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Posted (edited)

Other than building companies I highly, highly doubt many tree surgeons have been fined in the last 5 years for disturbing nests on domestic or small scale commercial

 

 

I did a FOI request for 3 London boroughs on the number of fines given for TPO violations in the last 5 years and the answer was a big fat zero. 

Edited by Clutchy
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Posted

Listening to all you very professional types, I think it is most likely it will be an uneducated diy`er who is most likely to fall foul of the law and prying neighbours. Not a well versed professional arborist 

Posted
On 02/04/2021 at 13:34, Mark Bolam said:

Nowt to do with the GL Paddy, all live birds nests are protected, regardless of species or pest status.

Ah okay, I just read through the act and it has exceptions. One of which is for pest species and for 

  • An authorised person (eg a landowner or occupier) may kill or take, in certain situations and by certain methods, so called 'pest species' and destroy or take the nest or eggs of such a bird. This is permissible under the terms of General Licences issues by government departments (see Licences). 

Then, the GL licences make it possible to destroy nests if you read them 

Posted

It’s certainly possible, but I think licences have to be individually obtained from DEFRA.

The GL rules were in a bit of a muddle last time I looked, thanks to Packham et al.

The best solution for me is to have flexible ‘banker’ jobs we can drop onto so we don’t lose a day if we find a live nest.

 

Incidentally, and I know it’s not technically legal, but we have successfully relocated plenty of live nests into retained trees in close proximity if the situation allows.

It’s a common BS line that if you touch a nest the parents won’t come back to it.

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Posted

Fair enough! I need to look into it more. Nothing more annoying than having to get a leylandii out with a pigeon nest in it. I've never had issues with "normal" birds, just bloody pigeons! 

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Posted

I would have thought Plecotus auritus myself on account of the aures grandis, but there is a certain resemblance to Inonotus from some angles I suppose.

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