This website uses cookies for anonymised analytics and for account authentication. See our privacy and cookies policies for more information.





The voice of Scotland’s vibrant voluntary sector

Published by Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations

TFN is published by the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations, Mansfield Traquair Centre, 15 Mansfield Place, Edinburgh, EH3 6BB. The Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations (SCVO) is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation. Registration number SC003558.

80th osprey chick at charity’s reserve

This news post is almost 8 years old
 

​Breeding success for rare raptors at charity's nature reserve

Osprey chicks are hatching thick and fast at the Scottish Wildlife Trust’s Loch of the Lowes Wildlife Reserve near Dunkeld.

Volunteers got the first glimpse of the second chick of the season just after midnight on Friday morning (20 May). It follows the first chick to hatch out on Wednesday afternoon.

The two chicks have both fed successfully and look healthy. There is still one egg in the nest and it could hatch at any time over the weekend. It is the 80th osprey chick hatched at the reserve over the years.

Charlotte Fleming, Perthshire ranger at the Scottish Wildlife Trust said: “We noticed a small hole in the second egg yesterday afternoon and knew that the chick wouldn’t be far away. It was great to see it when LF15 stood up briefly just after midnight.”

Visitors will be flocking to the visitor centre, and logging on to the webcam to see the chicks develop

“LF15 and LM12 are proving to be good parents again this season as the chicks are being fed and well cared for in the nest. We’ll be watching and waiting for the third chick to hatch out in the next few days.”

Osprey chicks are covered in down, but start to grow new feathers within days. They grow very quickly and are ready to fly after seven to eight weeks.

This rapid growth is fuelled by a high protein diet of pike, trout and other fish brought to the nest by their attentive parents.

Hours before the second chick emerged its sibling received its first feed. The male osprey LM12 brought a huge salmon back to the reserve. After perching in a tree to devour the head it brought the food to the nest, where female LF15 enjoyed a brief meal before feeding its hungry chick.

Just after seven o’clock this morning the male brought in another fresh fish and while the first chick managed some food the second narrowly missed out.

However the female tried again around half past nine, and the second chick managed to feed successfully alongside its older sibling.

Once extinct in the UK, there are now around 240 breeding pairs of ospreys thanks to the efforts of nature conservation charities including the Scottish Wildlife Trust, whose Osprey Protection Programme is supported by players of People’s Postcode Lottery.

Clara Govier, head of charities at the People’s Postcode Lottery, said: “It’s fantastic news that the 80th egg has hatched at Loch of the Lowes and that nesting ospreys are bringing fish to the nest. I’m sure that visitors will be flocking to the visitor centre, and logging on to the webcam to see the chicks develop.”