Friday 19th March 2010
    Register Login
    Home |  About the Trust |  Strategic Review |  Multimedia |  Volunteer |  Members' Centres  |  Travel Trade |  Vacancies |  Contact
    Join Support Learn Conserve Functions Visits Holidays News Events Shop
    the National Trust for Scotland Visits & Holidays
    Places to Visit St Kilda National Nature Reserve Nature Reserve
    St Kilda National Nature Reserve
    • At a glance
    • Facilities
    • What to see & do
    • Accessibility
    • Getting There
    • Route planner
    • Map
    • Ranger services
    • Volunteer
    • Admission prices
    • Contact us
    • Search for places to visit
    Join
    • Become a member
    • Benefits of membership
    Donate
    • Support Scotland's leading charity - donate online.
    St Kilda National Nature Reserve
    St Kilda National Nature Reserve
    St Kilda National Nature Reserve
    St Kilda National Nature Reserve
    St Kilda National Nature Reserve
    St Kilda National Nature Reserve
    St Kilda National Nature Reserve
    St Kilda National Nature Reserve
    St Kilda National Nature Reserve
    Population studies could show bad news for kittiwakes
    Kittiwakes could be on course to disappear from some of Scotland’s most important seabird colonies if current trends continue, according to conservation charity the National Trust for Scotland.
    Kittiwakes could be on course to disappear from some of Scotland’s most important seabird colonies if current trends continue, according to conservation charity the National Trust for Scotland.

    The news comes as the Scottish Parliament prepares for a member’s debate on seabirds, led by Nanette Milne MSP on Wednesday 25 February, which highlights concerns for the future of Scotland’s seabirds. Almost a fifth of all the seabirds in Scotland breed on National Trust for Scotland properties.

    Since the mid-1980s, kittiwakes have been in decline at Trust colonies including World Heritage Site, St Kilda and Fair Isle in the Shetland Isles. At another Trust property - St Abb’s Head National Nature Reserve in Berwickshire, the population has dropped from in excess of 19,000 in 1989 to just over 5000 in 2008.

    Monitoring on Canna and on Mingulay also found that kittiwakes struggled to breed successfully in 2008.

    It is believed that the dramatic drop in population could be down to changes in the food supply, possibly connected to changing climate. A decline in the kittiwake’s preferred foodstuff - sandeels – has been traced to warming seas off Scotland’s east coast. Other studies have linked the breeding failure to attempts to feed on snake pipefish, which cannot be easily digested by kittiwake chicks.

    Dr Richard Luxmoore, Senior Nature Conservation Adviser with the Trust, said:

    “Seabird populations do fluctuate a great deal and it can be hard to draw firm conclusions, but we are certainly concerned by our kittiwake populations. Like many other seabirds, kittiwakes are long-lived, so a few bad breeding seasons might not be catastrophic in the long term. However, sustained seasons of poor breeding are bad news for the survival of this seabird.

    “It is difficult to identify the precise causes of population decline but the evidence points towards changes in the food supply. Although the pipefish were less in evidence in 2008, breeding success was still very low with many parents failing to lay eggs at all. There is clearly much more work required if we are to understand this complex picture. Kittiwakes are a much-loved feature of our coastal cliffs but if these trends continue their evocative cries may be consigned to folk-memory.”

    Balmacara, Canna, Culzean, Fair Isle, Iona, Mingulay, Montrose Basin, Murray Isles, Rockcliffe, Staffa, St Abb’s, St Kilda and Unst are home to over a million breeding seabirds including gannets, kittiwakes, manx shearwaters and puffins. For further details, visit www.nts-seabirds.org.uk.
    Return to top of this page

    St Kilda: all year, daily.
    News
    • No news at this property today
    • Search all news
    Events
    • At this property
    • At properties nearby
    • Search all events
    Search
    Downloads
    • Event Guide 2009 (PDF)
    • St Kilda Guide to access (PDF)
    • Stakeholder Consultation - English (PDF)
    • Stakeholder Consultation - Gaelic (PDF)
    • Consultation Reply Form - English (DOC)
    • Consultation Reply Form - Gaelic (DOC)
    Join
    • The St. Kilda site
    • Hiort
     
    The National Trust for Scotland. The National Trust for Scotland for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty is a charity registered in Scotland, Charity Number SC 007410 and depends for its support on the subscriptions of its members, donations and legacies. Terms & conditions of use | Increasing text size and site accessibility | Disability Access (PDF) | Site and contents copyright © 2010 the National Trust for Scotland.