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The single swiftlet is recovering at a shelter after being found in a badly damaged nest. Photograph: Sue Hope and Laura Crompton View image in fullscreen The single swiftlet is recovering at a shelter after being found in a badly damaged nest. Photograph: Sue Hope and Laura Crompton Swift nest reportedly thrown in skip during house renovations in South Tyneside Conservationists fear more nests may have been destroyed during work on Jarrow houses by council-appointed contractor Swift chicks are feared to have been thrown into a skip during house renovations in South Tyneside, despite rules that should stop the destruction of nests. The Northern Swifts Group (NSG) was alerted to the destruction of at least one nest on Tuesday, in a street in Jarrow where houses were being renovated by South Tyneside council. A single swiftlet that was found in a badly damaged nest was taken in by Laura Crompton, of Pawz for Thought, a local wildlife rescue centre. Though dehydrated and in a poor condition when found, it is said to be stabilising. Nest debris was also seen in a skip used by the contractors, which was removed from the site before NSG representatives could make further checks, and the damaged nest was found where many birds had been reported. South Tyneside council is investigating the incident. Under the Wildlife and Countryside Act it is illegal to disturb wild birds’ nests while they are in use or being built. Sue Hope, of the NSG, told the Guardian it was unlikely that only one nest had been destroyed, as swifts tended to nest in colonies. Nests also tended to contain two or three swiftlets. She said that on her visit to the site on Wednesday afternoon, she saw at least 10 swifts circling above. “It is a horrible thing to happen,” she said. “Swifts are amazing birds, you can’t fail to be lifted by their utter joy. And they are in steep decline. Not enough is being done by the government to help them.” Hope said the incident highlighted the need for councils to inform contractors about how to deal correctly with birds’ nests when found in properties undergoing work. Swift numbers have plummeted in the UK by about 70% since 1995, as their habitats have disappeared. They tend to nest in buildings, but few modern ones have the eaves and small cavities they like to use. A recent study showed the migratory birds returned every year to the same nests . Building work and renovations are often fatal for the birds, when holes are filled in and nests are, wittingly or unwittingly, blocked up. There was outrage in April when nest holes were filled in during the refurbishment of a Derbyshire rail viaduct , which Network Rail subsequently reopened, along with new nesting boxes. In May the government refused to redraw its rules on new homes in England to require the installation of “swift bricks”, which allow for nests without harming the fabric of the building and cost about £35. They are mandatory in Scotland . A spokesperson for South Tyneside council said:
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