Quite interesting book all about the situation and history of the red kite. THere is an indepth analysis of why it was exterminated, starting with the 1566 acte and moving through time - really opened my eyes to the trigger-happy Victorian groundsmen. I also particularly liked the information about the effects of myxomatosis. Unlike wildcats which appear to have found diseased rabbits easier to catch (man & beast), red kites seem to have had problems keeping up their populations without rabbits. Also interesting is that they only eat voles, lagomorphs and mice, and appear to be unable to even scavenge sheep, cats, dogs or calves without dogs, foxes or ravens opening up the corpse first.
One quote:
The word ‘kite’ clearly derives from the Anglo-Saxon cyta (onomatopeic of the call) and evolved through the medieval ‘kyte’; it is noteworthy that like many of our other vernacular names of birds, ‘kite’ has remained essentially unchanged for over a thousand years. However, an alterative name widely used and older than ‘kyte’ or ‘cyta’ but which has now disappeared from the language was ‘glede; or ‘glead’ , again derived from an Anglo-Saxon word, ‘glidda’ which is itself of Germanic origin; the common root.