Showing posts with label Lesser Black-backed Gull. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lesser Black-backed Gull. Show all posts

Friday, August 12, 2011

Did You Sleep Well?

There were three words in particular that stuck out from Eno’s North West weather forecast last night, Gloomy, Damp and Heavier. The first two words are self-evident with the third relating to the intensity of droplets falling from on high. Hence I find myself sat at the PC again, thinking and blogging about birding without actually picking up my bins or pliers. In fact after recent weeks of seeing huge Swallow roosts and finding for the first time a Goldfinch roost, I found myself reflecting upon birds and their sleeping arrangements, in particular their communal roosts.

Lots of species roost communally, mostly outside of the breeding season. We have all seen evening flights of gulls heading out to sandbanks, watched massed waders on the tideline or marvelled at the acrobatic formations of thousands of Starlings or Red-winged Blackbirds at dusk. Maybe we have watched a procession of Wrens making their way into a garden nest box to spend the night, or disturbed the Blackbirds from the thick Holly bush near the front door. As a birder and a bird ringer I have been interested in roosts for a many years and both watched and worked communal roosts of Swallow, Chaffinch, Brambling, Linnet, Tree Sparrow, Greenfinch, Goldfinch, Redwing, Blackbird, Fieldfare, Pied Wagtail, Yellow Wagtail, Long-eared Owl, and various mixed wader flocks.

Chaffinch

What all those gatherings have in common is that the birds are resting, roosting and sleeping, but it is not quite the slumber we humanoids know of eight hours tucked up in a warm bed. A bird’s disturbed and restless sleep that appears to us more like a quick nap is in fact a product of their innate ability to distribute sleep between the right and left hemispheres of their brain and effectively remain awake in the other; hence the roosting bird with one eye open, head tucked in, but always alert to predators. Also, birds that roost off the ground have specially evolved tendons in their legs so that when they are on a perch and relax their legs, their feet automatically curl around the perch and hold on with a tight grip so they can sleep without falling off. It’s easy to test that function out by allowing a Sparrowhawk or Kestrel to grip a finger or other suitable part of your anatomy.

Sparrowhawk

Studies into communal roosting in birds theorise three main benefits: Guy Beauchamp, The evolution of communal roosting in birds: Behavioural Ecology (1999).

1. A reduction in thermoregulation demands, (Thermoregulation is the ability of an animal to maintain body temperature within certain boundaries, even when the surrounding temperature is very different). The presence of nearby birds in communal roosts may reduce the energy demands for thermoregulation by for instance huddling together and thereby lessening the cooling effect of wind speed or direction. My experience of winter finch and thrush roosts has shown how they favour thick evergreen bushes in sheltered spots to spend the night, but conversely Fieldfares alone amongst the thrushes seem to favour rough grassland in which to pass the dark hours. The whole idea of warding off the chill by crowding together makes absolute sense when thinking about a tightly packed flock of waders on a windswept winter beach.

Sanderling

Fieldfare

2. A decrease in predation risk. For instance, the presence of more eyes in a communal roost may increase predator detection. In addition, the sheer number of individuals using a communal roost may decrease the risk of predation to an individual bird through the dilution effect. However, the greater conspicuousness of communal roosts may mitigate against the dilution effect, i.e. we have all witnessed how large roosts attract several predators. The geometric structure of the communal roost is also thought to provide increased predation avoidance; e.g. individuals that occupy central positions in a communal roost may be buffered from predators to a greater extent than birds sleeping on the edge or higher up. Does the Sparrowhawk dive into the Swallow roost and carefully select a bird from the centre or take the first one it happens upon near the top stems or the outer margins of the reed bed?

Swallow

3. Increased foraging efficiency. Increased foraging efficiency is often considered the main advantage of communal roosting in birds, whereby a roost acts as an information centre where unsuccessful foragers can follow more successful or experienced companions to good feeding areas. Communal roosts have been hypothesized to be an accumulation of foragers spending the night as close as possible to good feeding areas, i.e. birds join large roosts to reduce commuting costs from the daily centre of activity or simply join in as they pass on migration. Observations from local roosts of Swallows and finches support this theory with the whole roosting process from start to finish taking a couple of hours as birds arrive in small groups from all compass directions before settling down for the night. Ringing recoveries from the same periods also support this theory with quite local recoveries but also birds from further afield or indeed highly migrant birds like Bramblings recruited into a large Chaffinch roost, or on other occasions Sand Martins and Yellow Wagtails joining a Swallow roost.

Brambling

Well it’s now 2pm but still peeing down and whilst the above makes food for thought, creates a post for Another Bird Blog and passes an hour or two, I’m now tired and going for a quick snooze.

Lesser Black-backed Gull

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Short Session

36 hours (so far) of rain and wind in Lancashire has meant no posts on Another Bird Blog. This morning’s rubbish weather restricted birding to an hour with the incoming tide at Knott End before the rain rushed in from the south west to send me scurrying back home. In the circumstances this is but a brief report from which there are a few good counts from the sixty minutes, but not too many bright new pictures from the grey overcast morning.

At the jetty I could see 10 juvenile Eider and 4 Cormorant loafing at the point where the construction tails off into the estuary. As the tide ran in and the 9am ferry arrived from Fleetwood the birds all took to the water, Eiders upstream and Cormorants out to the deeper waters of the bay.

A number of terns and gulls arrived on the beach with the rising tide, 41 Sandwich Tern, 4 Common Tern and 130 Black-headed Gull, where they joined 270 Oystercatcher, 2 Whimbrel, 1 Bar-tailed Godwit, 2 Knot and 7 more Cormorants. Coming from the direction of Preesall Sands I counted 1100 Dunlin, 9 Ringed Plover and 4 Golden Plover, all heading upriver to the Barnaby Sands roost.

Golden Plover

Dunlin and Golden Plover

Luckily, I got a half decent picture of a Sandwich Tern a week ago when an adult bird accompanying a fully-fledged youngster came to warn me off when I approached too close. The second picture which appears to be black-and-white was actually taken this morning in the grey, cloudy, overcast conditions. However, autumn is a great time to watch terns in the local area as they breed some distance away from the Fylde coast.

Sandwich Tern

Sandwich Tern and Common Tern

When the rain came with more force, I took to the car and sat out the rain for a while as the ever present gulls waited patiently for bread hand outs from parked vehicles. The gulls might have had a longer wait than normal today, a day for not venturing out.

Lesser Black-backed Gull

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Fleetwood Mac

I had an appointment in Fleetwood this morning so first nipped into a few of the well-worn birding spots. My first point of call was Rossall, most of which is actually part of Fleetwood, but I know from experience that some residents of the Rossall area consider they live in a more upmarket place than the very historic but perhaps not scenic port of Fleetwood. When asked, or in conversation they invariably say they live in Rossall. It’s comical really.

I set off towards Rossall Point just as a shower broke. Fortunately the coastguard tower was handy to hide in the lee of the burst, close against the wall so I didn’t get too wet.

Two Grey Seals popped out of the water, heading into the estuary or even the docks as they do occasionally. The sky brightened so heading west I scanned the shore. Wader numbers were thin with 1 Dunlin, 4 Turnstone and 3 Sanderling, their numbers swelled by 19 early returning Ringed Plover, and separate to them but between two other groynes, an adult performing a distraction display, but leading me in the direction I was already going. A fly past of 18 Dunlin and a single Whimbrel improved my counts. The Dunlin were all returning adults as we expect at this time of year. Carrion Crows hung about the beach and I couldn’t help but worry about the Ringed Plover chicks vulnerable to the corvid’s voracity and perseverance. But it’s not often a crow gets featured here,

Carrion Crow

Dunlin

Ringed Plover

The outgoing golfers disturbed four Sklarks from the fairway, whilst close to me Swallows were clearly on the move, not stopping and not many of them, but I counted 3 groups totalling 16 birds heading quickly south over the beach or above the dunes to then follow the River Wyre. Four Swifts low from the same direction as the Swallows also headed over the beach before disappearing in the same direction. Well it is almost August! 4 Pied Wagtails arrived on the beach but they too headed off towards the port. The tide was running in a little which probably helped the appearance of 6 Sandwich Terns, but the grey cloud didn’t help my photography today and the tide too low to concentrate the few waders.

I did my errand then made my way to Fleetwood Marsh Nature Park and parked up to watch a Song Thrush demolish a snail. It threatened rain again but on the pools were 42 Coot, 7 Tufted Duck and 9 Little Grebe including 3 fairly recent chicks, but all kept their distance as Little Grebes are wont to do. Waders on the “tyre pool” were 1 Lapwing, 2 Oystercatchers and a lone Black-tailed Godwit that stood around for a minute or two only before the large gulls came in from the docks to bathe and roost.

Song Thrush

Little Grebe

Little Grebe

Lesser Black-backed Gull

I counted 8 Swifts and 7 House Martins hawking over the “bridge pools” with 2 more Pied Wagtails and a Reed Warbler around the margins. I ventured towards the ringing area without exploring too deeply but on the passerine front I found 2 Sedge Warblers, 3 Reed Warblers, 2 Whitethroat, a Reed Bunting and 4 Skylarks.

Skylark

I didn’t get wet after all. The rain stayed away with no need for a Barbour or a Fleetwood Mac.
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