30 May 2017

Drift migration in action

Following a brisk overnight easterly wind, hopes were high on the morning of 12th May for a few drift migrants arriving at Isle of May Bird Observatory in the Firth of Forth. The highlight was a stunning male Red-breasted Flycatcher found on the beach at Pilgrims Haven, soon drawing a fair crowd (by island standards). It was quickly noticed that the bird was ringed, and knowing it hadn't been ringed on the island, attempts were made to read the ring from photographs. The ring inscription looked foreign, but unfortunately the ring number itself couldn't be read.


So the bird was left to feed for a couple of hours, before ringers returned with a single-shelf net and just minutes later the bird was caught, revealing the ring was from the Swedish Ringing Scheme. After processing, the bird was released in the same spot and was still present the next day.

Being such an unusual record (we've only ever seen one previous foreign-ringed Red-breasted Flycatcher in the UK - details here), a quick flurry of emails back and forth across the North Sea soon revealed the details. TV0721 was ringed just a week earlier (5th May) at Torhamn in southern Sweden. It had presumably been caught up in an area of high pressure over northern Europe, creating an easterly airflow across the region. The synoptic chart (below) for 11th May also shows the ringing and finding locations, some 1,175km apart!


When ringed, the bird weighed 10.0g and a week later 9.7g, so rather than being thought of as a lost vagrant, it should perhaps be considered a drift migrant, carried on the wind on its migration north. Red-breasted Flycatcher breeds from eastern Europe across to the Himalayas, wintering in southern Asia, although it was long been suggested that there may also be a wintering population in west Africa.

Previous recoveries in the UK have all been in autumn, although one record did see a bird ringed on Shetland recaught in southwest Norway two weeks later!

##UPDATE##
Many thanks to Anders Loell who got in touch with some background (and a photo) on the ringing of this bird: "I had the pleasure of finding it in a net here at Torhamn. And as you suspected there were some heavy eastern winds. There were only two nets possible to use on the 5th and the only reason why they were active was due to some schoolkids coming out here to visit the observatory."


10 May 2017

Reading the small print

Within the ringing team, it never ceases to amaze us just how many people spend their time reading bird rings. Only a small percentage of ringed birds are colour ringed as well, so most birds can only be identified by reading the metal ring number, which can be difficult with wild birds. Rings on large birds such as swans and geese can be quite easy to read, due to the ring size and the proximity of the birds in parks and lakes.

Mute Swan account for 44% of all the metal ring reads (sample from 1 Jan 2017 to today), followed by Black-headed Gull with 19% and Shelduck with 5%. The remaining reports are between 57 different species ranging from sea birds like Puffin and Cormorant to passerines like Nuthatch, Goldcrest, Lesser Redpoll and Grasshopper Warbler.


Last week we had a report of a Green-winged Teal (below) at Storavan, Stöcke, Västerbotten, Sweden wearing a BTO ring! Luckily for Johan Forssell and Mikael Wikstrom, very few Green-winged Teal are ringed by our ringing scheme (see ringing totals by species), so finding a match with the given numbers was relatively easy. This bird was ringed as an adult male on 6 Oct 2015 at Caelaverock, Dumfries and Galloway (1,651 km). For more information on the recoveries of Green-winged Teal see our Online ringing reports (don't expect to be overwhelmed by numbers).

BTO ringed Green-winged Teal (foreground). Photo by Johan Forssell




Bardsey Bird Observatory was lucky enough to ring a Pallas's Warbler on 18 April 2017, making this the first spring record for Wales. In fact, this is probably only the third spring record of Pallas's Warbler in the history of our ringing scheme. This bird soon moved away, however a ringed Pallas's Warbler was seen on the island on 7 May.

Pallas's Warbler. Photo by Steve Stansfield in May

Being a very popular bird, this bird was photographed in enough clarity that five of the six digits could be read. This size of ring also fits on Goldcrest and Wren, so is very small indeed. There was only one issue... the ring number didn't match the one that was put on the Pallas's Warbler in April. This was a different bird!

Pallas's Warbler. Photo by Steve Stansfield in May


With the help of the BTO's national ringing scheme database, the origin of this bird was traced. It was originally ringed at Spurn Bird Observatory on 11 Oct 2016! Re-catching a ringed Pallas's Warbler at a different site is incredibly rare, so the details of where this species goes after it reaches our shores is now a little clearer, but there is still a long way to go to fully understand their migration.

Learning to become a ringer takes quite a lot of commitment and time. As these and other previous examples highlight, you don't need to be a ringer to make a real difference to our knowledge of bird demography.