Protected cliff swallow nests destroyed in Pitt Meadows again - Action News
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British Columbia

Protected cliff swallow nests destroyed in Pitt Meadows again

Federal and provincial wildlife officials are investigating another instance of cliff swallow nest destruction at an observation tower in Grant Narrows Regional Park in Pitt Meadows, B.C.

The cliff swallow colony's nests were destroyed at the same observation tower in Grant Narrows Park in 2019

a bird flies out of a mud nest
A cliff swallow is seen taking off from a nest at Grant Narrows Regional Park on July 29, 2023. For the second time in four years, the mud nests at the observation tower at the park have been destroyed, according to birders in the area. (Toby Ye)

Larry Cowan has been birding for 30 years, including nearly 20 years where he lives in Pitt Meadows, B.C., about 38 kilometres east of Vancouver.In that time, Cowan says he's noticed a decline in cliff swallow sightings.

So in 2019, he was pleased to see the birds, which are protected under the federal Migratory Birds Convention Act, building a colony of nests in the observation tower in Grant Narrows Regional Park at Pitt Lake.Unfortunately, the nests were destroyed that summer, and it took four years for the swallows to try to establish their colony again at the park.

This year, Cowan saw the cliff swallows were back, building their mud nests under the eaves of the tower.

"It looked like a very vibrant colony that was taking shape, and I was really happy about that," he said.

But, once again, the nesting birds had their homes torn from the structure.

"I was devastated," said Cowan of the discovery.

Two men in brown short  and baseball caps with binoculars slung around their necks walk on a park path.
Larry Cowan (left) walks with fellow birder Carlo Giovanella in Grant Narrows Park in 2019. The observation tower in the background is the site of repeated cliff swallow nest destruction. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

According to Melissa Hafting, a fellow Pitt Meadows birder who runs B.C. Bird Alert which informs the birding community of notable sightings the cliff swallows had built about 30 nests on the tower this year, roughly double the number in 2019.

She was also thrilled to see them return, and similarly crushed to see the destruction. Hafting says about half the nests were initially destroyed in early July, then several more, before the final three were torn off the structure last week.

"How disgusting it is that somebody would do something like this to these innocent swallows."

Officials investigating

Officials from the B.C. Conservation Officers Service (BCCOS) as well as the Canadian Wildlife Service are looking into thecase.

"Environment and Climate Change Canada's Enforcement Branch is aware of the destruction of cliff swallows nests at Grant Narrows Regional Park in Pitt Meadows, B.C., and of a similar incident in 2019," said a spokesperson in a written statement, adding that nobody was available for an interview as it's an ongoing investigation.

Four mud nests are shown under the eaves of a structure
A photo taken July 5, 2023, shows some cliff swallow nests intact, with the outline visible where others had been built by the birds, before being removed. (Melissa Hafting)

Asked about the results of the 2019 investigation, a spokesperson for the BCCOS also declined an interview, writing, "No leads to possible suspects were found and no evidence of the damage to be caused by humans and the investigations were concluded."

The spokesperson didn't suggest any other cause of the damage in the response to CBC News, but both Hafting and Cowan said an officer told them it may have been barred owls preying on the swallows a theory they find hard to believe.

"For that to be so clean, I don't believe it could be an owl," said Hafting.

"I sort of thought, 'Can this be natural, or could it be an animal?' But there's just no way an animal can get at it," said Cowan.

"I still feel somebody's going up there with some kind of implement to knock them down."

Messy nests

Hafting said the birds do tend to make a mess of the area below the nests, where droppings fall. She suspects that may have something to do with a motive for the nest removal if a human is to blame.

A yellow sign with blue writing says NOTICE: it is illegal to remove or destroy the nest of a bird when the nest is occupied by a bird or its egg.
A sign posted on the observation tower at Pitt-Addington Marsh in 2019 in Pitt Meadows warns the public not to damage bird nests. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

In 2019, around the same time the first Grant Narrows investigation began, wildlife officials were also looking into an alleged case of mass cliff swallow nest destruction at Walnut Beach Resort in Osoyoos, B.C., in the Interior, about 123 kilometres south of Kelowna. In that case, nearly 150 nests were affected.

At the time, the conservancy group Nature Canada reported that the cliff swallow population in B.C. had dropped by nearly 90 per cent since 1970.

Under the Migratory Birds Convention Act, destroying nests with eggs, nestlings, or adult birds can result in warnings, fines, or prosecution.