
Loch Ryan sandwich terns to get help from Norfolk wind farms
A search of shorelines came up with the Dumfries and Galloway site as the best location to seek the return of sandwich terns.A special coastal habitat would be created including an inland pool with islands to be surrounded by a "predator-proof" fence.Bird viewing hides would also be set up to allow walkers to view the area without disturbing wildlife.Developers Equinor want the scheme in southern Scotland to compensate for the predicted impact on breeding sandwich terns of extensions to its two Norfolk schemes.
The site was selected after a detailed search for suitable places to create or restore a habitat for the birds.The area was identified as having been a historic breeding site up until about 15 years ago.It appears the site was vacated by the colony primarily as a result of coastal erosion.Opponents have raised concerns about the low likelihood of the project being a success and problems linked to additional visitors to the site.They have also voiced fears that other species in the area could be adversely affected.However, a report by council planners has recommended the scheme should be given the all clear.It said the project had "acceptable environmental credentials" and could go ahead with a number of conditions attached.
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BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Manx Wildlife Trust's flower bed scheme to support pollinators
Schools and community groups on the Isle of Man have been given the tools to create flower strips to support pollinating insects as part of a drive by a conservation Make Space for Nature scheme by the Manx Wildlife Trust (MWT) encourages residents to transform outdoor spaces and make them "more wildlife-friendly".Sewn in five locations across the island, the flower beds have used a blend of seeds to ensure a "maximum benefit to wildlife", the trust groups who signed up were given advice on how to plant, water and weed the areas, as well as tips on monitoring any wildlife that visits them. Two schools, a community garden in St Johns, a nursing home in Ramsey and the St John Ambulance Isle of Man headquarters in Douglas have taken part in the chief executive Graham Makepeace-Warne said the project blended "education and action".The result would be to "deliver a wonderful mix of horticulture, nature conservation and enhanced places for people to enjoy", he advice also included "simple things to start or stop doing that could make a big difference", he continued. MWT volunteers have also harvested seeds and cultivated plants from native Manx wildflowers to give out to community projects across the trust said the seeds once sown were "easy to care for" and could be grown in a "nature-friendly way" without using peat and pesticides. Mr Makepeace-Warne said the project had also been an "excellent opportunity" to continue to develop a Manx wildflower mix, which the team was regularly asked trust had a "long-held ambition to see an Isle of Man recommended seed mix" that was "suited to Manx soil and doesn't compete with our naturally occurring native wildflowers", he broader Make Space for Nature project has also been designed to show residents how to support pollinators at all stages of their life cycle in their own gardens or outdoor spaces. Read more stories from the Isle of Man on the BBC, watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer and follow BBC Isle of Man on Facebook and X.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
RSPCA billboard in Great Yarmouth wants kindness to seagulls
An animal welfare charity has erected a billboard asking people in a seaside town to be kind to RSPCA poster, on Acle New Road in Great Yarmouth - a main thoroughfare for tourists - said the birds were "lovers not fighters".Holidaymaker Suzanne Reynolds, of Canning Town, east London, said she agreed with the campaign despite a seagull cutting her finger "in two places" while she was eating a hotdog."It bit me but it must be hungry and just wanted food," she said. "We shouldn't be cruel to them because it didn't mean to bite me, it was an accident." The RSPCA said in a statement: "Sadly, gulls are one of the most victimised wild birds, and we receive a report about deliberate or extreme cruelty to them every three days."That's why as a charity advocating 'for every kind' - it's important for us to promote these unique and fascinating birds, how they deserve our compassion and respect."While we know not everybody likes gulls, others find them amazing animals - and we exist to protect and prevent cruelty to all animals, including those which are less popular or misunderstood."All animals have feelings and emotions, whether they are pets, wildlife, on farms or in labs, and they all deserve to have a fulfilled life of their own." Christina Docwra, who owns a chip stall at Great Yarmouth Market, said customers were regularly attacked by she said one man responded by repeatedly kicking at a seagull: "Now I don't agree with that. You don't hurt an animal no matter what the animal has done." Tessa Fennell, 49, of Great Yarmouth, was witnessed by our journalist as two gulls fought each other, almost hitting her in the head."I don't like them, but I don't mean violence to them. I'd just rather they weren't here while I'm eating." Kenny Hearn, 59, of Bradwell, said: "They're not really a problem unless people start feeding them; that's where the issue comes and I can understand why people get frustrated." Eating fish cake, chips and gravy, Anthony and Ciara Stevens, of Welwyn Garden City in Hertfordshire, were being watched by herring gulls in close if it worried him, 58-year-old Mr Stevens said: "Not at all. Just let them do it and then get on with it, and they go away. There's no excuse [for harming them]."Ciara, 52, said: "It's absolutely disgusting [to attack gulls]. It's bad. This is their home, not ours." Follow Norfolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


The Guardian
12 hours ago
- The Guardian
Unburied treasure: Viking hoard found by Scottish detectorist comes to South Australia
In AD900, marauding Vikings buried a hoard of treasure – jewellery, gold, silver and more – in Scotland. It wasn't until 2014 that it was unearthed. Metal detectorist Derek McLennan was prospecting in a ploughed field near Dumfries and Galloway when he came across the hoard, which turned out to be the most significant Viking-age collection ever found in the UK or Ireland. Now the Galloway hoard is making its international debut in Adelaide, on exhibition at the SA Museum. By chance, the very detector McLennan used (a waterproof, all-terrain CTX 3030, for the cognoscenti) was made by an Australian company based in Adelaide, Minelab. Minelab's engineering general manager, Mark Lawrie, says it was a 'bizarre' and 'happy' coincidence, and the museum confirmed it had no relationship with the company. Minelab sells detectors for coins and treasures, for gold prospecting and for finding landmines in conflict zones. With names such as Excalibor, Equinox and Manticore, the machines have helped customers around the world find treasures such as a pirate knife, sterling silver with an ivory handle and a Bronze-age torc. There are coins and rings, and American civil war relics, arrowheads and, in one case, a 1906 dog registration tag. And then there was that amazing cache in Scotland. 'I unearthed the first piece; initially I didn't understand what I had found because I thought it was a silver spoon, and then I turned it over and wiped my thumb across it and I saw the saltire-type of design and knew instantly it was Viking. Then my senses exploded,' McLennan said at the time. In Scotland, treasure seekers are paid for their finds – in this case, National Museums Scotland paid Derek McLennan a reward of almost £2m (about A$4m) for the 5kg of gold, silver, textiles and other objects he found. When he discovered it, the hoard of treasure was topped with a layer of silver bullion with an Anglo-Saxon cross, thought to be a decoy. Under it was another layer – of gravel – under which was a much larger stash of silver bullion, then elaborate, silver arm-rings and a box of gold objects, including a gold bird-pin. Next was a silver-gilt vessel, packed with valuables and wrapped in fabric, and inscribed with a 'fire-altar' associated with Zoroastrianism, the state religion of the last Persian imperial dynasty, in modern-day Iran. The Vikings buried their loot as they fled danger, perhaps hoping to later recover it – or to see it in the afterlife. Content coordinator at the SA Museum, Stephen Zagala, says apart from the looted treasures in the hoard, there are other objects that are perhaps more interesting. 'It's these glass beads and curios and heirlooms which are really more like a time capsule than a treasure hoard,' he says. 'Heirlooms that have been passed down over several generations, and they intended to pass them on further, and it never happened. 'They were just left in the ground for a thousand years.' One of his favourite objects is the rattle-stone, also known as a charm-stone. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email 'The inside has been eroded by water and left some sort of little fossil or other bit of stone inside, so that it rattles when you shake it like a seed pod,' he says. Zagala explains that the rattle-stone was often used in Scandinavia to help 'loosen' a baby during childbirth. 'It speaks to magic and mysticism,' he says. 'It speaks to maternal care and memories and relationships in a community.' Mark Lawrie says Minelab started working with McLennan and his wife, Sharon – who is from Kalgoorlie – after their 2014 find. They are now field testers who help Minelab fine-tune its technology. They are testing, for example, technology to weed coke – which sends similar signals as metals do – from burned wood in Scotland, to be used for energy. While detectorists hunt for archaeological treasure and Viking hoards in Europe, in Australia it's more about looking for gold, old coins or lost objects. Australia's famous gold nuggets are one of the reasons Minelab is in Australia. Another is that an inventor in the 1990s worked out how to get detectors to work on the iron-heavy red dirt of the outback. Now, Lawrie says, they have a big market in Africa. There, people on the poverty line can make a living out of finding gold. Minelab also makes landmine detectors for humanitarian projects in Cambodia, Laos, Afghanistan and Ukraine, 'everywhere where there has been conflict,' he says. Lawrie is a detectorist himself and describes it as 'meditative'. 'If you like hunting, or fishing, anything to do with dreaming of the thing you're going to get, and then preparing all your equipment and then going and doing it and, by and large, not actually finding anything most of the time, but being OK with that … that's very similar,' he says. 'They sometimes call it 'dirt fishing'.' Researchers will be studying the Galloway hoard for years, if not decades to come, particularly the more exotic items: the surviving silk, those curios, a rock crystal jar. And there are two balls of compact earth containing flecks of gold, which might have been gathered from a religious shrine or sacred place. But for now they're calling these things, which McLennan fished out of the earth, 'dirt balls'.