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Sparowhawk 2022

A sparrowhawk in the garden at Friends of the Irish Environment on the Beara peninsula. Once almost extinct in Ireland, there are now 11,000 pairs in Ireland after Rachael Carson’s ‘Silent Spring’, (published 60 years ago this month) ended the use of the toxic chemicals like DDT. Like other birds of prey, the sparrowhawk was poisoned by feeding on prey that had eaten contaminated grain.
Sparowhawk 2022

A sparrowhawk in the garden at Friends of the Irish Environment on the Beara peninsula. Once almost extinct in Ireland, there are now 11,000 pairs in Ireland after Rachael Carson’s ‘Silent Spring’, (published 60 years ago this month) ended the use of the toxic chemicals like DDT. Like other birds of prey, the sparrowhawk was poisoned by feeding on prey that had eaten contaminated grain.
© Examiner Publications (Cork) Ltd

A sparrowhawk in the garden at Friends of the Irish Environment on the Beara peninsula. Once almost extinct in Ireland, there are now 11,000 pairs in Ireland after Rachael Carson’s ‘Silent Spring’, (published 60 years ago this month) ended the use of the toxic chemicals like DDT. Like other birds of prey, the sparrowhawk was poisoned by feeding on prey that had eaten contaminated grain.