Spoonbills return to E for first time since 17th century
by Helena Horton Environment reporter from Environment | The Guardian on (#6PAE4)
Driven out by hunting and habitat loss, the birds are now nesting and breeding in a few pockets in England
With their long, spoon-shaped beaks, it is perhaps little surprise that the RSPB has nicknamed the offspring of a spoonbill a teaspoon".
It has been a bumper year for the snow-white wading birds, which have been found nesting and breeding in Cambridgeshire for the first time since the 17th century.
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