Saturday, 4 April 2026

Bygone birding: slaughter of Common Scoters was once Christmas shooting ritual in southern France

                                           

Portrait of Common Scoters in Arctic waters in Gould's Birds of Europe


News that the RSPB is seeking to appoint a Common Scoter Manager has prompted a reminder of what John Gould wrote about this marine duck species in the mid-19th Century:

It will not be necessary for my readers to be told that our earth is encircled by zones termed the frigid, the temperate and the torrid.

 Every schoolboy knows the principal features of the poles, but perhaps there are persons who are not aware that, although the conditions of the Arctic and Antarctic circles are much alike, the birdlife of these opposite ends of the globe is very dissimilar.

Guillemots, Puffins, divers and ducks of numerous species, inhabit the northern, while penguins, albatrosses and petrels, but no ducks, or scarcely any, inhabit the ice-bound lands of the south. 

The bird whose history I am about to give pertains to the north, and belongs to one of the peculiar types of ducks above alluded to - commonly termed scoters, are strictly denizens of the icy regions.

 They are strikingly different in colour, and somewhat in structure, from every other form in the great family of ducks. 

That nature’s general laws are sometimes infringed is evident from the peculiar coloration of the birds of this genus which does not, as is generally the case, assimilate in any way with the objects surrounding them.

What can form a greater contrast than their jetty-black colour with either the masses of snow and floating ice-mountains of the part of the ocean they inhabit or, the borders of the inland rivers and lakes, or the tussocky parts of the marshes upon which they breed? 

The black colouring of the scoters is most distinctive and, in the present species, the Common Scoter,  there is no indication whatever of a white mark on any part of its plumage.

When the rigours of winter induce the Common Scoter to leave the north and seek the more temperate latitudes and seas surrounding the British Islands and those which wash the shores of Holland, France, and Spain, it may be seen in flocks of many hundreds.

In the winter season, we can scarcely take a trip from Dover to Calais or from Folkestone to Boulogne without the vessel steaming through little knots of the Scoter, while, from the deck, strings of 40 or more may frequently he seen passing to and fro between one part of their feeding-grounds and another.

When a solitary individual leaves the seas for our inland waters or ascends the Thames and other rivers far above the tideway, we may be sure that it is incited to do so by some unwonted cause, perhaps from sickness or an internal injury.

This remark, however, does not apply to the small companies which are said, now and then, to visit the great lakes of Cumberland and Westmoreland.

Saline lakes are more in unison with their habits and mode of life than fresh waters, for molluscs, shrimps and other crustaceans are as plentiful on their sandy bottoms as on the bed of the sea. 

Being supposed to partake of the nature of fish, Common Scoters are eaten in France and Spain during Lent and on fast-days. 

A French account of the mode in which many of these birds are obtained upon the various salt lakes in the vicinity of Martigues, at the mouth of the Rhone, reveals that these numerous salt lakes are frequented in winter by large flocks of aquatic birds. 

With the first appearance of frost, the Common Scoters and other ducks arrive in numerous small flocks, and a destructive sort of battle takes place in which all who can are induced to participate with great eagerness. 

About Christmas, when the scoters have made their appearance, printed bills are posted at Marseilles, Aix-en-Provence and all the principal towns in the vicinity, stating the intended order of attack upon the birds, and the day and hour at which it is to take place.

The mayors of two or three of the principal places make the necessary arrangements. 

On the eve of the day fixed upon, all the shooters are divided into parties, and each has a boat, a pilot and a commander appointed. 

The assemblage is large, filling the inns and the lodgings to be had at private houses. 

In the morning, at the sound of a drum, the embarkation takes place on the lake named for the first attempt.

The boats, filled with sportsmen, form an extended circle round the flocks of birds at one part of the lake.

The boats then draw in, diminishing the circle by degrees, until the crews are within gunshot of the intended victims. 

At a well-known and preconcerted signal, a partial discharge takes place at the unfortunate birds while swimming on the surface of the water. 

Many are killed on the spot; those which escape the first fire attempt to save themselves by flight, when a second discharge assails them in the air.

Many more fall, and with broken wings and loud cries, are picked by the shooters, who divide the spoil, not without many altercations, and return to land. 

After a short respite, the birds having again collected together on that or some other neighbouring lake, a second advance takes place in the same manner, and the day is passed in making a succession of attacks, each followed by a retreat for a time to allow the birds to reassemble. 

A chasse, as it is termed, of a somewhat similar character, is performed near Bastia, the capital of Corsica.

However, in this locality, the Common Scoter is always accompanied by numbers of the Red-throated Diver which appear to act the part of sentinels outside the flock of ducks.

So quick-sighted are these sentinels, and so instantaneously do they dive, and so rapidly do they swim under water, that hundreds of scoters are killed to one couple of divers.

Enough has been said to show that this bird is strictly a winter visitant with us.

However, it does remain within the precincts of the British Islands until late in the spring, and even, in some instances, until summer has fairly set in.

Flocks have been seen off Dungeness as late as the middle of June, and a writer in The Zoologist states that Lake Windermere is visited every year, about the first week in July, some14 having been observed off Wray Castle at that period in 1848. 

The Common Scoter must, therefore, commence the task of nesting immediately after its return home. 

Up to the present time we have no record of its having bred in the British Islands. 

Mr. Dann states that it breeds in Scandinavia from 800 to 2000 feet below the snow-line, and Mr. Procter found it breeding in Iceland, which is probably its most western limit, for Professor Reinhardt does not include it among the birds of Greenland. 

Eastwardly, it is said to visit the Caspian Sea. 

In the far north, the late Mr. John Wolley found it breeding   in Lapland, and Mr. Alfred Newton informs me that  it is plentiful enough in the interior of that country where it is known as the seabird par excellence, and its musical notes add to the pleasure with which a naturalist explores the countless lakes of that desolate region.

The nest is generally placed in some sheltered spot on the ground, and the eggs, which are six or seven in number, are of a pale buff slightly tinged with green, somewhat more than two inches in length by about one inch and three-quarters in breadth.

The diving powers of the Common Scoter are as perfect as those of any other species which resorts to that mode of procuring its food from the bottom of the turbulent sea.

Its whole structure, its flattened tarsi, large feet and dense plumage are all admirably fitted for the purpose. 

Its flight is rapid, straight, and of sufficient duration to convey the bird from the sea to the inland lakes or from one part of its feeding-ground to another.

Generally, however, these passages from place to place are performed near the surface of the water, but it is said to mount higher in the air when necessity requires it so to do.

Friday, 3 April 2026

Dog welfare charity will be at Global Birdfair 2026 - but BTO again expected to snub Rutland event



A DOG welfare charity is this year set to take stand space at this year's Global Birdfair, the foremost social event in the UK birding calendar.

The Dogs Trust is a national organisation which, among its activities, helps to find new homes for unwanted dogs.

For it to be represented at Birdfair is a surprise development - though perhaps not as surprising as it would be if the Cats' Protection League were to book a stand.

By contrast, the BTO is again expected to snub the event because its staff are said to disapprove of the presence of overseas holiday tours companies whose activities, they insist, do more harm than good, particularly to the environment.

Given their own similar ideologies, it is not known yet if either the RSPB or the Wildlife Trusts might follow the BTO's lead.

In the run-up to Global Birdfair at Lyndon Top, Oakham, Rutland between July 10-12 ,  the organisers have released a list of the  individuals and organisations that have so far booked to take stand space:

They include some old favourites such as the African Bird Club and Naturetrek, plus some new names such as the Crossbill Guides Foundation and House Martin Conservation UK & Ireland

The list is below:

* 2by2 Holidays

Albatross Birding and Wildlife Photography in Chile

Abelmosaics - Raising Awareness for Critically Endangered Species

African Bird Club

* All4birding

* Alpine Birding

Aqua-Firma Worldwide

Ark Expeditions

Ashanti African Tours Limited

Asian Adventures

Association Biom (Birdlife Croatia)

Atropos

Barefoot Eco Surveys

Bellavista Cloud Forest Lodge

Bellbird Tours

Bespoke India Travel

Biebrza Wildlife Trust

Biotropica Expeditions

Bird Observatories Council

Birder Travel trading as Sicklebill Safaris

Birdfinders

Birdfy by Netvue

Birding Haapsalu

BirdLife Cyprus

BirdLife International

Birding Direct

Birding Ethiopia Tour

Birds Chile

Bird's Wildlife & Nature Tours

Birds & Nature Tours Portugal

Birdtour Asia Limited

* Birdwatching Magazine

Bluetail Birding

Brazil Birding Experts

Briggate Travel

British Decoy & Wildfowl Carvers Association

British Dragonfly Society

Buseu Wild Pyrenees Nature Photography

Butterfly Conservation East Midlands

Button and Squirt

Cactus Tours Madagascar

Cairngorms National Park Authority

Canopy Family, Panama

Castilla y León Tourism Board

China Bird Tour

Clinton Banbury Illustration

Committee Against Bird Slaughter (CABS)

Cornell Lab - eBird and Merlin Bird ID

Costa Rica Birding Board

Crossbill Guides Foundation

Crowartist

Curlew Action

D Smith Glasscraft

Darren Woodhead

David Tipling Wildlife Photographer 

Discover Rutland

Dogs Trust

El Septimo Paraiso (Lodge & Cloud Forest Reserve)

Embratur Brasil

Enchanted India

Falklands Conservation

Falkland Island Holidays

Falkland Islands Tourist Board

*Fauna and Flora

Ferne Creative

French Parcs

Fujifilm UK

Ganders Travel

Gareth Watling British Bird Paintings

Garrick Books

Geckoman

Global Birdfair 2026 Mural

Global Wildlife Fair (Asian Adventures)

Grant Arms Hotel / BWWC

Greenpeace

HADCO Experiences

Hayley Jones Wire Sculptures

Heatherlea Birdwatching Ltd

Hebridean Adventures

Heights Hotel

Helen Whittle, Artist

House Martin Conservation UK & Ireland

Humane Wildlife Solutions

Irene Brierton SWA - Wildlife Artist

Jaguarundi Travel Colombia

Jetwing Eco Holidays Pvt Ltd

John Cox Wildlife Artist

Jonathan Pomroy Wildlife and Landscape Artist

Kate Cree Artist

KS Nature Photography

Langur Eco Travels - Bhutan

Lawson's Birding, Wildlife & Custom Safaris

Leicestershire and Rutland Mammal Group

Leicestershire and Rutland Ornithological Society (LROS)

*Letaka Safaris

Limosa Holidays

* Livingstone African Safaris Ltd

Lynx Nature Books (Alada Books, S.L.)

Manakin Nature Tours

Mark Andrews Artist

Mongolia Quest LLC

Nature Experience

Naturetrek

Nepal Nature Treks and Tours PVT

Neophron Tours

NHBS

Nicky Heard Artist

Nicola Jane Art

Nungunungu Expeditions

Operation Seabird

Opticron

Oriental Bird Club

*Oriole Birding Limited

Ornithological Society of the Middle East, The Caucasus and Central Asia (OSME)

Panama's Bird Team - Promtur Panama

Park Cameras

Partnership for International Birding

Peak Boxes

Planet Birdsong Foundation

Plantlife

Princeton Nature

Reef and Rainforest Tours Ltd

Richard Lewington, Wildlife Illustrator

Rockjumper Birding Tours

Ruth's Portraits

Sara Budzik Studio

SEO/BirdLife

Secret Atlas

Serra dos Tucanos Eco-turismo Ltda

SpeediGimbal

Stephen Message Art

Swarovski Optik

SWLA Printmaking Area

Tasmanian Odyssey, South Australia Tourism Commission & Australian Wildlife Journeys

The Birdway

The Feather Lady

The Royal Society for Wildlife Trusts

The Society of Wildlife Artists - SWLA

The Species Recovery Trust

The Woodland Trust

Tranquilo Bay Eco Adventure Lodge

Tropical Birding

Uganda High Commission

Uttar Pradesh Tourism

Viking Optical Limited

Warbler Tours

Warwickshire Clothing

Wild Discovery

Wild Herz Ltd

Wild Nature Quest

Wild Poland

WildArt Bird Photography Awards

Wildbird Tours Costa Rica

Wildlife Poland

Wildlife Worldwide & The Travelling Naturalist

WildSpaceGroup

Wildwings Travel

Woolley Wildlife

World Pheasant Association

WWF

* Yorkshire Coast Nature

The list will be updated as more prospective exhibitors confirm their bookings.

                                 



Thursday, 2 April 2026

Ongoing Middle East conflict certain to take its toll on nature - including birds of many species

                                                

Birdlife in jeopardy - the zone of conflict (image: Wikimedia Commons)

THE spring conflict in the Middle East has brought needless of life for many entirely innocent humans.

And once the hostilities are over, ornithologists will doubtless seek to assess the impact on nature and birdlife.

At this time of year, thousands of northerly-heading migrants are settling - to feed and roost - in the area around Strait of Hormuz which links the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman.

Kharg  Island - which President Trump has in his sights - is a particular hotspot because it provides not just vegetation habitat but also fresh water.

It is feared that hundreds of  birds will already have lost their lives to ballistic missile explosions or as a result of plumage contamination from tankers leaking oil into waterways having been damaged by explosives.

The most conspicuous bird on Kharg Island is the House Crow, but other birds to be seen in and around this part of the region include Dunlin, Oystercatcher, Curlew, Bar-tailed Godwit and Black-tailed Godwit which may be familiar in many parts of Britain but were already regarded as "near threatened" in this part of Arabia even before the current troubles.

Another wader, the Curlew-sandpiper, is deemed vulnerable.

Meanwhile, hereabouts the  Wilson's Petrel, Persian Shearwater and Lesser Frigatebird are classified as rare/accidental.

Normally more conspicuous, at least on migration, are likely to be the following: 

Gray Francolin

Collared-Dove

Laughing Dove

Crowned Sandgrouse

Alpine Swift

Common Swift

Pallid Swift

Little Swift

Eurasian Thick-knee

Black-winged Stilt

Black-bellied Plover

Little Ringed Plover

Red-wattled Lapwing

Tibetan Sand-Plover

Greater Sand-Plover

Kentish Plover

Terek Sandpiper

Whimbrel

Common Sandpiper

Green Sandpiper

Marsh Sandpiper

Wood Sandpiper

Greenshank

Sanderling

Slender-billed Gull

Pallas's Gull

Bridled Tern

Little Tern

Saunders's Tern

Whiskered Tern

Lesser Crested Tern

Greater Flamingo

Glossy Ibis

Little Heron

Squacco Heron

Dalmatian Pelican

Osprey

Egyptian Vulture

Pallid Harrier

Spotted Owlet

Common Hoopoe

Asian Green Bee-eater

European Bee-eater

White-throated Kingfisher

Red-tailed Shrike

Isabelline Shrike

Woodchat Shrike

 Brown-necked Raven

Desert Lark

Crested Lark

White-eared Bulbul

Asian Desert Warbler

Spotted Flycatcher

Rufous-tailed Scrub-Robin

Bluethroat

Black Redstart

Rufous-tailed Rock-Thrush

Isabelline Wheatear

Hooded Wheatear

Desert Wheatear

Purple Sunbird

Citrine Wagtail

Tawny Pipit

Common Chaffinch

Mongolian Finch

Striolated Bunting

To a lesser or greater extent, all birdlife in around the Gulf regionwill inevitably be affected if the conflict continues.

Whimbrel - one of the wader species to be seen in the Gulf




Likely to be lively interest when Whitaker's "sumptuous" two-volume The Birds of Tunisia goes under the hammer

                                                 

Black-eared Wheatear - an illustration from one of the volumes


ONLY 250 copies of J.L.S. Whitaker's pioneering The Birds of Tunisia were printed when it was published in two volumes in 1905.

There should, therefore, be lively interest when a set goes up for auction at the Cirencester  (Gloucestershire) saleroom of Dominic Winter next Wednesday April 8. 

This is how the work was reviewed in The Ibis journal at the time:

"This sumptuous work in two royal octavo volumes, with numerous coloured plates, is a beautiful example of bookmaking, and the contents are worthy of the setting. 

"The number of species treated is about 365 of which 150 are permanently resident, 90 are summer migrants, 90 are winter migrants and 35 are of occasional or accidental occurrence.

"Most of the information is first-hand, and the result of personal observation during the various journeys Whitaker made made in the regency, but in some cases he has had to rely on the information  supplied me by others, foremost among whom were Mr. O. V. Aplin of Bloxham, Oxfordshire , between the months of January and June, 1895, and M. Blanc of Tunis.

"The author’s expeditions in Tunisia extended over a period of about ten years, and he speaks of the country as unrivalled in climate during a large part of the year, and as delightful to visit for sport and natural history investigations.

"The scenery and climatic conditions are varied, richly wooded mountains and valleys, with fertile plains relieved by lakes and rivers, characterising the northern districts, while the central
region consists of undulating park-like country, broken by lower hills, giving place further south to vast semi-desert prairie-like plains. 

"The author has evidently pre pared this work because he felt that he had something useful to say and for this reason it will meet with a hearty welcome."

The pre-sale estimate is that the hammer will fall at somewhere between £200 and £300.  


Handsomely produced - the two-volume set



Desert Eagle-owl



                                             
Audouin's Gull




One of the maps in the first volume


Wednesday, 1 April 2026

Running out of puff! Is much-loved seabird doomed to breeding extinction on mainland Britain's south coast?

                                                

Puffins - once 'thick as grass' on Dorset coast but now in rapid decline

DOUBTS are growing over whether Puffins will remain as a breeding species on the south coast of mainland Britain.

In recent years, no more than three  pairs have been present at Purbeck in Dorset  - none of which has raised any chicks.

It is a far cry from the 1930s when the species was  described as "thick as grass" on the Dorset coast. In 1958, 85 birds were recorded in Purbeck.

The Puffins are monitored by the National Trust whose coast project officer, Ben Cooke, says:

"We fear that even if just one of the Purbeck birds were to have been  lost to the storms of winter, it would be another step closer to the loss of the whole group. 

"We are waiting with some trepidation to see if all six birds reappear this spring."

In 2024 and 2025, birds were seen nest‑building, but no fish deliveries to sites where there might have been chicks.

It was thought they may have  succumbed to predators such as rats or Carrion Crows, but a study of no fewer than 70,000 photographs taken by cameras installed on the breeding ledge revealed no predators.

It is now thought that any eggs laid may not have hatched for reasons that are unclear.

Human disturbance is not thought to be factor because this is minimal between 5am and 8am when the birds are most active.



Bird tours company "not too heavily impacted" by ongoing conflict in Middle East

                                             

They like to get out and about - one of the company's brochures from a previous year

AS the conflict rages on in the Middle East, global bird tours  operator Naturetrek has issued an update.

It states: "Fortunately, our business operations have not been impacted too heavily overall by the ongoing travel disruption in the Middle East. 

"Naturetrek customers who were on holiday in India, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Oman at the outbreak of the conflict in Iran are now safely home.

"Those about to travel to India and Sri Lanka have been placed on alternative routes and airlines." 

It tells customers: "If you are booked on a Naturetrek tour and are due to travel with Emirates Airlines through Dubai or with Qatar Airways through Doha in the coming months, please be assured that we are monitoring the situation closely. 

"As your tour operator, it is our responsibility to ensure that any cancelled flights are rebooked, and we always operate our tours in line with Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office advice for your destination (which includes any country that you might transit through en route). 

"If the FCDO advises against travel to your destination, or if we cannot offer a suitable alternative flight to get you to your destination, then in line with our terms and conditions we will offer you the option to rebook your tour or receive a full refund.

"Currently, Emirates and Qatar are allowing flights up to mid-April to be rebooked. 

"For future departures, we are waiting to see how the situation progresses and will get in touch with you with an update as we approach the balance due date for your tour."

Tuesday, 31 March 2026

Panel of wise birders deems that 'ship-assisted' corvid should not be added to the 636-strong British List

                                                     

Taking flight - but not landing a place on the British List


THE records committee of the British Ornithologists' Union has decided not to add the Pied Crow to the British List.

Members reached their verdict unanimously after considering a bird that spent the period between  June 13, 2018, and May 21, 2019, in various parts of England and Wales.

The committee's report states: "The Pied Crow is an abundant  species of sub-Saharan Africa, Madagascar, Aldabra and Comoros.

"It is largely sedentary though, in some areas, seasonal movements may be dictated by rainfall. 

"Instances of vagrancy to temperate Europe by birds of Afrotropical origin are exceptional but ship-assisted passage is a potential means of arrival.

"However, there are only a small number of documented records of Pied Crow actually aboard ships: at sea off Western Sahara and around the Canary Islands, and there is also possibility that these records concerned individuals known to have escaped on the Canary Islands." 

In chronological order, the British sightings over a period of 12 months included:

* Easington, Kilnsea and Spurn, Yorkshire

* Gibraltar Point, Lincolnshire

* Great Yarmouth, Winterton-on-Sea, Caister-on-Sea, Cromer,  East Runton, Norfolk

* Clevedon, Avon

* Pencarnan, Pembrokeshire

* Thornwick Camp and Flamborough, Yorkshire 

* Spurn, Yorkshire

* Gibraltar Point, Lincolnshire

* Holland Haven, Essex

* Winchelsea, Seaford, and Litlington, Sussex, 

* Cot Valley, Land’s End, St Just and Nanjizal, Cornwall

* Clovelly, Lundy, Morte Point, and Woolacombe, Devon

* Dover, North Foreland, St Margaret’s at Cliffe, Foreness Point, Swalecliffe, Broadstairs and North Foreland, Kent 

Crucially, the committee noted that "on June, 8, 2018, a Pied Crow  briefly visited a ship travelling from Russia to Britain in the south-eastern North Sea".

In all likelihood, this was the bird that went on to spend time flying hither and thither on the mainland. 

The report continues: "The committee's policy towards ship-assisted vagrants is not to admit port-to-port or coast-to-coast transportees on to the British List.

"Suspected ship-assisted birds should only by admitted to the List if the species is considered capable of making an unassisted crossing under favourable circumstances.

"The committee did not consider the 2018-2019 Pied Crow to be a vagrant and voted unanimously to not add the species to the British List which thus remains at 636."

The committee consists of:

Chair: Alexander Lees (Manchester Metropolitan University)

Secretary: Chris Batty (Lancashire)

Members:

Ross Ahmed (Tyne and Wear)

Pierre-André Crochet (Centre d’Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive, France)

Mark Golley (Norfolk)

Andrew Holden (ex officio, BBRC)

Mark Thomas (RSPB)

Jane Turner (Cheshire)

Leila Walker (BOU Chief Operations Officer)

BOURC Category F Sub-committee:

Prof Umberto Albarella

Jo Cooper (British Museum)

Dr Dale Serjeantson

Dr John Stewart

BOURC consultants:

Steve Dudley (Category C consultant; former BOU Chief Operations Officer)

Martin Stervander (National Museums of Scotland, museums consultant)

Keith Naylor (historical records consultant)

The Wryneck says: Few will object to the record committee's verdict, but it needs to clarify its policy on ship assisted birds. What, for instance, is its definition  of a port? Solely the point at which the vessel is anchored  - or the wider environ which may extend to 100 metres or more?  As for the line about whether a bird is "considered capable of making an unassisted crossing under favourable circumstances". That is a whole debate in itself.