Friday, June 17, 2011

Recoveries

The BTO sent a series of recoveries for Fylde Ringing Group, several from Rossall where Seumus and Ian ring plus two from Out Rawcliffe where Will and I spend most of our spring, summer and autumn. Another record involves one of my local Swallows from Hambleton near Poulton-le-Fylde.

The first concerns a second calendar year Lesser Redpoll (L583607) caught and ringed by Will and I at Out Rawcliffe on 27 March 2011. The bird was recaptured at the Calf of Man Bird Observatory on 16 April 2011, 20 days later. The Calf of Man is 130km and in a slight North West direction of Out Rawcliffe, Lancashire.

The winter of 2011 was memorable for the large numbers of Lesser Redpoll in the UK, amounts reflected in our own region of Lancashire in the North West. Equally, there was a noticeable, huge northerly movement of the species in March/April and it could be this bird was caught up in that directional movement during its return to the Isle of Man where Lesser Redpoll is common, Scotland where the species is numerous or possibly to Ireland where Lesser Redpoll is also common.

Lesser Redpoll

Out Rawcliffe to Calf of Man

The second recovery from Out Rawcliffe involves a Sedge Warbler (V971554) ringed by young Craig in the plantation as a fresh juvenile on 11th July 2009. It was later recaptured by French ringers at Treogat, Finistere, France on 10 August 2009, just 30 days later. The distance involved is 673 km and the location of Finistere is almost exactly due south from Out Rawcliffe and on a direct route to the Sahel region of Africa where most British Sedge Warblers spend the winter.

Sedge Warbler

Out Rawcliffe to Finistere, France

It took 21 months to receive details of this Sedge Warbler. In the meantime we know from our IPMR database that after its stay in France the bird made it safely back to Africa and returned to Out Rawcliffe in 2010, staying there between at least 22nd June and 28th July 2010. During this period it was captured by Will and I on four occasions and identified as a breeding male each time. So far in 2011 we have not recaptured V971554 and therefore it is perhaps likely it is dead because Sedge Warblers are very site faithful; following successful migration and wintering in 2010/2011 it would surely have returned once more to Out Rawcliffe.

I also got to hear about one of my Hambleton Swallows X515371, ringed as a nestling from a brood of 6 birds on 5th June 2010. The same bird was found dead in a Longridge, Lancashire garage on 20th May 2011, just 349 days later and 20 miles from Hambleton. Lots of Swallows return to exactly the same place to breed and whilst this bird may have been still on migration it could well have entered a building new to it in search of a place to nest then later found it could not escape. This sad end came despite the bird’s success in making the journey to Southern Africa and back to the UK at the first attempt during 2010/2011.

Swallow

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Sea Wall Sortie

Skylark Sign

June 16th, so a Pilling embankment walk is well out of the "no-go" lambing period the sign advises, not that all folk respect the well-reasoned rule and polite request. After the token early morning showers the clouds parted to let the sun shine out as I hit the trail, east to west then back again for the incoming midday high tide.

The Skylark wasn’t going to sit on the sign long and certainly not let me approach any closer, but when they’re not warbling from on high Skylarks often serenade from a lookout post or even from the ground where they merge into the background of the summer marsh.

Skylark

I counted at least 13 Skylarks this morning, and then checking the nest from where I ringed 4 young last week, the lining was well trodden but otherwise undisturbed, the standard test for a successful outcome. Other passerine quantities were in the low digits expected in June; 3 Greenfinch, 4 Goldfinch, 4 Linnet, 2 Pied Wagtail, 3 House Sparrow, 2 Meadow Pipit and 2 Reed Bunting. I took a few pictures of an obvious 3J Reed Bunting close to Pilling Water where there have been singing males all spring. The Meadow Pipits were my first of the “autumn”, as for the first year in many, I have not seen or heard singing Meadow Pipits along this stretch of coast in the spring and summer of 2011.

Reed Bunting

The warmth of the morning brought out the hirundines and swifts, with 12+ House Martins and 20+ Swallows and my best count this year of Common Swift with more than 30 hawking insects over the marsh and sea wall.

I hoped the incoming tide might reveal a few Redshank and Oystercatcher chicks previously hidden in the ditches, but as I have suspected in recent walks here, there are no youngsters of either species. I confirmed a single Oystercatcher nest on the inland side of the wall and let the male bird escort me a distance along the wall until he thought me less of a danger to the nest.

Oystercatcher

Other counts here: 45 Shelduck, 28 Curlew, 37 Lapwing, 15 Redshank and 4 Grey Heron.

Grey Heron

Back towards Lane Ends I came across a single hovering Kestrel that took off inland in the direction of the nest box near Damside. Lane Ends held the usual Blackcap, Reed Warbler and a dozen or so Blackbirds, some of the latter newly fledged youngsters, and on the pools 4 Tufted Duck, 2 adult Little Grebe with 5 chicks - well done you grebes!

Regular readers of Another Bird Blog will know I’m not a major weed and creepy crawly enthusiast, but even I couldn’t help but notice several flowers that from my pitiful knowledge I identified as Early Marsh Orchids, some of them in absolutely stunning purple colours and shapely order.

Marsh Orchid

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Just Checking

Between the bouts of drizzly rain I did a spot of nest inspection today, both Tree Sparrows and Swallows. I finished up not ringing any chicks when I found the Tree Sparrow boxes were still at egg stage and the Swallows nests at the point of either egg, or tiny too small for ringing. The end of the week should see several nests ready for ringing, but my Swallows are definitely late this year, almost certainly because of the cold, windy month of May we experienced here “Up North”. Similarly while Tree Sparrows experienced good weather in April and early May for their first broods, they seem to have fallen behind with second broods in the latter part of May and early June.

Tree Sparrow

Swallow

Swallow

Local bird watchers have done much to help the red-listed Tree Sparrow in recent years, erecting nest boxes to make more nest sites available and also employing winter feeding stations that help the sparrows (and other species) through the winter. But as I look around our local area, I can’t help but think that it is now House Sparrows that need help with some House Sparrow “terrace” communal nest boxes.

Tree Sparrow

House Sparrow

House Sparrow - Communal Nest Box

House Sparrow populations have fluctuated greatly over the centuries, with a gradual decline over the last 100 years. Change from horse-drawn vehicles to motorised ones caused the population in many cities to drop by two thirds, with the removal of an important food supply - the cereal fed to horses. Recent declines have been caused by a combination of reduced plant food in winter, reduced insect availability for chicks, and reduction in available nest sites. On farmland, these are due to changes in agricultural practices; housing of livestock in inaccessible buildings, mechanisation of grain harvest and more effective storage of grain and animal feeds all reduced sparrows access to food. Recent cereal hygiene regulations mean that farm buildings are sealed, and therefore offer fewer nesting sites. In the 1950s, the UK House Sparrow population was estimated at 9.5 million. The population increased to 12 million by the early 1970s, then declined, and crashed again during the 1990s. Over 25 years the population has declined by 62%. Because of this decline in numbers, the House Sparrow is now also red-listed, alongside Tree Sparrow as a species of high conservation concern.

After my checks I detoured to Out Rawcliffe where I found this year’s regular flock of c40 House Sparrows, down a quiet rural lane but close to a couple of older, lofty houses that have gaps in the eaves of the roof and gardens with tall, thick hedgerows where the spodgers can hide.

Close by the houses a Yellowhammer sang out with a second one along the lane towards our ringing site. I explored the usual spots and found both Blackcap and Garden Warbler, 4 Great-spotted Woodpecker, 6 Mistle Thrush, 15+ Whitethroat, 2 Skylark, several Willow Warbler and 12+ Tree Sparrow. Across the large, newly sown grassy field and in a small dip of the distant earth I could just make out the single Oystercatcher head, sat motionless on its now week old nest and nearby 20 or so Lapwings, long since finished their breeding season.

As I entered the copse one of the Buzzards flew silently from its nest in a tall conifer, the crown too dense with greenery and too high to see the age the youngsters might be; through the trees I glimpsed the adult flying off to the next wood to wait for my departure. Back along the track a Stoat ran ahead of me then dived back into the plantation, not good news if a family of the villains find low down Whitethroat, Sedge Warbler and Willow Warbler nests.

There were plenty of Goldfinch zipping about the area, including a few family groups, which reminded me I had to collect the Nyger feeders, take them home and then clean them up in readiness for autumn feeding soon.

Goldfinch

Monday, June 13, 2011

Review - The Birds of New Jersey

The rain batted down against the bedroom window once more this morning. Add to this the seemingly ever present gusts from the west and it seemed a good time to postpone checking Barn Swallow nests until tomorrow but instead delve into a book recently received for review by Another Bird Blog.

The Birds of New Jersey

Readers from North America especially those that bird on the East Coast, will be pleased to hear that the book is the awaited “The Birds of New Jersey – Status and Distribution” by William J Boyle Jr, a birder of 40+ years and author of "A Guide to Bird Finding in New Jersey".

Of course I know where New Jersey is and I recognise it includes the birding sites of Sandy Hook and Turkey Point and the celebrated migration hot-spot of Cape May, where both US and UK birders/banders make pilgrimages. But until I looked in “Wiki” I didn’t realise the state of New Jersey in only about 70 miles wide and 170 miles from top to bottom; all the more reason to rejoice in the 450 + species recorded here in such a relatively small state. A major reason for the huge number and variety of species here is that as far as a bird is concerned New Jersey has a wide variety of habitats in a geographically ideal location whether they reside permanently, seasonally, or just make stop-over visits during migration time.

So this book is not simply another field guide to add to the many already out there, it is firstly a guide to the status and distribution of the more than 450 bird species recorded in the state of New Jersey in the last 200 years. Until now there has been no single, comprehensive and readily available guide out there for birders and naturalists, so as well as the 200 year history, this book draws from the many publications and bird journals of more recent years. Naturally enough in this the age of the Internet, Boyle’s book includes records from online reporting services like eBird, New Jersey Rare Bird Alert and the Cape May Birding Hotline, so it is bang up to date.

I am hugely impressed by this book. It is very well written, clear and concise, nicely laid out and thorough in presentation. By the time I had studied it well I realised that it was as the back cover blurb had claimed, “authoritative”. The 300 pages contain species accounts that describe the preferred habitat and relative abundance of each species as well as detailed, colour coded and very precise maps, interspersed with some really excellent and varied photographs that break the text into readable chunks. Shame about a distant and blurred but the actual Northern Lapwing photograph, the second ever record of Vanellus vanellus in New Jersey, and if only William had asked I would have emailed him a few pics of Lapwings from Pilling!

The Birds of New Jersey

The Birds of New Jersey

I found the terminology used for Status and Distribution especially effective and useful, with a couple of extra terms I had not seen before in this type of book. Those two are “Irregular” - species whose occurrence is unpredictable, and “Local” - typically found only in specific habitats and areas within a particular region. If only field guides could include such fine detail it would surely help birders unfamiliar with a particular place to find birds, or indeed help new birders to sort out the likelihood of the bird’s occurrence in the first place? This led me to think that anyone who birds regularly in New Jersey or neighbouring states should not only study this book in depth but also keep it side by side with their standard field guide to Eastern North America.

The Birds of New Jersey

The final 13 pages of the book contain a helpful and extensive bibliography for readers interested in pursuing and learning more about the birds and natural history of New Jersey.

To sum up, “The Birds of New Jersey” is an object lesson in how to produce a book of this type. It is well researched, succinct but detailed, easily accessible and extremely logical in the arrangement of the information. The book also lives up to the quality of print, colour and paper that we expect of a Princeton product.

Finally, another few facts about New Jersey: Its per-capita income is the third highest in the United States and New Jersey also has the highest percentage of millionaire households. So there are a few people who don’t have to worry about the cost of this splendid book, not that anyone should at the bargain price of $24.95 or £16.95 from Princeton University Press.

Saturday, June 11, 2011

A Middling Morn

Will and I finally got to Out Rawcliffe for a spot of mist netting on a fine morning with just an early breath of wind that left the nets motionless in the cover of the planation. As expected for early to mid-June we didn’t get a mega catch, just 19 birds, with 13 new and 6 recaptures. New birds: 5 Great Tit, 2 Whitethroat, 2 Blackbird and 1 each of Goldfinch, Blackcap, Sedge Warbler and Willow Warbler. Recaptures were 4 Sedge Warbler, and 1 each of Great Tit and Willow Warbler.

We hoped we might catch several fresh juvenile (3J) warblers today, but it was not to be. The only juveniles caught were 3 Great Tit and 2 Blackbird so we must wait a few more days for an indication of breeding success as more youngsters appear.

Blackcap

”3J” Blackbird

”3J” Great Tit

Willow Warbler

By 1015 hours the ever present 2011 wind sprung up to 15-20mph again which caused us to take the nets down.

Other birds seen this morning, most from the well positioned coffee chairs on the sun-deck of the moss: A Raven flying inland and then later (if the same one) back out towards Pilling Moss; 1 Great-spotted Woodpecker, 1 Jay, 1 Lesser Redpoll, 3 Corn Bunting, 2 Skylark, 2 Buzzard, 2 Oystercatcher, 20+ Lapwing, 6 Goldfinch, 1 Yellowhammer, 12 Tree Sparrow, 4 Swift, 6 House Martin, 4 Mistle Thrush, 2 Stock Dove, 30+ House Sparrow. And not forgetting 25+ Brown Hares which entertained us as they rushed and chased around the nearby fields in groups 8 and 10 at times.

Driving home through Town End, Out Rawcliffe I heard roadside Chiffchaff, Sedge Warbler and Whitethroat and then stopped to snap a Great-spotted Woodpecker doing a Woody Woodpecker impression on a telegraph pole.

Great-spotted Woodpecker

Yes, it was just an average sort of morning but don’t we sometimes take even those too much for granted?

Friday, June 10, 2011

Pilling Plod

Both overnight and early morning rain plus predictions of heavy showers put paid to any mist netting plans. So it was birding only for me this morning and a trudge along the familiar but now saturated fields of Pilling.

I started at Fluke Hall with Sylvia warblers, a loud Lesser Whitethroat, singing again from close to the wood and 8 Common Whitethroats, with at least one pair of the latter feeding young in a nest close to the road. It’s always worth a stop here, if only to clock the Swallows that perch overhead or a listen to all the Tree Sparrows and Linnets hiding in the hedge. Today a Greenfinch sang from the hawthorn and I counted 7 Linnets there too. The Swallows obviously have young in the nest now as they came in from the fields with food.

Swallow

Lesser Whitethroats are impossible to photograph in the field, at least for me, but here’s a picture of one in the hand and a reminder of that wonderful, flamboyant song. The Lesser Whitethroat song is very far carrying, and in this morning’s still air I could hear the bird from the sea wall 100 yards away. One could be forgiven for thinking that the brash, rattling flourish is the whole of the Lesser Whitethroat song, and it only when close that the initial scratchy Sylvia type part of the song is heard.

Lesser Whitethroat


I walked out to the sea wall giving my boots and socks a good soaking from the earlier downpours but found 30+ Lapwing plus a welcome surprise, an adult with 3 tiny, newly fledged chicks. I looked in vain for Redshank or Oystercatcher chicks, counting just 8 and 15 adults respectively. Although the Oystercatchers didn’t have young, several of them were still in display mode, flying in pairs above and around me. None of the Redshanks acted as if they had young but hopefully there may be at least a nest or two of Oyks soon. Like elsewhere in the Fylde the Brown Hares are in good numbers here at the moment, with lots of leverets.

Oystercatcher

Oystercatcher

Brown Hare

A look on the pools at Lane Ends produced 50+ Greylag, single Tufted Duck, 2 Little Grebe, 2 singing Reed Warbler and a singing Reed Bunting. In the plantation were 1 Sparrowhawk making a dash for Blackbirds, 1 Blackcap, 1 Jay and 10+ Blackbirds and a singing Chiffchaff. The Chiffchaff is newly in to the site so I assume it bred or failed elsewhere and is now trying its luck here.

Chiffchaff

From the top car park I watched a fly-past of 6 Grey Herons heading up towards Cockerham, the largest gathering of Grey Herons I’ve seen for a while - perhaps a prelude to the return of the Little Egrets.

Grey Heron

Later I had to dry my socks on the washing line but it was well worth it.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Skylark

Just like yesterday it rained most of the morning which fitted in quite well with our child minding duties, so I left it until lunch time before I went out in search of Skylarks at Pilling. I didn’t find a single nest today; I actually found two, one nest with four good sized young, just ready to ring, and a second nest in the course of construction.

Skylark nest

The Way In

Young Skylarks grow down that is superb camouflage when viewed from above, whereby the keen eyes of crows and Kestrels might just find them.

Skylark

Skylark chicks

As yet there were no eggs in the second nest I found so I’ll keep an eye on it and do BTO Nest Records for both nests.

Under Construction

The story of the Skylark is a pretty sorry one. In the UK Skylark numbers have declined over the last 30 years, as determined by the Common Bird Census started in the early 1960s by The British Trust for Ornithology, and there are now only 10% of the numbers present 30 years ago. This massive decline is thought to be mainly due to changes in farming practices and only partly due to pesticides. In the past cereals were planted in the spring, grown through the summer and harvested in the early autumn. Cereals are now planted in the autumn, grown through the winter and are harvested in the early summer. The winter grown fields are much too dense in summer for the Skylark to be able to walk and run between the wheat stems to find its food. We are fortunate in this area that we have coastal nesting Skylarks, the two nests today I found alongside the sea wall in the grass that lines the sea wall.

Skylark

Over the centuries the Skylark has inspired an abundance of writing and poetry, due mainly to its song. But considering that from earliest times Skylarks have given man so much pleasure, we have treated them appallingly. The French song Alouette, gentille Alouette, familiar to children the world over, goes on to describe in great detail how the lark is to be plucked; over the centuries millions of Skylarks have been killed and eaten. Fortunately we in the UK have moved on from these practices, but some Mediterranean people still eat larks and other small birds despite the “might” of the EU.

I spent a few hours seeking Skylarks today so didn’t see much else save for a passing Stoat that fortunately was some way off the Skylark nests, but an animal that is always a danger to ground nesters. At Lane Ends I could hear singing Reed Warbler and Blackcap, and then briefly, a large Peregrine overhead.

Stoat
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