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First osprey egg laid at Loch of the Lowes reserve

The female osprey nesting at the Scottish Wildlife Trust’s Loch of the Lowes Wildlife Reserve near Dunkeld has laid her first egg of the season. The egg was laid at 12:52am this morning (12 April 2016).

Charlotte Fleming, Perthshire ranger for the Scottish Wildlife Trust, said: “LF15 has given us an anxious wait this year, however we’re delighted that she has laid her first egg. With any luck numbers two and three won’t be far behind.

“There were a number of changes in her behaviour including high pitched calling and constant fidgeting that made us sure she was about to lay, and managed to get settled down to incubate soon afterwards.”

Photo: Scottish Wildlife Trust

Photo: Scottish Wildlife Trust

“The male has visited the nest several times today. Initially he seemed more interested in an old fish tail than the egg, but once he had finished his breakfast he returned to the nest, inspected the new egg briefly and then settled to incubate it, giving LF15 a well-earned rest.”

The female known as LF15 arrived back at the reserve on 18 March and was joined by her mate LM12 a week later on Good Friday, 25 March. Since then reserve visitors, rangers, and webcam viewers from all over the world had been waiting patiently for the first egg to arrive.

Ospreys typically lay between two and three eggs in a season. 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.

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