FLUFFY new arrivals are making history on Salisbury Plain.

Four Great Bustard chicks have hatched so far this year, helping to consolidate the reintroduction of the bird to the UK.

The Great Bustard, which became extinct in Britain as a nesting bird in 1832, successfully nested last year, when two pairs fledged two chicks and this year’s arrivals have further boosted the project.

David Waters, founder and director of the Great Bustard Group, said: “Last year was a milestone for the project, this year really does give confirmation that the project is well on its way to achieving its aims of a self sustaining population in the UK. After so many years of work, it is great to see the results.”

A reintroduction trial, led by the Great Bustard Group, began in 2004 using bustards reared from eggs rescued from cultivation in southern Russia. The chicks are reared in Russia in a partnership with the A.N. Severtsov Institute of Evolution and Ecology, a branch of the Russian National Academy of Science.

When they are about six weeks old they are flown into the UK, and after a period of quarantine they are released onto Salisbury Plain.

The first nest from the project was in 2007, and there were further nests in 2008 but the eggs from these clutches were infertile.

Last year the oldest males became sexually mature, and the first Great Bustard chicks hatched in the wild in England after 177 years.

Dr Mark Avery, the RSPB's Conservation Director, said: “Restoring lost wildlife and lost landscapes to Britain are among the RSPB's most important objectives. The encouraging signs that the return of the Great Bustard is edging closer is fantastic news. There are still some noticeable species gaps in England, but we will strive to restore some of those species which Man has thoughtlessly removed over successive generations."