Friday 31 December 2021

PLANNING GREEN LIGHT FOR NEW WADING BIRDS HABITAT ON OUTSKIRTS OF GRIMSBY

Two fields adjacent to the chemicals factory will be transformed into a wetland bird habitat

PLANNING consent has been granted for creation of a wetland bird habitat on 17.1 hectares of land on the outskirts of Grimsby in North East Lincolnshire.

Two agricultural fields adjacent to the Novartis factory will be given over to a water storage and habitat lagoon, shallow scrapes and ponds, bunding, a bird hide, culverts and a bridge.

The intention is for birds - most likely to be wader species - to use the site to roost when high tides prevent feeding on the mudflats of the adjacent Humber Estuary.

Like Cress Marsh, at nearby Stallingborough, the site has been designated as a mitigation site, not a nature reserve, and access will only be by permission from North East Lincolnshire Council.

However, for other birds, the estuary wall will provide excellent views across the whole site.

Consulant for the project - to be called Novartis Ings - is Roger Wardle who was also mastermind for Cress Marsh.

Says he: "There will be a mosaic of wet grassland, scrapes, pools and a lagoon. 

"The objective is to provide roosting areas that provide the birds' needs for a feeling of security from disturbance and predation. 

"This security is enhanced by the water  features, many surrounding a marooned area of gravel or wet grassland and mud. 

"There is also a high probability of other bird and biodiversity benefits."

Once contractors have vacated the site, probably at about this time next year, oversight will be by North East Lincolnshire Council's ecology officer, Rachel Graham.

Design of the proposed bird hide

Proposed layout of Novartis Ings 


Thursday 30 December 2021

THREE MORE YEARS IN HOT SEAT FOR NATURAL ENGLAND'S TONY JUNIPER

Tony Juniper - a lot to do 

TONY Juniper CBE has been reappointed chairman of Natural England for a second term of three-years span.

Following the announcement by Environment Secretary George Eustice, Mr Juniper said: "I am honoured to be reappointed.

"Natural England's vital role in defending and enhancing our nation’s natural environment has never been more important.

"Since I arrived in 2019, we have made significant progress in restoring energy and direction to the organisation, created a clearer strategic plan and mission and secured a major increase in resources to implement it. 

"We have made strides toward realising England’s ambition to create a Nature Recovery Network, supported the landmark Environment Act, declared new national nature reserves, helped the public connect with nature, advised government on nature-based solutions to climate change and how best to join up new farming policy with nature recovery."

He continued: "Looking to the future, there is a lot to do.

"My focus will be even more firmly on

* The delivery of the Government’s ambitious goals for nature recovery

* Implementing biodiversity net gain

* Delivering programmes for key habitats, such as peatlands

* Gearing up species recovery programmes

* Initiating more landscape-scale Nature projects

* Supporting government to deliver nature-based solutions to combat climate change

* Implementing new land management schemes

"All of the above has to be harnessed to establish the Nature Recovery Network which is so vital for overall success."

It is understood Cambridge-based Mr Juniper's remuneration for the three-days-a-week position, is about £90,000 per annum.

He added: "I want to thank all of our staff, partners and stakeholders for their support and dedication, and I look forward to continuing to work together to deliver the biggest possible positive impact for Nature that we can."

 


Thursday 23 December 2021

POLICE ISSUE IMAGE OF MAN SOUGHT FOLLOWING AUTUMN BLAZE OUTSIDE TV PRESENTER'S HOME


Police have distributed this image (taken from CCTV footage) of a man they wish to quiz in the wake of a fire on October 8 that destroyed a section of fencing outside the remote New Forest home of  birder TV wildlife presenter Chris Packham. The incident left him angered and distressed. Anyone who can assist inquiries should ring 
101 quoting incident number 44210403698.


Saturday 11 December 2021

HAMMER COMES DOWN AT £80 ON SALE OF 12 STUNNING SOUTH AFRICAN BIRD STUDIES

 


This handsome study of two Giant Kingfishers and a Malachite Kingfisher is one of  12 colour plates contained in a protective case that sold for £80 at a sale conducted last month by Cirencester-based  auction house Dominic Winter. The collection, entitled The Kingfishers and Bee-Eaters of Southern Africa, was published in about 1985, by the Southern African Nature Foundation. All of them watercolours, the signed and numbered paintings are the work of artist David Ord Kerr with text by Richard Brooke.


Sunday 5 December 2021

IT'S A FAIR WIND FOR OBSERVATORY-REBUILD PROJECT AS £7.4-MILLION FUNDING TARGET IS ACHIEVED

 

An impression of how the new observatory is likely to look (Image Colin Armstrong Architects)

A TARGET date of spring 2023 has been set for opening of a new observatory - with 29 guestrooms - at Fair Isle, Britain's top birding hotspot.

The building will replace the one destroyed in an unexplained fire in March 2019.

The £7.4-million project was thought to have been in jeopardy because the insurance payment was insufficient to cover the re-build costs.

But in October, between them, Highlands and Islands Enterprise and the Scottish Government pledged £2.35-million.

And, this weekend, it emerged that the West Midland Bird Club had made a generous donation - thought to be as much as £15,000 - to ensure the observatory trust also reached its public appeal target of £650,000.

Shetland Islands Council (Crown Estates Coastal Communities Fund) and Garfield Weston Foundation have also chipped in with vital monies.

Confirmation that funding has been secured means that one of the UK’s most remote communities can look forward to a promising future as a global eco-tourism destination that plays a crucial role in the social and economic life on the island.

The project, which is led by Fair Isle Bird Observatory Trust, will create seven  jobs and help  to sustain the island's population.

Designed by Inverness-based Colin Armstrong Architects, the  new building will be modular  and largely constructed off-site, with the various sections being shipped to Fair Isle for assembly and completion works.

This has raised eyebrows in the wake of concerns among some that modular buildings are vulnerable to fire risk.

Both the predecessor observatory and an hotel in the Shetlands were of modular construction and both ended up as ashes.

Subject to planning consent, it is hoped that construction of the new observatory will  get under way in summer next year, with opening in the following year.

The development aims to be  energy-efficient, using power from the island’s community-owned renewable energy grid as well as from the building’s own solar panels.

Says chairman of the observatory trust Douglas Barr: "We are extremely grateful to our funders.

"This will allow us both to continue with our research and  to maintain our  role in both the tourism and wider Fair Isle economy."

Flames sweep through the observatory in March 2019



Friday 3 December 2021

WORK UNDERWAY TO ENHANCE HABITAT FOR LINCOLNSHIRE'S ONLY BREEDING CRANES

 

Adult and chick - the trust has high hopes of further breeding success

WORK has begun on a revamp of Willow Tree Fen in South Lincolnshire - one of the smallest nature reserves in Britain to host breeding cranes.

Contractors moved in on Monday both to reshape the reserve, owned by the county's wildlife trust, and to to create new visitor facilities.

In order to safeguard the cranes, the site has been closed to the public since January last year, but the Trust hope to reopen it in spring next year.

The work involves removing the central track in order to encourage water to flow across the land so as to enhance the habitat not just for the cranes but for other wetland birds.

Spoil from the track will be used to raise the car park to the level of the adjacent bridge, creating a raised area for the public that overlooks the whole reserve.

Eventually, the car park and a drain bank will provide a walk with viewpoints looking over the site, allowing people safely to enjoy the reserve and the birds, away from the road. 

New scrapes and pools close to this new viewing area will also be created.

All this means that the circular routes at Willow Tree Fen, which is not far from Spalding, will not reopen. 

Says a spokesperson for the Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust: "We are very aware of the implications for visitors, and this is not a decision that has been taken lightly. 

"However, wet have a clear duty to do what we can to maximise the chances of success for the cranes. 

"We have consulted widely over the best course of action, taking advice from the UK Crane Working Group, the RSPB and an expert with years of experience in working with breeding cranes." 

It is thought that the breeding cranes might not have arrived if it were not for the solitude that the first lockdown provided, and there is a risk that the birds would desert if the circular routes were reopened.

Adds the spokesperson: "The views across the reserve from the new viewpoint will be superb, offering great opportunities for watching wildlife."

* Photographs: Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust

 

Track removal gets underway

Thursday 2 December 2021

NEW BOOK EXPLORES THE FASCINATING (AND COMPLEX) SUBJECT OF VAGRANCY IN BIRDS

                                                                    


HUGE  plaudits  to frontline ornithologists Alexander Lees and James Gilroy for their absorbing and  authoritative new book, Vagrancy in Birds.

From Victorian collectors to today's high-octane bird-chasing twitchers, the enigma of vagrancy has long been a source of obsession for birders worldwide, but this study really drills deep into the phenomenon.

It's complicated. As the duo admit, defining the term  is itself "a challenge".

After reflection, they conclude that "the geographic range of a species should encompass something like 99.9 per cent of individuals - anything outside this range might be defined as a vagrant."

When the sightings of a vagrant bird is reported in the popular Press, the general line is that it has been "blown off course", but there are some sedentary species - the short-toed treecreeper is cited - that do not migrate.

As such, they cannot accurately be said to have been blown off course since they do not have a 'course' to take.

Most vagrancy occurs in species that are, by nature, long-distance migrants, and weather can, indeed, be a factor (as can drought or food shortage) in how they come to end up in the 'wrong' place. 

But the authors emphasise that some form of disruption or distortion in their navigational compasses - whether using sun, stars, patterns of light or the Earth's magnetic field - is often likely to be just as influential, if not more so.

The text occasionally slips into somewhat pompous and ugly scientific jargon - for example, using the  terms, 'exogeneous' and 'endogeneous', to distinguish between external and internal causes of vagrancy. But mostly  it is accessible, and the narrative clips on at a lively rate.

There is one catchily-titled section - "the sky as a complex habitat" - which gives the lie to our generally one-dimensional view of wind.

The authors note that "we, as humans, have very little intuitive grasp of the windscape that birds experience in the airspace above us - a complex three-dimensional habitat comprising an ever-changing maze of jets, boundaries and eddies, invisible to the eye, but keenly felt by any bird ascending through the atmosphere.

They continue: "Pockets of turbulent air that buffet aircraft sometimes cause vertical lurches that can leave your stomach in your mouth.

"Given that these forces are strong enough to shake the metal hull of an aeroplane, it is easy to imagine just how disruptive the winds could be to an airborne bird."

There is a word of caution about reaching mistaken conclusions on vagrancy.

Time was when an Iberian chiffchaff seen in the UK might have been regarded as a vagrant, but it may simply have been that, in the past,  many were overlooked.

Nowadays, records of this species are fairly commonplace, probably because of "enhanced observer awareness".

Similarly, more regular appearances of black-winged stilts within our shores may be driven by habitat creation.

By contrast, we are unlikely to see increases in little bustard, tawny pipit and ortolan bunting because they have contracted both in range and population size towards regions where agricultural  modernisation has been less aggressive.

As well as exploring the biology of vagrancy, Lees and Gilroy explore the whole spectrum of the world's bird groups to pinpoint instances of individual species within each that have gone awry in their travels. This is all fascinating - the sort of content that you return to again and again.

A word, too for the selection of photographs. Where possible, the authors have, to their credit, plumped for the quirky rather than the conventional which adds significantly to the overall vibrancy of their study.

What are the routes by which a vagrant might reach that out-of-context destination where it reaches the eye of some doubtless delighted twitcher? The authors are a bit vague on this.

They note: "Human agency plays an increasingly major role in influencing patterns of avian vagrancy worldwide.

"Vagrants that cross barriers by piggybacking on human transport networks may have an important role to play in allowing species to respond to climate change and should perhaps therefore be viewed with a more open mind than many currently afford them."

But what does this mean? It needs to be clarified in a future edition.

What happens to vagrants after they have left the scene where they were twitched? Very few are seen again, and the authors are probably as disappointed that they remain in the dark just as much as the rest of us.

They continue: "It is a common assumption that most vagrant birds are ultimately doomed aside from the rare cases where individual birds are able to repatriate and return to their normal ranges.

"While most long-distance vagrants undoubtedly meet an untimely end, some individuals can survive for protracted periods in their new ranges - even decades in some case - provided they are able to meet the basic requirements for survival.

"By virtue of never breeding and consequently escaping the physiological stresses of reproduction, it is possible that these lost individuals can survive even longer than their life expectancy in their native range."

The subject of vagrant-hunting - or twitching - has been covered in other books, so Lees and Gilroy do not dwell on the motivators for what many people (non 'bird literate'!) see as somewhat eccentric behaviour.

However, they acknowledge that, in an era of escalating climate change, there is a moral issue to be addressed.

"Vagrant hunting is often a very high carbon hobby, especially when it involves long-haul flights, short-haul flights aboard small aircraft or epic long-distance car journeys.

"There is thus a pressing need to reduce the carbon footprint of both amateur and professional ornithology.

"Local patch birding has always attracted stalwarts, but, in an age when emissions need to be reduced, his represents an opportunity to reduce the activity's carbon footprint.

They add: "Species can be 'vagrants' at local as well as national and continental scales."

Vagrancy in Birds is published next Thursday (December 9) by Bloomsbury Helm. Price is £40 or £36 Ebook.

Jim Wright 

HOW VALUABLE TO WILDLIFE TRUST IS THE FAMOUS 'BIRDFAIR' TRADEMARK?

                                              

The trademark - no prizes  for identifying the bird


ALTHOUGH the Leicestershire and Wildlife Trust has ditched Birdfair, it still holds a potentially value asset - the trademark.

Any individual, organisation or consortium seeking to take over the show would thus need to secure the permission of the Trust to use the name.

And, if the Trust has astute commercial lawyers, it would probably also seek payment - either a one-off sum or a recurring income.

Any revenue could prove precious in helping the Trust with its core activities such as managing its 35 reserves, including Rutland Water.

Over the years, Birdfair has certainly been a moneyspinner, generating profits of more than £5-million over 30 years. 

In the past, these monies have been channeled into global conservation charities, but a new owner might have other ideas.

Birdlife started life, in 1989, as the British Birdwatching Fair but, following the change of name, the Birdfair trademark (number: UK00003072917) was formally registered on September 17,  2014.

It is due for renewal on the same date in 2024.

Factfile:

* Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust is the foremost wildlife charity operating in the two counties, with a mission to protect and enhance the wildlife and wild places of Leicestershire and Rutland and to engage people with nature. It has over 17,000 members, manages 35 nature reserves covering 1,250 hectares, and is supported by a staff team of 35 and more than 700 volunteers (341 of these worked on Birdfair in 2019).

* Birdfair was held over three days in August every year from 1989 to 2019. Total annual attendance on the site was around 20,000.

* Birdfair’s last donation was in respect of the 2019 event and totalled £168,000. The donation for the 2018 event was £320,000. 

* The cancellation of the 2020 event increased the costs relating to the financial year 2019/20, resulting in the much lower donation figure for the 2019 event.

* Income from recent Birdfairs averaged £900,000 per year. Costs averaged £600,000.

* Birdfair is operated by LRWT’s wholly-owned subsidiary, Leicestershire Wildlife (Sales) Ltd. 

* Virtual Birdfair - a wholly online event - was held in August 2020. It was an innovative concept, one of the first digital events to be held whilst Covid prevented “live” events. It was designed to explore how new digital techniques could be harnessed effectively to communicate with the public and spread the Birdfair message.

* Virtual Birdfair's  website hosted more than 130 exhibitors, 43 artists, 17 sponsors and partner organisations, 130 recorded events and lectures, 24 authors talks and 20 live events. 25,800 unique users visited during the festival week (rising to 96,000 over autumn), viewing pages 210,199 times. 

* Grant funding of £123,000 was received from the National Lottery Heritage Fund  to allow the Trust to hold Virtual Birdfair, plan for the future and seek to ensure continuity of the event. In addition, a loan of £41,713 was obtained from the Royal Society of Wildlife Trust’s Strategic Development Fund, to provide working capital support.

* Rutland Water Nature Reserve is managed by the Trust in partnership with Anglian Water.

Wednesday 1 December 2021

TIM APPLETON'S ZOOM COMMENTS PROMPT REVIVAL HOPES FOR MUCH-CHERISHED BIRDFAIR

                                          

Tim Appleton - enthusiasm undiminished

HOPES are rising that Birdfair could be reborn - and even be held, as in the past, at Rutland Water, near Stamford.

The event's 'godfather', Tim Appleton MBE, revealed yesterday evening that he had received several approaches about restoring the event that was controversially killed off last week by its longtime hosts, the Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust.

It is unlikely that Mr Appleton, a former manager of the Rutland Water nature reserve, would again want to assume a day-to-day hands-on role, but he would be able to provide crucial experience and an encyclopedia's worth of precious contacts.

He said: "I should be very pleased to help.

"Birdfair has always been such a great opportunity for bringing people together and for encouraging them to share their passions for birding and Nature."

Of the statements given by the Trust for pulling the rug on Birdfair, he said they had been "just excuses", noting that there had  never been a financial cost to the Trust.

He was particularly scathing about the organisation's claim that the land used for the fair had been damaged by soil compaction to the detriment of what is a Site of Special Scientific Interest.

"That’s nonsense," he declared. "We have never had an issue with obtaining a licence from the Natural England." 

There has been speculation that Birdfair, in a different form, could be staged at a purpose-built exhibition centre such as the NEC in Birmingham or Excel in London.

But Mr Appleton said that this might reduce it to becoming "just another trade fair".

He continued: "I think it needs to be held in Nature - that is important for the overall atmosphere.

"Furthermore, firms involved in the optics industry would want a site where potential customers have the opportunity to sample their binoculars, scopes and cameras.

The co-founder and former manager of Birdfair was speaking exclusively at an evening Zoom discussion hosted by David Lindo  as the latest in the latter's popular In Conservation series of interviews.

                                            

David Lindo - upbeat Urban Birder

There is no bigger champion of Birdfair than Mr Lindo - also known as  the Urban Birder.

Said he: "Not only has Birdfair always been a very enjoyable occasion, but it has enabled me to meet many different people, some of whom have opened doors and helped me in my career."  

But he went on to express misgivings whether, in a post-pandemic world, exhibitors and visitors would return to the event in the same numbers as yesteryear. "I think the world may have changed and moved on," he observed. 

However, this was disputed by his guest who noted that Manchester United were continuing to attract crowds of more than 70,000 non-maskwearing fans to home matches.  

In his own further reflections, Mr Lindo described the Trust's recent statement as "lame" and said he found it "offensive" that it contained no mention - let alone any note of gratitude - for the hard work and achievements of Mr Appleton.

There has been speculation that Birdfair might be replaced by a series of regional events, building on those on held at Martin Mere in Lancashire and Spurn in Yorkshire.

Mr Appleton acknowledged that these were valuable and enjoyable, but he still felt there needed to be a pre-eminent national event, both as a magnet for international visitors and  for the scale of what it could offer.

He revealed that the costs of infrastructure for the three-day event were colossal - for instance £200,000 for marquee hire and  up to £80,000 for supplying temporary power and other utilities plus Portaloos.

His preference would be for Birdfair to be retained at Rutland Water where there was a pool of some 350 willing and highly capable volunteers and where the contractors engaged were not just experienced but also "extremely enthusiastic".

It was possible that, subject to consent of the landowners, Anglian Water, who had always been "supportive", the event could be relocated to a different part of the same site.

He went on to note that remaining loyal to this location  would be to benefit of the local community in and around Oakham which was boosted to the tune of up to £1.3-million from income generated by the influx of exhibitors and visitors of different nationalities.

"At what other small town or village can you hear 20 different languages being spoken on the high street as you do at Birdfair weekend in August?" he asked.

As well as bringing people together, Birdfair satisfactions for Mr Appleton have also included the huge amounts raised for wildlife charities and good causes, not least the £125,000 raised for Save the Albatross. 

Other contributors to the Zoom discussion, which will be featured on David Lindo's YouTube channel later this month, included long-time volunteer and charities consultant Nigel Scott who suggested a revived Birdfair should operate as an "independent entity", either as a company or as charity.

The Wryneck says: Huge congratulations to David Lindo for hosting such a timely interview and to Tim Appleton, both for his continuing enthusiasm and for his forthright and helpful insights into Birdfair and its past (and hopefully its future). By his own admission, he is not a "committee man", but, if willing, he would make the ideal figurehead, thereby reducing the risk of  all the goodwill towards reviving Birdfair being dissipated by too many different initiatives getting in the way of one another and achieving nothing. However, there remains one powerful voice that urgently needs to be heard - that of the RSPB. So far the organisation has remained silent. What support would it pledge to reviving Birdfair? Leadership is required Chief executive Beccy Speight needs to speak out without delay.

Tuesday 23 November 2021

FINAL CURTAIN COMES DOWN ON BIRDFAIR - BURDEN WAS TOO MUCH FOR ORGANISERS

Birders queue to enter the last Birdfair 

IT'S the end of the line for Birdfair - probably the world's most popular gathering festival for birders.

From its launch more than 30 years ago, the event was hosted by the Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust  at Rutland Water Nature Reserve, near Stamford.

But today, the Trust announced that, "after careful consideration of a number of key factors", it had taken the "difficult decision" to stop running the event.

In a statement this afternoon, Head of Engagement Jamie Perry explains: "The global pandemic has had a significant effect on our day-to-day operations as a charity. 

"Like many other similar institutions, we have seen income streams lost or reduced, with a resultant impact on our financial reserves and thus the delivery of our charitable work. 

"Birdfair operations have contributed to these financial concerns."

He continues: "Birdfair proceeds have always been donated in full to Birdlife International. 

"The Trust has never received any part of this, but we have nevertheless borne 100 per cent of the risks and liabilities and have supplied the staff and volunteer effort of running the event. 

"This is a significant burden for any organisation, let alone a small local charity such as ourselves.”

Both the 2020 and 2021 events were cancelled because of the global pandemic which still prevails. 

Mr Perry further notes increasing concerns over climate crisis.

"The current format of Birdfair is heavily influenced by travel and tourism, with exhibitors travelling from 80 different countries to attend. 

"The carbon footprint generated both by the event itself and the activities it promotes does not now fit well with our own strategy towards tackling the climate crisis." 

He adds that the event has grown considerably over the years, and the Trust is concerned about the impact that the event might be having on Rutland Water Nature Reserve itself in terms of soil compaction in the site area.

He concludes: "The Trust has therefore had to conclude that continuing to run Birdfair presents our charity with unsustainable financial, ecological and reputational risks."

The Wryneck says: Everyone will understand the Trust's decision, but why did it take until late-November to announce it? It is now almost certainly too late - at least for 2022 - for anyone else to take up the reins and stage the event at another venue. What other options did the Trust explore as an alternative to pulling the plug on the event? Could, for example, the rights to Birdfair - and the goodwill -  have been transferred, sold even, to a commercial events company? And, with all its clout, could the RSPB not have done something to rescue the fair? A lot of people, while immensely grateful for the memories, will feel deflated at how the high-ups of the birding world seem to have patted themselves on the back for past achievements, washed their hands  and walked away.

                                              








Monday 22 November 2021

PUFFIN AND SNOWY OWL MAY BE 'ON PATH TO EXTINCTION' WARNS AMERICAN AUTHOR


TIME was when hummingbird - served in a walnut shell - was on the menu of an upmarket  restaurant at Boston Harbour in the USA.

It was  regarded as a special delicacy though perhaps not so rich in flavour as another culinary favourite, the now-extinct Eskimo curlew.

This offbeat information is included in an absorbing new book, Birdpedia - A Brief Compendium of Avian Lore, by American ornithologist Christopher W. Leahy.

In his section on how wild birds regularly used to feature on the menu in the United States, he notes that, even today, robin pie occasionally reaches (illegally) the table in some rural areas.

Leahy, whose other books include the authoritative Birds of Mongolia, is extraordinarily exhaustive in his survey, with almost 200 entries on topics ranging from plumage and migration to birds in art, fiction, drama (including Shakespeare), poetry and religion.

To his credit, despite his cheerful tone, the author's perspective is not one of undiluted feel-good optimism.

He says it how it is, warning that iconic species such as Atlantic puffin and snowy owl  may be "on the path to extinction".

In his survey of man-made threats, he describes "the indiscriminate use of highly toxic chemicals to control insects  as one of the chief follies of the modern era because many birds depend on insects for their diet".

Back in the 1960s, the American writer, Rachel Carson, was the first to warn on pesticides in her famous book, Silent Spring.

It led to her being targeted in a smear campaign, not just from the agro-chemical lobby but also from some politicians, with one coming up with the bizarre statement that, because unmarried, she was  "probably a communist"! 

The author notes with sadness that, during her work on Silent Spring, Carson developed breast cancer and died of complication in April, 1964. she was only 57.

At just £9.99 in hardback, Birdpedia represents excellent value  for money, both for Leahy's breezily-written and authoritative text and for the enchanting sketches by illustrator Abby McBride.

It is published in the UK by Princeton University Press and available wherever books are sold.

Tuesday 16 November 2021

SALEROOM NEWS: FRENZIED BIDDING PUSHES UP PRICE OF RAVEN AT LINCOLNSHIRE AUCTION

Under the hammer - what secrets could this handsome bird tell? 

They say every bird has a story to tell, but this raven's story will probably never be told.

Where and when did it live? How did it die? Who was the taxidermist who mounted it?  And what is its fate in the years to come?

The doubtless once wise corvid was one of the star lots at an auction staged today by John Taylors of Louth in Lincolnshire.

The bird attracted frenzied bidding over the internet such that the price had reached £340 - yes £340 - before the hammer fell.

Who was the buyer? In common with customary saleroom practice, Taylors are not revealing the successful bidder.

Several other items of taxidermy were also up for grabs.

More modest - but still impressive - sale prices were realised by a jay (£50), a buzzard (£95) and a golden pheasant (£75).

                                      
This jay fetched £50 

 

Friday 12 November 2021

WORKS ON PROPOSED NEW LIFEBOAT STATION DELAYED TO SAFEGUARD WINTER SHOREBIRDS


Artist's impression of the proposed new lifeboat station as it will be seen from the promenade (Picture: RNLI)

CONSTRUCTION work on a proposed new lifeboat station on the East Coast of England will be delayed to safeguard overwintering shorebirds.

Although the £3-million project at Cleethorpes, Lincolnshire, is scheduled to start in April next year, piling will be postponed until May 1 by which time the knot, dunlin, curlew, sanderling and other species will have flown north to their breeding grounds.

This has been agreed following discussions between the RNLI, Natural England and North East Lincolnshire Council.

Works will then be put on hold again after August 31 when the birds will be returning.

A downside is that there is likely to be displacement for migrating common and Sandwich terns which often rest on this part of the beach.   

The new station to be built on the beach will replace the existing one, which is on a public highway, and will have its own slipway for launch and recovery of the lifeboat. 

Target date for completion is mid-2023.


Existing lifeboat station is on a public highway and blind bend

         

Natural England has insisted  that works must not be carried out during autumn and winter for fear of disturbing shorebirds such as these sanderling and dunlin




Sunday 7 November 2021

THAT ORKNEYS THRUSH: WAS IT FROM NORTHERN ALASKA - SHOULD IT BE IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA?

                                               

Varied thrush - Did Orkneys bird mistake Orkneys for Los Angeles County? 

    

AMID  speculation about the origins of the Varied Thrush that recently spent a few days in The Orkneys, a paper published more than 120 years ago might offer some pointers.

American ornithologist Joseph Grinnell identified plumage differences that led him to conclude that were two separate breeding races in Alaska - one on the coast and one inland.

Below is an abbreviated version of the report that he wrote for the April 1901 edition of The Auk, quarterly journal of the Nuttall Ornithological Society.

"Well-marked differences exist in the case of the female between the race of the Varied Thrush (Hesperocichla naevia naevia) breeding in the humid area around Sitka on the South-east coast of Alaska and that of the race (Hesperocichla naevia meruloides) breeding in the dryer interior region in the north of the same state. 

"The Sitkan race is characterised by a predominance of deep browns, restriction of white or light markings, and by a shorter and more rounded wing.

"By contrast, the northern and interior race (Hesperocichla naevia meruloides) has a much greyer and paler coloration, greater extension of white markings, and a longer and more pointed wing. 

"Unfortunately I have no male birds from Sitka, except juveniles, but three spring males from the Kowak Valley in the North-west of Alaska when compared with late-winter males taken from northern California are of a lighter slate colour dorsally and slightly paler tawny beneath. 

"The females of this species appear to be much more subject to protective coloration, so-called, than the males, and it is therefore reasonable to expect climatic variations to be more pronounced in the females than in the males, especially when the climate of the sunnier habitat is of an extreme nature. 

"In the winter home of Varied Thrushes, there is also a different distribution of the two races, but their latitudinal relation is reversed.

"Thirty-five skins from Los Angeles County, in southern California, are all but one referable strictly to birds (meruloides) from northern Alaska while the majority of the winter skins from the coast region of central and northern California are of the Sitkan race (naevia). 

"In other words, though its summer habitat is more northerly, meruloides migrates further south in winter than naevia. Its migration route is much the longest. 

"Naevia's apparently much shorter migration route probably extends at most between the latitudes of Sitka and Monterey."

On the basis that the meruloides race has the capacity to migrate longer distances, is it fair to assume that The Orkneys bird is from northern Alaska and should, by rights, now be in southern California? 

Grinnell ends his article thus: "The wing-contour seems to offer a criterion by which to judge the length of the annual migration of a bird - by the study of further material I hope to arrive at some more definite conclusions in this regard."

Friday 5 November 2021

NATURE'S OWN MUSIC: AUTHOR'S CELEBRATION OF A MUCH-LOVED SONGBIRD OF FARMLAND

 



IN medieval Britain, eating skylarks was believed to cure ailments of the throat.

Meanwhile, in Italy, eating larks was considered to be a remedy for liver disease.

These are among the nuggets in  nature writer John Lewis-Stempel’s engaging new book - The Soaring Life of The Lark.

It is only a short volume - fewer than 100 pages - but it is a highly-readable compendium of insights about this very special bird, not least as an inspiration to  countless poets (notably Shelley) and musicians such as Vaughan Williams.

Borrowing from one of his earlier books, Where Poppies Blow, the author also describes how the song of the skylark provided cheer to soldiers - presumably in both sets of trenches - on the Western Front in the 1914-18 war.

He laments how larks were once exploited in their thousands by the caged birds trade. (Remarkably, they still sang, even in confinement.)

Importantly, Stempel-Lewis also provides a reminder of the ongoing decrease in their population in Europe as the result of modern intensive agricultural methods.

Can anything be done?

"Yes and easily," he writes. "One simple solution is for the 'skylark plot' which costs next to nothing in money or time.

"Such plots help the birds forage for food once the crops grow and become dense.

"If there were a thousand such plots, the decline of the skylark could be halted."

It is a nice thought, but is this really so?

The sad fact, surely,  is that on most farms there are insufficient insects to enable the species to flourish.

The decline of the skylark is therefore likely to continue.

The Soaring Life of The Lark is published by Doubleday Books at £9.99.


Thursday 4 November 2021

BYGONE BIRDING: EGG OF GREAT AUK WAS DISCOVERED IN ENGLISH PARISH CHURCH

From the April 1892 edition of The Auk, quarterly journal of  the Nuttall Ornithological Club.

Mr Symington Grieve of Edinburgh, in a recent letter to Capt. J. W. Collins, announces the discovery of one more egg of the Great Auk "this time in a museum kept in the tower of an English parish church". 

The egg was labelled 'Penguin', and the owner of the museum was under the impression that it was the egg of one of the penguins of the southern hemisphere until he read a magazine  article that the Great Auk also was known as the Penguin in the American localities that were frequented by the bird.

He had the egg examined by experts who pronounced it undoubtedly an egg of Alca impennis

From all that can be discovered of its history it appears in all probability to have come from Newfoundland."

Frederic A. Lucas 

Washington DC

USA

Tuesday 2 November 2021

EXOTIC BIRD LISTENS IN ON HIS MAJESTY'S CONVERSATION WITH AMAZON TYCOON


What is thought to be a golden pheasant (upper centre) listens intently as the Prince of Wales enjoys light-hearted  banter with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and his lady friend, Lauren Sanchez. The picture, taken at Dumfries House (about 40 miles from the COP conference in Glasgow), was posted on his social media pages by the tycoon who is, like His Majesty, at the forefront of initiatives to tackle climate change.  The identity of the lady on the left is not known. Below are pictures of the house and part of its stunning 2,000-acre estate which is open to the public and offers great opportunities for viewing and hearing a range of songbirds.  
                                     
                                      



Sunday 31 October 2021

HOW DID MAGNIFICENT VARIED THRUSH FIND ITS WAY FROM NORTH AMERICA'S WEST COAST TO ORKNEY?


Varied Thrush - photo by Walter Siegmund via Wikipedia 

RECENT excitement over the appearance of a Varied Thrush in Orkney would doubtless have been shared by Lincolnshire's pioneer-naturalist Sir Joseph Banks.

Back in the 18th Century, Banks - who, when not travelling, divided his time between Revesby Abbey, near Spilsby, and London -  was probably the first European to identify this beautiful bird as a unique species.

His encounter came when, as scientist on board one of Captain James Cook's epic voyages of exploration, he was captivated by the beauty of the bird, examples of which he saw during a stop-off at  Nootka Island off the west coast of Canada in April, 1778.

In 1841, American ornithologist and artist John James Audubon acknowledged the importance of Banks and Cook in the discovery of the species when he depicted it in one of his celebrated paintings.

The Orkney bird is only the second for the UK - the other bird was an aberrant-plumaged male that spent November 14-23, 1982, at  Nanquidno, near St Just in West Cornwall.

Since the Varied Thrush  was first reported by David Roche last Wednesday, hundreds of twitchers have made the trip to see it - typically paying £216 for a ferry return from the Scottish mainland to Orkney's main port, Kirkwall, then paying £170 each way for a charter boat (carrying up to 11) to the island of Papa Westray (population  just 90).

The bird, which is slightly larger than a Song Thrush, has mostly been very obliging, providing excellent views  as it  pecks for insects on a grass field. It is extremely lively and evidently in good health.

A bird of the west coast of Canada and North America where it favours moist coniferous forests, the Varied Thrush seems an unlikely vagrant to Europe. The route of this particular bird to Orkney can only be a matter of conjecture. 

Inevitably, some will suspect it might have been ship-assisted. Or, to put a real damper on things, might it be an escapee from a private aviary?

There is also one other Palearctic record for the Varied Thrush - a specimen that spent a few days in early May, 2004, feeding in the company of hundreds of redwings, on farmland in East Iceland.  


Orkney's current star attraction

Audubon's study of the species 


Sir Joseph Banks - pioneer birder