Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Bar-tailed Godwit, DH, enjoys some midnight sun


Just a very quick one today, to mention our first Bar-tailed Godwit re-sighting outside Ireland. It turns out that this is also the furthest away that we’ve had a re-sighting!

Ringing and re-sighting locations for Bar-tailed Godwit, DH. 

While we managed to catch up with, and ring-read, 31 out of the 99 Bar-tailed Godwits (ringed 31st Jan, 2014) before they left Dublin Bay, DH wasn’t read until the 18th May, when it was photographed by Tomas Aarvak. Here’s a very dapper-looking DH in northern Norway, looking a lot more colourful than on the ringing day in January.

Bar-tailed Godwit, DH, in breeding plumage in Porsanger, 
Finnmark, Norway on 18th May, 2014. Tomas Aarvak 

It won’t be long now before we start to see waders, most likely failed breeders, returning from the north, and there are also quite a few of the colour-ringed Oystercatchers and Bar-tailed Godwits summering in Dublin. So, if you feel like getting out there to do some birding or ring-reading, your re-sightings would be greatly appreciated!
     

Tuesday, 20 May 2014

Well Spotted!


Last night, Monday 19th May, we had one of our most interesting colour-ring re-sightings to date. Its the first Dublin Bay Birds Project colour-ringed Redshank that has been re-sighted outside of Ireland. In an extraordinary coincidence, the bird (colour-ring BH) was spotted by BirdWatch Ireland's very own Olivia Crowe whilst over in Iceland on a Knot ringing expedition, which is  co-ordinated by Jim Wilson as part of The International Wader Study Group.



The team was out late Monday evening attempting a cannon-net catch on a flock of 9,000 Knot in Iceland's westerns fjords, when BH was spotted with nine other unringed Redshanks. 


Redshank BH - ringing site (Dublin Bay) to re-sighting location 
(Iceland's western fjords). Roughly 1,700 km!

We ringed BH on the 1st February this year at Sandymount Strand in Dublin, and hadn't had any re-sightings until this report from Dyrafjorour in Iceland late last night.


Redshank BH - re-sighting location, Dyrafjorour, Iceland. Olivia Crowe. 

Remember that all re-sightings are hugely valuable us, so please keep them coming in. You can submit your records HERE.

Friday, 2 May 2014

Visible Migration


This week we had a report from a local birder of a colour-ringed Dunlin in South Dublin Bay on April 21st. As part of the Dublin Bay Birds Project, we have ringed a good few (hundreds) Dunlin but we haven’t colour ringed any. We know that the bird was ringed as part of a wader ringing project in North West Africa, at Banc d'Arguin, Mauritania, on January 9th 2013. 

Northward bound - colour ringed Dunlin, 
South Dublin Bay

The Banc d'Arguin stands on the African Atlantic coast, where the ocean and the desert meet. The area comprises shallow coastal areas with extensive mudflats covered by seagrass, small islands, coastal swamps and sand dunes. It is one of the most important areas in the world for migratory waders, holding approximately 2 million birds.

From ringing site to Dublin Bay, but where in between?

We get three difference races of Dunlin in Ireland, two of which, schinzii and artica, winter in west Africa. The schinzii race breeds in small numbers in the northern extremes of Ireland and the UK, as well as in south eastern Greenland, Iceland, the Faroes, Norway and the Baltic. Small numbers of slightly smaller and shorter-billed artica birds move through on passage en route to and from north eastern Greenland each year.    

We are always on the lookout for re-sightings of colour ringed birds, so if you see any, and can read the inscription, combination of colour rings or get a good photo, we would be delighted to have the record. Thanks to all our regular and casual ring readers, we hope you have been enjoying the good weather recently - perfect for ring reading...

Observations can be submitted here.


RW

Wednesday, 16 April 2014

Survey "work"


While you were all slaving away in your offices yesterday, the Dublin Bay Birds team was out surveying in Dublin bay, where the sun was splitting the stones. There is no better way to count waders, than with Skylarks providing the tunes and with Swallows acrobatically chasing overhead. As I stood on the causeway in my tee shirt with my ice-cream, I wondered if I should have brought sun cream. Then I pinched myself, and started my work

There have been big changes around the bay since last month’s count. The Wigeon, Teal, Shoveler and Pintail have all gone, and the Brent Geese are fervently fuelling up for their imminent departure. The Oystercatcher numbers have more than halved since last month, and the Bar-tailed Godwits have all but disappeared. There are still plenty of Black-tailed Godwits around, but now, sporting their tomato soup-coloured glad rags, they really stand out on the mudflats. There are also lots of Redshanks around now too, but these ones are likely to be birds that have wintered further to the south, who are on their way northwards.


Black-tailed Godwit in breeding plumage Shay Connolly

I stopped in at Merrion Gates to read some Oystercatcher rings on my way to back to the office, and was delighted to hear the grating kerrick calls of Sandwich Terns over the strand. These harsh calls foretell the arrival of their Common and Arctic cousins, who will be arriving back to their breeding platforms in Dublin port in the coming weeks.  



Sandwich Terns in breeding plumage Shay Connolly

Just two of our radio-tagged birds, Redshanks AN and AP, remain from the eleven birds we tagged in January. We got some great data from them before they left, and now the job is to get this data out of notebooks, mapped and moulded into something useful!  

Wednesday, 26 March 2014

See you in Iceland!


I got an email this morning from Jim Wilson, who coordinates the fantastic International Schools Godwit Project. Jim had been contacted about colour-ringed Oystercatcher “CU”, which had just been seen in Stokkseyri in southern Iceland! This is great news as it is the first re-sighting of our Dublin-ringed birds in Iceland!

Wintering and breeding sites for Oystercatcher CU.
Blue marker: ringing and wintering site.
Red marker: breeding location.

CU is reported to be on its breeding territory with its mate.  It had been re-sighted 5 times on Sandymount Strand since it was ringed there on the 26th February, 2013, with the most recent re-sighting being on the 4th March this year.

Oystercatcher CU on breeding territory in 
Stokkseyri, Iceland.  Tómas Grétar Gunnarsson 


While we don’t know what age CU is, we know that it hatched at least four years ago. CU had a bill length of 78 mm when we ringed it, which suggests that it tends to prise open cockle and mussel shells, rather than smashing them open like some of its shorter billed buddies.

Tuesday, 25 March 2014

Things that go bump in the night


I didn’t see a fox while out radio tracking last night. And it was the very first time that I didn’t see one on a nocturnal radio tracking survey. We are practically tripping over them at night in Dublin. We often see them picking their way along Sandymount Strand scavenging stranded treats laid down by the withdrawing tide, or, at the weekends, skulking in the shadows en route to the chipper to feast on deep-fried treats discarded by the withdrawing revellers.

But this is supposed to be a bird blog, and everyone else seems to be blogging about the signs of spring, so maybe I should too. As I’m practically nocturnal these days, you might think it would be hard to notice anything, but there are some signs:

  • There has been a constant passage of Redwings every night that we have been out in recent weeks. Their diagnostic tseep calls have been providing pleasant backing vocals to our nocturnal endeavours. After fuelling up all day, no doubt on the abundance of berries that still adorn many trees, they take advantage of the cool night air and lack of predators to make their northward migration.
  • We’re not doing such a good job at tracking the wintering birds anymore, as the radio-tagged waders seem to have the same idea as the Redwings. A few weeks ago, we’d be able to get fixes for all of the eleven radio-tagged birds each night, but this number has recently taken a nosedive. We only had three last night: D A, the one remaining Oystercatcher; A N, the Redshank pictured in the banner above; and D C, my second favourite of the Bar-tailed Godwits.
  • Also with procreation on their minds, Robins, Wrens, Blackbirds and Song Thrushes, coerced by a concoction of street lights and testosterone, have been heralding springtime by belting out their songs in the better-lit parts of our survey site.
Nocturnal radio tracking. Niall Tierney

Spring is surely on the way, and it won’t be long until all our winter visitors have left our shores. So it’s a great time to get out to Dublin Bay to read the rings on the birds that aren’t ready to leave yet, but it’s also worth keeping an eye for colour-ringed waders elsewhere, as they are on the move.  

Thursday, 6 March 2014

Remember this guy?


We blogged about him in last April. He was ringed as a juvenile on the 16th September, 2012 in the Montrose Basin in NE Scotland. Since that blog last April, he was seen again on Bull Island on the 2nd of May, 2013 before heading off to breed.

Colour-ringed Black-tailed Godwit Ewan Weston

He is back in Dublin again and has been seen and photographed several times on Bull Island, with the most recent sighting being on the 23rd February.


Colour-ringed Black-tailed Godwit Graham Prole

Isn’t it fantastic how much we can learn from these colour-ringed birds? Check out this link to read about what godwit researchers are learning about how climate change is affecting the timing of migration.