Skokholm Island, an island off Pembrokeshire is
delighted to be reclaiming its status as a vitally important bird observatory, the
BBC reports. The island became the very first bird observatory to be
established in Britain back in 1933.
The researching and ringing of birds ceased in
1976, but the island was bought by the Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales -
and now the trust has realised its vision for the island to become an official
bird observatory once again.
Skokholm - back where it belongs |
"It is vitally important, because Skokholm was
the very first bird observatory ever established," explained the
conservationist and Welsh wildlife expert, Iolo Williams. "It has been
some 30-plus years since that all changed, but now we can finally reopen the island
as an observatory once again. It is a momentous occasion."
Skokholm lies 2.5 miles (4km) off the Pembrokeshire
coast, and was once part of the Dale Estate. It was leased by Cardiff-born
ornithologist Ronald Lockley in 1927, and by 1933 he had turned the island into
the UK's very first bird observatory.
The running of the island was taken over by the
forerunner of the Wildlife Trust in 1948, and in 2007 the trust purchased the
island for £600,000. A year later, it was declared a national nature reserve,
and the whole 106 hectares (260 acres) of the island is an officially
designated Site of Special Scientific Interest.
Since purchasing the island, the trust and
volunteers have been restoring buildings on the island, including Lockley's
former cottage and the island lighthouse.
The area around the lighthouse is of international
importance, as it has nearly 3,000 burrows used by Manx shearwater birds -
making it almost certainly the densest shearwater colony in the world. In fact,
along with nearby Skomer, the two islands are believed to be home to half the
world's Manx shearwaters.
Skokholm is also an important environment for storm
petrels, and for greater black-backed and herring gulls.
Regaining its
observatory status means the island rejoins a network of 18 other observatories
around the UK coast, including another Welsh island - Bardsey off the Llyn
coast of Gwynedd. The observatories work to record migration
patterns, bird populations, and developing conservation policies and scientific
research.
"To have Skokholm back as a bird observatory,
it really is a landmark day for all those involved," added naturalist,
Williams, who will be taking part in the official ceremony to mark the regained
status for the island later on Sunday.
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