While waiting over the weekend, I did some concentrated number-crunching, and ended up with a plot comparing original ringing date with the number of days to our subsequent recapture of the same bird. I was very gratified to find that this plot, although a bit gappy for reasons outwith our control, entirely supports the impression I'd got: the breeding population disappears almost entirely in about mid-October, to be replaced by a wintering population that arrives at about the same time and itself disappears by about mid-April, while the breeding population has been re-appearing since about the end of March (and showing signs of having been somewhere hot enough to bleach their feathers). I'll produce a refined and annotated version of this plot in due course.
Today we received details of our 'control', ringed as a juvenile at the beginning of August last year on South Uist in the Outer Hebrides, 600km from Mwnt. This is a genuinely exciting moment in the project, and inspires us to go forward with increased effort, if that be possible.
Hi Chris. Nice one.
ReplyDeleteThat almost mirrors our most recent Linnet recovery in Lochinver. Also a result! We are sure that most if not all of our wintering Linnets originate from many miles north of Lancashire. If you remember, we also controlled a same season Linnet ringed as a pulli in Shetland. We now have two retraps only from 440 Linnets in two winters.
https://anotherbirdblog.blogspot.com/2018/05/result.html