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https://naturalengland.blog.gov.uk/2022/09/22/the-death-of-asta-a-natural-england-tagged-hen-harrier/

The death of Asta, a Natural England-tagged hen harrier

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Biodiversity, Hen Harriers, Protected sites and species, Wildlife

Typical hen harrier upland breeding habitat

By: John Holmes, NE Strategy Director

Hen harriers are currently extremely rare in England due to illegal persecution and nest disturbance, primarily in areas associated with grouse shooting. Natural England satellite-tracks hen harriers in order to investigate patterns of dispersal and survival, and the causes of any deaths. I said in my last blog that some areas of Natural England’s hen harrier recovery work remain controversial, and this is especially so because illegal persecution rightly evokes strong feelings for all of us. This is the story of one of our tagged hen harriers, Asta, and what happened to her.

Asta was one of four chicks fledged from a nest in Northumberland in 2020 in an area managed by Forestry England. She had spent almost all of her short life in the north Pennines, and before her death had established a defined home range in an area managed for grouse shooting, centred on Gilmonby Moor, County Durham, ranging onto other nearby moors.

As with all our tagged hen harriers, our staff were constantly checking up on Asta. Concerns were raised when Asta appeared to suddenly move to a new location – near Arrathorne, south-east of Richmond – and stopped moving. As always, the police were immediately informed, and no efforts were spared in tracking down the tag. Finding tags calls for considerable expertise, and our dedicated staff spent many long hours chasing the signals. What they eventually found was shocking and unexpected: the tag, which they had last seen on the healthy nestling Asta, attached to the scavenged carcass of a carrion crow. It was hard to make sense of this finding, but our staff acted fast, involving the police and other specialists.

Here is what we know: it was quickly and clearly established that the tag and harness were intentionally fitted to the crow by a person. We know that Asta must have died before or soon after her tag was removed, because the harness straps were not cut or broken, and there would have been no way to remove the harness intact from a live bird without severe injury.

Here’s what we do not know:

  • We do not know exactly what happened to Asta, whether she was shot, trapped or otherwise deliberately killed on the grouse moors where she had been ranging, or if she died at a different location or another way.
  • We do not know how the tag came to be fitted to a crow, how the crow was obtained or how or exactly when it died. However, the tag transmissions do not show a long period of inactivity before or during the change of location, so our interpretation is that the tag was fitted to a live crow soon after Asta’s death, and this crow was released alive, in the Arrathorne area.
  • We do not know if the intention of the person who did this was to trick us into thinking Asta was still alive – although this is the obvious interpretation. We don’t know who this person was, or whether this action was linked to their employment.

We are clear that the evidence points to a crime being committed, and that this will be shocking to anyone interested in improving the prospects for birds of prey in our uplands. This has been upsetting for all of our staff involved, especially those who had been monitoring and tracking Asta all her life.

Our focus since this discovery has been to maximise the chances of finding the person who fitted the tag to the crow. The police launched a criminal investigation, which by its nature, has taken a long time to play out to its full conclusion; over a year. We have had many discussions during this time about whether sharing the details of this event with the public would increase or decrease the chances of a successful conviction, and the consistent advice of the police has been that this would decrease the chances. Therefore, on the specific request of the police, no statements were made, as is often the case when there are ongoing and sensitive police investigations, and we are still not sharing the details of the police investigation to avoid influencing future police work.

Unfortunately, we have recently been informed that the police investigation did not gather enough information to identify a suspect. We remain deeply distressed and angered by this evidence of a wildlife crime, and an apparent effort to attempt to deceive or frustrate our monitoring programme, but without further evidence the police and Natural England have no basis for further action. Any requests for more details about this case, or new evidence, should be directed to North Yorkshire Police.

Accusations that we have unduly withheld information

Despite the decision of the police to not publicise the details of the case, the full information was passed, by someone familiar with all the details, to anti-raptor-persecution campaigners. These campaigners have claimed that Natural England has not shared the information publicly in order to protect the grouse shooting industry. On 25th August 2022 these campaigners published a blog, accusing Natural England of being reluctant to share information because of alleged biases toward the shooting industry, because by that point the investigation had been closed and Natural England had not shared the facts of the case.

Our work must always be open to scrutiny and criticism and we share and support the aims of anyone who wants to see an end to raptor persecution, but unfounded allegations are insulting and upsetting to our dedicated staff. The details of the case were not shared before now in order to maximise chances of a conviction and on the express request of the police. Natural England was only informed by the police that the case was closed, and no further action would be possible, on 31 August 2022, after the publication of this blog, so this claim has no substance.

Furthermore, it has been alleged by the same campaigners that a contribution by The British Association for Shooting and Conservation (BASC) of £75,000 to Natural England’s hen harrier work is related to our decision to not publicise details of this case, and has influenced our wider work tackling persecution. This is a serious allegation which we strongly reject. As published in March 2022, the BASC funding supports some Natural England staff time spent on monitoring, and on liaising with shooting land managers, and we welcome this support. As clearly set out in our agreement with BASC, this funding in no way constrains our wider statutory functions, and is not related to our work on cases of suspected persecution.

What next?

We will continue our work tracking hen harriers and will make every effort to track down tags that stop transmitting. Some dead birds will be found, and investigations will conclude that they died naturally. Some birds will be found in suspicious circumstances, and the police will investigate, fully supported by our fieldwork and enforcement teams. In many cases the birds and tags will never be found – some of these losses will be birds that have been shot or trapped, and the bodies and tags hidden or disposed of, while others will be due to natural mortality, with low battery levels or topography meaning that the final signals are too imprecise for the tag to be tracked down. Still others could be due to tags failing while the birds are still alive. Whatever the possible reason, all tags that stop transmitting will continue to be referred to the police, and will be kept on file by the National Wildlife Crime Unit and local police forces, who monitor patterns of disappearances and take action where warranted. We will tirelessly continue this work, alongside all other work with our partners under the Hen Harrier Action Plan to tackle and discourage hen harrier persecution.

Though the evidence continues to show hen harriers remain persecuted in parts of their range, we are pleased to be working with organisations including the Moorland Association, BASC and the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust, as well as individual landowners and gamekeepers, to return breeding hen harriers across our uplands. The illegal acts perpetrated by criminals – whoever they may be – continue to cast a shadow over these efforts. Despite this, and the unfounded allegations that our staff are sometimes subjected to, we are approaching our work with renewed determination, recognising that there is much work to be done to address illegal persecution but encouraged by this year’s hen harrier breeding figures, with over 100 young fledged for the first time in 100 years.

Note: this blog was prepared for publication in early September 2022. However, publication was postponed due to the national mourning period.

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7 comments

  1. Comment by Alice posted on

    This is a shocking situation. I hope the investigation brings the people involved to justice.

  2. Comment by Nick Galley posted on

    Hi, very interesting reading, obviously some suspicion will be aroused by having a relationship with the shooting establishment.
    Surely this is the correct and sensible way forward, it must be sensible for all sides to join rather than divide in the hope of preserving and building on the success and safety of all our Harriers and birds of prey. Emotions are raised when we witness barbaric behaviour toward one of our most loved birds, but sensible debate must prevail. Regards Nicholas.

  3. Comment by Keith Cowieson posted on

    '... it has been alleged by the same campaigners that a contribution by The British Association for Shooting and Conservation (BASC) of £75,000 to Natural England’s hen harrier work is related to our decision to not publicise details of this case, and has influenced our wider work tackling persecution. This is a serious allegation which we strongly reject.'

    Since this serious allegation is strongly rejected, NE should sue for libel and, if successful, donate any proceeds to further hen harrier conservation work (having covered the associated legal costs first).

  4. Comment by Cara McClure posted on

    This is very upsetting, poor Asta! I'm massively passionate about fighting wildlife crime and am very interested in this area of NE, I would love to be a part of it.

  5. Comment by James A posted on

    As sad as this is why not Blog about the house developers destroying our green and pleasant land - or the sewage companies doing untold damage to our rivers and water ways

    Most of these birds live on grouse moors simply because they provide the habitat for them and protect their eggs from predators

  6. Comment by Stephen posted on

    The only way forward, as already mentioned, is by shooting bodies and conservation groups sharing knowledge and working together for the better good. There will always be bad apples in any organisation but I truly believe they are very much in the minority. As with almost all crimes it is this tiny minority that carries out the largest proportion of crime and can skew the figures. If the judiciary would hand out heavier punishment for such acts ie fined, confiscation and imprisonment, the message would get home. As George V said ‘ the wildlife of today is not ours to dispose of as we please, we must account for it to those that come after us ‘

  7. Comment by Keith Cowieson posted on

    One related question asked, but not answered, on the earlier HH blog, where are we with the Southern Reintroduction element of the HHAP?