January 25th 2019
Nets: 39m
Weather: -2C rising to
3C
Ringers: CS
Well, the weather here
has been miserable since the New Year: consistent rain and drizzle occasionally
punctuated by snow whose accompanying frosts have plummeted the temperatures to
-9C; a typical dreary start to a new year on the north German Plain.
Despite the persistent
precipitation Meisen Wood has not been without avian interest. Tawny and Eagle Owls have been regularly
calling at sunrise and sunset; male Black Woodpeckers have started their
territorial drumming on dead beech trees; and a host of passerines have started
singing. The activity around the feeding
stations has been frenetic with the movement of tits, finches, nuthatches and
woodpeckers being reminiscent of speeded up footage of aeroplane arrivals and
departures at a major airport; a most welcome blizzard of colour on dreary grey
days.
With the weather
forecast indicating a minor respite in the gloomy weather for Friday, CS took
the opportunity to stretch some nets for the first time this year. And though unpredicted sleet brought an early
close of play, the year’s first session was a decent one:
Species
|
Ringed
|
Re-trapped
|
Total
|
Blackbird
|
1
|
|
1
|
Blue Tit
|
2
|
9
|
11
|
Brambling
|
18
|
|
18
|
Chaffinch
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
Great Tit
|
4
|
11
|
15
|
Greenfinch
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
Long-tailed Tit
|
|
2
|
2
|
Marsh Tit
|
|
3
|
3
|
Nuthatch
|
|
3
|
3
|
Redpoll
|
1
|
|
1
|
Robin
|
|
2
|
2
|
Total
|
28
|
34
|
62
|
The ratio of new to
re-trapped birds was on a par with previous years; though this year’s new
ringed birds were bolstered by a good catch of Brambling. Recently there have frequently been eighty to
a hundred of these colourful finches at the feeders; and locally at least there
seems to have been a small invasion of Brambling; though these numbers do not
compare to those currently being recorded in central Europe where counts of
five to ten million have recently been noted.
Catching these
northern finches is a pleasure at two levels: aesthetically because of their
stunning colours; and scientifically as we often control birds from both ends
of their migratory path – south west France
and northern Scandinavia . Despite their nomadism it is pleasing to know
that Meisen Wood is on their migratory route.
The day’s Brambling data was interesting too in that most individuals
had fat scores from two to four but quite a number had muscle scores of
zero. Potentially this indicates that
these birds are not yet physiologically prepared to move on.
Of particular interest
in today’s totals were several re-traps, particularly: two Greenfinch, and one
each of the Long-tailed, Blue and Great Tits.
Both the Greenfinches
had been originally ringed in spring 2017, with one of them being re-trapped
last spring. Clearly, for this species,
we are on their migratory route too; though quite where this route’s terminals
are remains unresolved. The German
Migration Atlas shows many Greenfinch wintering in Belgium
down to southern France ;
also these birds include German and southern Scandinavian breeders. Several Greenfinch ringed by us have been
controlled near Hamburg
but whether these individuals were still on passage or breeding is unclear.
The Long-tailed Tit
had originally been ringed in September 2016 and has not been re-caught
since. Back then it had been aged as a
2. This does not mean it was two years
old. The age code 2 means that ringers
cannot say with certainty when that individual hatched. Some ringers derisorily, and unfairly,
describe this age code as a cop-out. Ageing birds is based on moult: when a
bird moults; which moult strategy that species follows (of which there are
several); and as a simple corollary to those points, the time of year. Long-tailed Tit adults perform a complete
post-breeding moult which is finished by late summer. Juvenile Long-tailed tits undergo a complete
post juvenile moult also finished by late summer. Thus by early autumn there is no plumage
difference between adults and juveniles so the ornithologist cannot say that
the bird was born that year or in a previous year. That is not a cop-out but an
honest recording of the in-hand observations.
So this re-encountered Long-tailed Tit was at least two and half years
old, and possibly older, pretty impressive for such a small bird.
Two other birds
extended the theme of being re-trapped for the first time since their initial
ringing: a Great Tit and a Blue Tit.
Both had been ringed as nestlings in May 2015. Their recapture the other day is interesting
at several levels: it illustrates that mist netting, can be in certain
circumstances, considered as a random sampling technique which gives strength
to any statistical analysis through removing bias. Also these two re-captures beg the question:
where have these birds been in the interim years? This question is a prime example of the fact
that there is still much we do not know about the lives of birds, including
common ones. This, and other simple
questions, will eventually be answered through ringing studies.
The weather forecast
for the week ahead is mixed, mixed precipitation that is, with perhaps a small
window of opportunity for ringing mid-week.
Fingers crossed!
Foot-note: during Lynne and Johne’s visit
in early November we captured a Swedish ringed Goldcrest. We have just received notice that this
individual was ringed nineteen days earlier at Hammaron Ringing Station, on Lake Vänern
some 858km distant from here.