footer_shadow

Bee-eaters hatch chicks in Nottinghamshire

Bee-eater, East Leake, Nottinghamshire, (© Ian Bollen)

Since June 25th up to seven Bee-eaters have been in residence at Easy Leake quarry in Nottinghamshire and now the RSPB have announced they have hatched chicks.

They gave this update on their Community Blog...

After touching down in East Leake quarry on 25 June, the Nottinghamshire bee-eaters have successfully hatched chicks – just the third time this has happened in a decade.

Nearly 10,000 people have come to see these spectacular birds, some travelling from as far afield as Cornwall and County Durham. But while visitors have been enjoying the birds, behind the scenes RSPB protection staff have been guarding three active nests. We are delighted to announce that the first of the nests has hatched!

Birdwatchers can expert their first views of the chicks in around three weeks’ time, once they fledge.

Yesterday afternoon the behaviour of the adults attending 'nest 3' changed with a burst of visits and prey items going into the nest. The other two nests are now also on the verge of hatching and we expect all three will have young by the weekend.

24hr wardening will continue until all the nests hopefully successfully fledge young. The threat of human disturbance has now been replaced with that of predators. A fox has been seen and deterred from the quarry several times in recent nights, so we still have a way to go.

Bee-eaters and nest in burrows that reach up to 10ft (3m) often in sand banks, in which they lay 3-8 white eggs.

RSPB announces arrival of bee-eater chicks! from The RSPB on Vimeo.

Mark Thomas, RSPB senior investigations officer said “Bee-eaters are sociable birds and nest together in small groups. Often pairs will enlist the help of a single, younger bird to help bring food and rear their chicks. Bringing up junior is very much a community effort.”

Please remember that bee-eaters are Schedule 1 species and their nests are protected from disturbance.

Finally we would like to thank all the brilliant volunteers, CEMEX and particularly quarry manager Scott Saunders, Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust and all the visitors!

Ends

 

How to see the bee-eaters: Follow your sat nav to LE12 6RG. Car park open 6am-9pm at a cost of £5 (half of which goes straight back to the RSPB to help them protect the wildlife you love).

 

20 July 2017

Share this story

 

 

 

 

freetrial-badge

 

 

Latest articles

article_thumb

Weekly birding round-up: 19 - 23 Dec

Jon Dunn brings you his final roundup of 2025, looking back at the best birds from around Britain, Ireland and the Western Palearctic. More here >

article_thumb

Solar-powered GPS tags show no detectable harm to Kentish Plovers

Detailed behavioural, breeding and survival monitoring suggests tiny long-life trackers can be used safely on one of Europe's smallest shorebirds. More here >