Part 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 28-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
White storks back in Britain after hundreds of years
These beautiful birds could be about to become a feature of the British landscape again
A 28
The last definitive record of a pair of white storks successfully breeding in Britain was in 1416, from a nest on St Giles Cathedral in Edinburgh. No one knows why storks disappeared from our shores. They often featured on the menus of medieval banquets so we might, quite simply, have consumed them all. But there could be a more ominous reason. Storks are migrants ariving after the end of winter, nesting on rooftops and happily associating with humans, and because of this they have long been a symbol of hope and new life. Yet their association with rebirth also meant they became a symbol of rebellion. Shortly after the restoration of King Charles II in 1660, while storks were rare but surviving, parliament debated putting greater effort into destroying them entirely for fear they might inspire republicanism. Today, fortunately, that notion has disappeared and the stork retains its association with new life, appearing on cards given to celebrate the arrival of a new child, as a bird carrying a baby in a sling held in its beak.
B 29
So, after such a long absence, there was great excitement when in April of this year a pair of white storks built an untidy nest of sticks in the top branches of a huge oak in the middle of our rewilding project at Knepp Estate in West Sussex. Drone footage, taken before the pair started sitting on them, showed three large eggs. The fact that they were infertile and did not hatch was not too disappointing. The pair are only four years old, and storks can live to over thirty, with their first attempts to breed often failing. Prospects for next year are encouraging. These young storks are part of a project to return the species to Britain, inspired by reintroductions in European countries that more than reached their target.
Imported from Poland, they have spent the best part of three years in a six-acre pen with a group of other juveniles and several injured, non-flying adults, also from Poland. Other birds have already shown strong loyalty to the site. Two years ago, a young bird from Knepp flew across the Channel to France and, this summer,returned to its companions.
C 30
In the face of reports of unrelenting ecological loss (the UN estimates a million species are on the brink of extinction globally), the white stork’s return is refreshing news. As tens of thousands of people demonstrate about the growing climate crisis and eco-anxiety besets us, these glimpses of restoration are important. Featuring the storks in BBC television’s Springwatch in June, the ecologist Chris Packham described the project as ‘ imaginative, intelligent, progressive and practical’.
D 31
And yet its path to restoration in the UK has not been smooth. Support from conservation bodies has been surprisingly difficult to obtain; some were hard pressed with their own initiatives, while others were simply reluctant to stick their necks out. In addition the committee of the Sussex Wildlife Trust raised doubts about the stork ever having been a British bird. They also had concerns that English-bred birds would migrate across the Channel, and feared that their messy nests and closeness to humans would cause a hazard – rubbish falling down people’s chimneys. So how has the reintroduction project managed to get going?What makes it in some ways special is that it has had to rely on private individuals actually building the introduction pens themselves and feeding the birds at their own expense. The expertise of tiny yet determined conservation charities such as the Roy Dennis Wildlife Foundation responsible for the successful reintroductions of ospreys and white-tailed eagles to Britain – has been very welcome. And the support of Cotswold Wildlife Park, which quarantined the original Polish birds and continues to manage and cover the costs of the captive-breeding programme using its own well trained staff and excellent facilities, has proved invaluable.
E 32
Across Europe, as stork populations have suffered from the draining of wetlands and disappearance of insect-rich pastures and meadows, their loss has been felt deeply. A few years ago, a tearful old woman in a village in Belarus showed me the nest on her roof, empty of storks for the first time in living memory. Where storks have been reintroduced, they are greeted with great happiness and some historical stork festivals have been restored. The Spanish erect poles for nests along their motorways, and in Alsace householders install cartwheels for storks to build nests on their roofs. During a cold snap in Bulgaria last March, villagers even gave white storks access to their homes.
F 33
A driving motivation behind the project in the UK is the aspiration that the storks return will spark feelings of empathy and affection from townspeople who see their nests on rooftops. They might also encourage the public to feel worried about the wider area where they fly to feed on earthworms, grasshoppers and frogs. White storks could be that charismatic species that connects urban communities directly with landscape restoration. Certainly, people once loved them here. The name of our local village, Storrington was originally ‘Estorcheton’ or ‘home of the storks’. The public response has been overwhelming, with crowds coming to see white storks flying free in England for the first time in hundreds of years, and private landowners queueing up to offer more introduction sites. The flight of the white stork over Britain is the triumph of practical action over bureaucracy, self-interest and negativity.
Questions 28 – 33
The text passage 3 has six sections, A-F.
Choose the correct heading for each section from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number, A-H, in boxes 28-33 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
- A. An enterprise arising from success in other countries
- B. The hope that storks will inspire a range of emotions and actions
- C. Support from some organisations but not from others
- D. Finding new types of habitat
- E. Opposition from the general public
- F. A sign of hope in difficult times
- G. Creatures which represent both joy and opposition
- H. Storks causing delight and the revival of public events
Questions 34 – 37
Complete the summary below.
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the text for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 34-37 on your answer sheet.
|
Project to reintroduce white storks at Knepp Estate Last spring, two white storks were observed nesting at Knepp Estate, putting 34_______________ together high up in a large oak tree. The female laid three eggs, which unfortunately proved to be 35_______________ . However, this was not surprising for such young storks. Naturalists believe they are likely to breed successfully in the future.
These two storks were bred in 36_______________ and, after arriving in the UK, were kept for several years together with a few fully mature storks and some fellow juveniles before being released at Knepp. It appears that other storks are developing a sense of 37_______________ to their new home. One left Knepp for a year, only to fly back to be with the group again. |
Questions 38 – 40
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
38In Section A, we learn that in the past people thought white storks
- represented the deep snow and cold days of winter.
- had the power to ensure that babies were born safely.
- were a speciality that only the very rich were allowed to eat.
- might be used to encourage people to get rid of the monarchy.
39The Sussex Wildlife Trust committee was unwilling to support the storks because
- it thought there might not be any safe breeding places locally.
- it worried whether they would survive in Britain long enough.
- it was unsure that they were actually a native species.
- it had too many other worthy projects to support.
40What has been one effect of stork reintroductions in Europe?
- A variety of measures have been taken to create nesting sites.
- Changes have been made to the routes of some major roads.
- Special shelters have been made to protect the birds in bad weather.
- Some people have strengthened their roofs to support the birds’ weight.
