According to the monthly counts of the Wetland Bird Survey (WeBS), the numbers of Eurasian Oystercatchers Haematopus ostralegus wintering in Great Britain has gradually decreased since the late 1980s/early 1990s. Although numbers also decreased in the South West region of England, the decline was much steeper in the Exe estuary population, suggesting that site-specific pressures may have affected this species in this regionally-important Special Protection Area. By combining data from the WeBS with those from 45 years of research on Oystercatchers by the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, we tested five hypotheses that could explain the relative decline on the Exe estuary: (1) a gradual improvement in estimating Oystercatcher numbers as counting methods were refined, (2) a deterioration in the main food supply, the Blue Mussel Mytilus edulis, (3) disturbance from people on and alongside the estuary, (4) disturbance from Peregrine Falcons Falco peregrinus and (5) an as yet unexplained increase in the frequency of stealing of mussels from Oystercatchers (kleptoparasitism) by Carrion Crows Corvus corone and European Herring Gulls Larus argentatus. The data are consistent only with the fifth hypothesis. Individual-based modelling suggested that kleptoparasitism at the increased frequency that occurred on the Exe estuary could have reduced the foraging success of Oystercatchers sufficiently to have (1) reduced the overwinter survival of the numerically dominant mussel-eating adults and (2) deterred prospecting immatures from choosing the estuary as their future wintering site.