QUOTE = Jasonbirder
I don`t know where this thread came from?
That's an easy one to answer - I started it as you would know if you've read Posting No. 1
Hybrid Falcons is an Animal Welfare issue not a conservation issue.
Not so. It is only an animal welfare issue when they are in captivity. It becomes very much a conservation issue once they are living, and possibly breeding, in the wild.
The number of Hybrid Falcons compared to wild birds is tiny, the number of escaped Hybrid Falcons is tiny tiny and the number of escaped Hybrid Falcons which breed with wild Falcons is tiny tiny tiny (well Zero really!)
Do you have a quotable source for this statement, or is it just your opinion?
Falconers who feel the need to artificially inseminate various combinations of Gry/Lanner/Lagger/Saker to produce the "ultimate" bird do need legislating against - because its a cruel and unnecessary thing to do, not because of some ridiculous notion that they`re all going to break out and interbreed with our native Peregrines!! I`ve heard some ridiculous notions in my time but that one really takes the biscuit!!
I agree with you about the need to legislate against breeding raptor hybrids either for profit or just for the hell of it. I also agree that it's unnecessary. But cruel? Now that's another question entirely and certainly one that would be an animal welfare issue if true and therefore not part of this thread.
As for the (quote) "...ridiculous notion that they're all going to break out and interbreed with our native peregrines!!" and "I've heard some ridiculous notions in my time but that one really takes the biscuit!!", where did this idea come from? As far as I'm aware, you are the only person to suggest this.
In the time i`ve spent Birding i`ve seen One probable Saker in the wild - and that was because someone told me where it was and I made the effort out of curiosity as against hundreds and hundreds of wild Peregrines - not exactly a major problem, particularly when you think that escaped Falcons are unlikely to mate succesfully with wild birds.
And that is exactly why I started this thread. You say that you've seen (quote) ..."hundreds and hundreds of wild peregrines" - but have you? How can you be so sure that one, ten or one hundred of them were not 'pure' peregrines
but peregrine hybrids or even a non-indigenous species altogether? I can tell
you the answer to that one - you can't!
As for your suggestion that (quote) "...escaped falcons are unlikely to mate successfully with wild birds", how can you be sure, especially if they are both from the falco genus? In my opinion it may already be too late. Don't forget it is known to have happened in broadwings between the Redtail Hawk (Buteo jamaicensis and a Common Buzzard Buteo buteo for example.
I believe this thread has brought up many vaild comments and provided an interesting exchange of information, thoughts and ideas. To simply scoff at this in such a dismissive manner is an insult to those who have posted and does you no credit at all.