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“We can't take it for granted that this colourful seabird will keep returning"

“We can't take it for granted that this colourful seabird will keep returning

Monday 25 July 2022

“We can't take it for granted that this colourful seabird will keep returning"

Monday 25 July 2022


A new campaign to create a predator-safe zone for the island's last remaining puffins has launched to save the much-loved colourful seabirds from local extinction.

The National Trust for Jersey and Birds on the Edge have partnered up for the new initiative.

The new campaign will raise funds to create the Seabird Reserve by establishing a predator-safe area along the cliffs below the footpath found between the Lecq Clay Shooting range and the Plémont headland. 

A predator-exclusion fence will protect the puffins, their eggs and chicks from non-native predators such as rats and ferrets.

The launch of this campaign comes after five years of ecological research and independent consultations. A feasibility study concluded that non-native predators have been one of the main causes of the decline of Jersey’s puffin population, from more than 200 pairs in the 1910s to only four pairs at present. 

The presence of predators on the cliffs where the puffins breed is most likely preventing the population from increasing and, without intervention, puffins will eventually become extinct in Jersey.

Plemont Headland - CREDIT: Chris Brooks

Pictured: The predator-safe area will be stablished near the Plémont headland. (Chris Brooks)

The study also concluded that a purpose-built fence to keep predators out of the area, was the only viable option to safeguard the puffin population and allow it to recover to more sustainable levels.

Alongside the building of the fence, a programme to relocate the predators from inside the reserve area, a bracken management programme aimed at restoring coastal grasslands, and long-term monitoring of the fauna and flora of the reserve will complement the positive effects of the fence on the nature of the area.

This long-term project to restore the puffin colony’s all-important nesting grounds will also protect other native species of seabirds, land birds, mammals, reptiles and insects that are special to Jersey. It is hoped that even locally extinct species such as Storm Petrels and Guillemots will re-colonise the area.

puffins_in_sea.jpg

Pictured: Jersey’s puffins are on the edge of local extinction. (Cris Sellarés)

Cris Sellarés, Project Officer for Birds on the Edge, stressed the importance of the project: “We can no longer take it for granted that this colourful seabird which plays such an important part in Jersey’s natural heritage will keep returning to our shores; we must play our part to protect it now before it is too late.

“We believe the reserve will benefit not only the natural environment but will bring other benefits to the island's community by providing employment for local companies, back to work schemes, volunteering opportunities, apprenticeships and education. 

“It also has the potential to become a tourism asset and to have positive effects on wellbeing and mental health by enhancing our connection with nature.” 

A public consultation has begun prior to a planning application for the installation of the fence needed to protect the puffins. 

Members of the public can share their help, feedback or concerns via email, via an opinion survey, or at one of the drop-in session at Santander Work Café on Thursday 28 July and Thursday 4 August between 11:00 and 14:00, and at St. Ouen’s Parish Hall on Friday 12 August at 19:00 and Saturday 13 August at 11:00.

A website with more details of the project can be found here and the survey to gather feedback on views to help form the planning application and strategy of the Seabird Reserve can be downloaded here.

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