From
day one, there was much to do. Skokholm is home to a voracious top predator:
the Great Black-backed Gull. These have become increasingly rare nationally so
it is essential to keep a pulse on their breeding and survival rates.
To this end, many of this year’s young have already been metal and colour-ringed. Our challenge was to ring those left, before they fledge. This, as with a startling number of things in life, is easier said than done! First, one must sight the chicks from a distance. Typically, they stand, quite fearlessly in the open, on rocky peaks. To get nearer, a swift approach is required followed by a thorough comb through of the surrounding bracken, into which they dive like unerring needles into expanding haystacks!
As
a trainee used to ~10g Sedge Warblers on the Teifi Marshes, the whole
experience, from catching to ringing, was new and exciting for me. Each day, we
typically ringed at least 4 new chicks.
As
night falls, the island, never truly asleep, wakes again with the eerie calls
of Manx Shearwaters dashing in off the sea. With Wendy’s night-vision camera,
we could put faces to the voices of this staggering spectacle; seeing dozens
and dozens swirling over our heads (see clip below). And with a torch and net, we ringed 142 in
our week there. It’s an immersive experience and incredible to think that each
individual will, in a matter of months, begin a journey of over 5000 miles to
their wintering grounds.
Of
course, I cannot pass mention of the island’s most well-known residents.
Skokholm has a study plot of ~200 Puffins to observe population changes essential to their protection. Each year, for one day, this population is ‘topped up’ by metal and colour ringing around 30 new individuals. Teamwork is key: three to extract, one to carry extracted birds to the ringing area, one to read out the metal and colour ring combinations, one to metal ring, one to colour ring, one to check and the visitors to release. This was like nothing I had ever done before, and it was amazing to learn so much in a matter of just hours.
Watching puffins in the sunset at the day's end. |
One of the male colour-ringed Wheatears hopping around his territory. |
Strong winds on Thursday swept up stronger currents and plastic. |
The Laughing Gull, native to America, but likely storm-swept over to Skokholm. |
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