogeely and Killeagh, Dr Alan McCarthy of Birdwatch Ireland discovered seven thriving barn owl chicks. He told the Irish Independent that the nest box project has been a resounding success in Cork. 'Year on year we're seeing more boxes have become occupied for nesting. So last year the occupancy rate was up to 25% of boxes, which for a Red-Listed species is very good, and this year we're still getting the numbers in but so far it looks like even more boxes will be occupied,' he said. 'The project is definitely producing the goods. Without nest boxes in these modern farm buildings, there would be no suitable cavities for barn owls to nest within, so it's providing new homes for new pairs for the population to expand.' In the past 10 years there's been an increase of around 130% in the barn owl breeding distribution in Cork, with the highest number of known nest sites in any county. In 2023, the highest density of barn owls in Ireland were recorded within a 10-kilometre square in East Cork. It's good news for farmers too as the owls feed on rats and mice as well as shrews and voles. A pair of barn owls can predate over 2,000 small mammals during the breeding season, Dr McCarthy said. Science teacher and BirdWatch Ireland volunteer Donncha Ó'Teangana has built and installed around 100 barn owl nesting boxes in County Cork over the past five years, with Cork County Council providing funding for the materials. He has since had the satisfaction of seeing many of them used to raise the next generation. 'When the first box got taken, I was delighted. When you're putting them up and nothing's happening and you're wondering, are you doing it right? Now I'm kind of disappointed when I arrive at a box and there's nothing in it!' he said. So the picture is looking somewhat better for the barn owl, at least in Cork. This year Cork County Council will receive €8,585 from the National Parks and Wildlife Service's Local Biodiversity Action Fund for barn owl and kestrel monitoring and conservation in the county. Even so, the barn owl remains endangered. 'We need more hedgerows that are managed sympathetically with wildlife in mind, a hedgerow that isn't cut every year and where the hedge is allowed to develop flowers, seeds and berries. Just leaving a one or two-metre grass margin along the base of a hedgerow could make the world of difference by providing good hunting for barn owls,' Dr McCarthy said. Funded by the Local Democracy Reporting Scheme.