Some notes from our activities over the last few weeks...
Reed Warblers
The number of Reed Warblers re-encountered for the 8th year of our RAS project is looking as expected with 42 birds from previous years.
We seem to be finding more females with brood patch 5 and in body moult ? Have we no late nesting attempts ? Certainly many juveniles of several species including Reed Warblers have been caught with poor feather growth this season. Many examples of tail and wing feathers with fault bars. The example below is a Great Tit with a marked fault bar.
Sedge Warbler ATP3573
Ringed Icklesham, Sussex 13/08/2021 by Rye Bay Ringing GroupRe -encountered Teifi Marshes, Ceredigion 19/08/2021 6 days 389 km West
The movement above adds interest to the origins of our Sedge Warblers. We have thoughts that the reason we rarely find a control from further north is that a large proportion of our Sedge Warblers are passage birds from breeding areas of Ireland where few birds are ringed. The bird above maybe an arrival in the south east now heading west - or just a wandering juvenile...
Swallows
Much lower numbers seen than previous years. Maybe the Swallows are using Maize fields down towards the estuary to feed over and roost. The largest roosts seen so far this season is only c250 birds and very few Sand Martins seen.
A breeding male with a nest in a garage 3kms away was caught in the roost, subsequently seen again at the nest 2 days later and now has another brood. We have not recorded this behaviour before and we assume the adult was on a feeding visit to the reedbed.
Reed Buntings
The number of Reed Buntings re-encountered for the 11th year of our RAS project is looking above average with 42 birds from previous years. Many of these are re-sightings of colour ringed birds with the majority of these sightings from our feeder near our Mallard Pond trapping area or from random feeding by Reserve visitors regularly leaving wild bird food in the car park.
Garden CES
The 2nd season has now been completed. 364 encounters of 20 species, 510 last year also 20 species with same nets and session length. The gut feeling was a decline in juveniles and this is backed up by the data and the graph clearly shows the smaller number of juveniles of selected species.
It will be interesting to see the BTO analysis of this season across all of the garden CES sites.
Storm Petrels
Only 3 Storm Petrels were ringed by the Group in 2020 but one of those has been re-encountered this month in Anglesey.
Storm Petrel 2720334
Ringed Mwnt, Ceredigion 17/07/2020
Re-encountered Point Lynas, Amlwch, Anglesey 03/08/2021 382 days 145km N
Into the autumn at our old CES site by the river and Pentood Marsh nets. A mixture of reed bed, scrub with a lot of bramble that is fruiting well. Over the coming weeks these sites will become our focus as the numbers of acros fall, Chifchaff and Blackcaps will make up the bulk of the captures with a few species of an autumnal flavour...
Rich D & Wendy J
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