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The reasons why and their history of survival!

The Bitterns History:

At the beginning of the 19th century, the Bitterns population was declining, sooner than expected, in 1949, the Bitterns population was so badly at the brink of extinction that they thought that the Bitterns were gone, extinct. People across the UK were shocked when they heard about this and this hit the news, fast. But, in 1950, somewhere in the Norfolk broads, a few booms were reported, the farmer had found the last pair remaining in the UK in the farm and protected them, these 2 Bitterns are heroes, and so is the farmer, now the population is spreaing throughout sotheastern UK, and there have been a few sightings round herfordshire.

From 57-58 years ago there was only one pair, now there are roughly 15 pairs of Bitterns In the UK, and that is such an amazing recovery for the Bitterns and me. I wish I can thank the farmer for protecting that one pair. And I am going to try and see one or more,film it and take pictures of it.

The KingFisher:

The kingfisher is one of our most rarest birds, but it is our most beautiful in the UK, it does not get hunted, so why is it rare?
It's great to hear that the Bitterns have spreaded out into Great Amwell, I would really enjoy going there, even if I don't see one.
 
As long as I see wildlife in a different area, I would find that a good thing. Seeing wildlife in different areas of the world is the target for all Naturalists Like David Attenborough and other famous people like him.

The Kingfisher is dying out because of the pollution from the industrial and power plants near seas or rivers. THe kingfishers are being poisoned by the toxic fumes coming from the industrial and powerplants. The Goverment has done some serious cleaning for the past century and still is, which is why the KingFisher does not get killed instantly, most people see the KingFisher as a flash of blue, but I have seen a KingFisher completely and they are well camoufladged and very colourful, they look like Giant Dragonflies, but live on small fish.