Showing posts with label Waders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Waders. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 December 2016

The Golden Wellies 2016




As another year comes to an end, the results of the RSPB’s internal competition to find the best passage wader site, The Golden Wellies, have just been announced.  The rules are simple: monthly counts of waders are recorded; they have to be ‘feet down’ (no fly-overs) on a managed fresh/brackish scrape or flood (not tidal). The idea behind the competition is also simple: you may not be interested in rare waders on your site but they tend to indicate a well-managed site.  A well-managed site will attract many common breeding and passage birds, rare birds will also tend to arrive at such sites. The better the feeding conditions, the more likely they are to stay. Extra elements to the competition test good wetland management throughout the year and also the accessibility of good birds to weekend birders by having a ‘rare bird Saturday bonus’. 

The Premier League champions are, yet again, Frampton Marsh. Frampton recorded 34 species, narrowly pipping Titchwell (33) who were top of the League for most of the year. The highlights of Frampton’s year included Long-billed Dowitcher, Black-winged Stilt, Broad-billed, White-rumped and Pectoral Sandpipers, as well as peak counts of 258 Curlew Sandpipers and 50 Little Stints.  Titchwell could only muster a feeble Great Knot, Pacific Golden Plover and a couple of Pec Sands.  Frampton had an average monthly peak of 4,856 waders of 25.1 species, compared to Titchwell’s slightly higher Knot-fuelled monthly average of 5,267 waders of 23.4 species.  Minsmere’s much lower monthly average of 526 waders nether-the-less still maintained a monthly diversity of 24.0 species. If only they could record a Temminck’s Stint!  Snettisham records the most waders monthly – an average peak of 39,300 birds, but only averaging 15.3 species a month.

The Golden Wellie also includes a breeding wader productivity award – won this year by Burton Mere Wetlands on the Dee Estuary.  Middleton Lakes (27 species), the Aire Valley (26) and the Ouse Washes (26 species) all again demonstrate that well managed inland sites can compete with the coast in terms of wader diversity if not numbers.  A new entry this year, Wallasea, gained immediate promotion from League 1 with a notable 23 species – what will it get when the site is completed?  In the north and west, Loch of Strathbeg, Conwy and Belfast Lough all perform well given they struggle to record the southern certainties of Avocet and LRP.

In all, 43 species of wader were recorded during the year, with a peak monthly count of 111,719 birds being recorded across RSPB ‘wader scrapes’ in September.  Monthly peak counts included 399 Whimbrel in April, 22 Black-winged Stilts in May, 12 Red-necked Phalaropes in June, 228 Green Sandpipers in July, 16,800 Black-tailed Godwits, 334 Ruff, 411 Curlew Sandpipers and 123 Little Stints in August, and 3,151 Avocets and 40 Jack Snipe in September.  

Although the Golden Wellie has 48 competing sites across three leagues, the top performing 15 sites in 2016 were as follows:
                                             
      Site                      Wader spp     Final score incl. bonuses
1.   Frampton Marsh       34                          72
2.   Titchwell                    33                          62
3.   Minsmere                   31                          53  
4.   Cliffe Pools                 28                          46
5.   Snettisham                 28                          44 
6.   Saltholme                   26                          42 
7.   South Essex                27                          41                                    
8.   Dungeness                  29                          38                                                  
9.   Arne                            26                          37         
10.  Exe                             27                           36
11.  Ouse Washes             26                           36             
12.  Loch of Strath            24                          34     
13.  Middleton Lakes        27                          33   
14.  Old Hall Marshes       28                          32
15.  Lodmoor/Radipole     26                          32


                         

Wednesday, 2 November 2016

Tipping the Balance - the story of Black-winged Stilts in 2016


Black-winged Stilts 2016 from graham white on Vimeo.




There have been repeated nesting attempts by Black-winged Stilts in the UK in recent years.  While spring influxes of stilts into Britain have largely been driven by dry conditions in south-west Europe, at least part of the most recent surge of records is also likely to have also been due to an increase in the nearest breeding populations, particularly in northern France. It is also clear that some individual stilts are now returning to Britain in successive years. Although breeding attempts by stilts in Britain are no longer just one-off events, their overall success has been poor and colonisation is by no means assured.  In 2016, we decided to try to do something about this.  This blog covers the events of the year, with a fuller account being published in British Birds in November 2016.

Following the failed breeding attempts by stilts in 2015, we decided to be proactive and try to maximise the chances of successful breeding in 2016.  But where should we focus our efforts given that stilts could turn up anywhere? We agreed that Cliffe Pools was the obvious site to work on, given that stilts had nested there in the two previous years.  Our plan was to develop a habitat so good for Black-winged Stilts that we would draw them in from all around.  Little did we realize the impact this would have!

The aim was to encourage stilts to nest in a location that contained not only good chick-rearing habitat but that we could also protect from predation. Foxes and Badgers are a known threat, but we also wanted to avoid a similar situation to 2015 where stilts nested on islands where the chicks were predated by Black-headed Gulls.  So, beginning in autumn 2015, management work started to try and encouraging stilts arriving in spring 2016 onto a key pool.  This included cutting and grazing vegetation to turn it into prime stilt habitat, installing a predator exclusion fence around the margins and manipulating water levels to provide ideal feeding conditions as the likely time for stilt arrival approached.  We sat back and waited.

The first stilt, a female, was recorded in Sussex on 12th April.  The following day, she was on the pool at Cliffe.   A pair of stilts arrived on 17th and a fourth bird the following day.  Two birds left on 19th April but three days later the remaining pair was joined by a further four stilts – a male and three females.  A pair were recorded at Manor Farm in Bucks on 24th but relocated to Cliffe the following day.  Stilts had been recorded at only three other sites in Britain during April yet 8 or 9 birds had passed through or settled at our pool at Cliffe!  Photographs showed that two of the males present, and which subsequently nested, had near-identical head and neck markings to the two males that had nested nearby in 2015.

Following a delay during a period of cold weather, two pairs of stilts began nesting inside the fenced area, with a third pair nesting on a lagoon outside out of it. The first pair began incubating on 1st May. Based on plumage, the male is assumed to be one of the males that nested at Cliffe in 2015.  A wardening scheme was quickly organised as soon as this first pair began nesting, and the frequency of Fox control was increased.  This pair diligently took turns to defend the nest against a wide range of other bird species. As the hatching date approached, the number of Black-headed Gulls feeding in the area of the stilt nest began to increase. The gulls were feeding on chironomid larvae, made more accessible by falling water levels, so we brought in a pump to raise water levels slightly. This successfully reduced numbers of Black-headed Gulls in the vicinity of the stilt nest, in the run up to hatching. 

The first egg hatched on 25th May, and a second two days later. The adults successfully defended the two chicks against potential avian threats before the effects of bad weather intervened. At three days old, the youngest and smallest chick succumbed during a period of torrential rain and cold winds. The first chick continued to grow well, and became increasingly independent, frequently exercising its wings.  However, on 13th June, about ten days from fledging, came another period of torrential rain, this time overnight. Sadly, there was no sign of the chick the following morning.

The second pair began nesting on 3rd May, but failed five days after the start of incubation, when rather bizarrely a male stilt was seen removing and dumping the eggs from the nest. This pair then relocated across the Thames to South Essex, a reserve where stilt habitat had been factored into the design and stilts have turned up every year after the initial wetting-up.  However, we were concerned about the predation risk at this site and we waited to see where they would settle. After much to-ing and fro-ing around the site, the stilts eventually settled to nest on 31st May, on an island on Pitsea scrape. A poor choice!  This scrape is close to a landfill site, and consequently surrounded by high densities of Foxes and large gulls. The reedbeds surrounding the scrape meant it was impossible to install a temporary predator exclusion fence.  A wardening post to watch over the stilts was again immediately arranged, but the nest failed five days later. Frustation!

The third pair started nesting on 14th May but unfortunately just outside the fenced area.  Both birds would chase off any potential avian predators, including even quite distant Marsh Harriers, commuting back and forth over the site, and posing no obvious threat. Consequently, the eggs were frequently left unguarded. The pair lost their eggs on the night of the 17th May.  Although the cause was uncertain, a Fox was seen close to the predated nest the following day.

This pair subsequently reappeared in north Kent, where they were first seen at Higham Marshes on 7th or 8th June and began nesting there on 11th June. The nest was in an area where Fox control was already being carried out, and where other waders had enjoyed a successful breeding season. We again organised wardening of this pair. The incubation period proceeded uneventfully until, on 4th July, just before the eggs were expected to hatch, all four eggs were predated by Carrion Crows.

As discussed above, the establishment of Black-winged Stilt as a regular breeding species in Britain is by no means assured, despite the projected changes in climate.  In particular, there are very few ideal breeding areas in Britain – areas that have appropriate feeding and nesting habitat, and where predation levels are sufficiently low for stilts to fledge young.  The key measures to increase the breeding success of pioneering pairs should involve:
  • creation and management of ideal feeding and nesting habitat, 
  • management of water levels to provide optimum feeding and nest protection, 
  • minimising nest predation, particularly by Foxes, through the provision of predator-exclusion fencing or by lethal control, and 
  • preventing disturbance by humans, and the theft of eggs, by rapidly implementing wardening schemes.


The RSPB reserve teams in North Kent and South Essex, together with our contracted wardens, worked supremely hard to try to deliver stilt success in 2016. Despite what may seem as a failure with the loss of all five nesting attempts, we have all learnt a huge amount about how to manage for this colonizing species and this will no doubt tip the balance fully towards success in future years.  Plans are already afoot for 2017!


Sunday, 24 July 2016

Another silent spring?


As spring passes to summer, we begin to gather data from nature reserves as to how birds have fared during the breeding season and to assess how conservation work for key species is progressing.  On a reserve that has ground nesting birds, such as waders, gulls or terns, an assessment can often be made very quickly and at an early stage, before the final figures are collated.  A productive site has a characteristic sound and feel: the noise of birds interacting with each other or defending their nests or young.  Lapwing or Redshank quickly rise to scold and chase passing crows.  ‘Kleep kleep-ing’ Avocets tell you that they have something left to fight for.  Usually the initial impression gained from a quick eye-ball of the habitat and a listen to the action tells all.

However, the incoming data will not be good on all sites.  There may be few chicks surviving, with overall productivity being low.  In fact, this is a widespread issue.  A study of the breeding success of key species from the Waddensea region of The Netherlands/Germany showed that 18 out of 29 were in decline, with poor breeding success being the important driver of decline. Three species, Avocet, Arctic Tern and Oystercatcher, had such poor breeding success that they were rarely able to reproduce themselves and local populations were in deep trouble.

When trying to determine the cause of low numbers of birds or poor productivity, two or three key issues are likely to hold the answer.  Poor weather in varying forms can cause problems.  In cold, wet conditions chicks will take longer to fledge or die of starvation or cold.  By contrast, dry conditions may also make food hard to find. Mitigating the effects of poor weather is often closely linked to habitat quality; a crucial factor that is well within the control of the land manager.  Wet grasslands in particular are frequently in poor condition; the sward is either too long or overgrazed, or the site often too dry.  Water control structures, if not maintained, can be leaky and in a poor state of repair.  Such problems are usually obvious to the trained eye.   Finally, and often the key issue when everything else looks to be okay, is the problem of predation.  This is the issue that is most often ignored as it asks some difficult questions for the conservationist.

For me, a trip to a range of French nature reserves a few years back was particularly illuminating.  Arriving one evening prior to an arranged reserve visit the following day, we wandered out to discover and enjoy a gloriously large, noisy, smelly, productive colony of Sandwich Terns and Mediterranean Gulls.  Next day, at the nature reserve, just a few Avocets loafed silently on a deserted island.  Apparently, when acquired, the reserve had thriving Avocet and Stilt colonies, but gradually the local foxes targeted the reserve and the birds moved on.  Reserve managers argued about controlling the foxes and finally agreed.  But just two foxes had been killed that year.  And what of the adjacent productive site?  It was owned and controlled by hunters who routinely undertake control of foxes.  An uncomfortable truth is revealed. Top reserves often seem to have plenty of staff asking for your membership or serving you coffee but not so many happy to understand and tackle the difficult issues of predation or habitat management.

Nature reserves surely have an obligation to deliver good breeding success for the key associated species. Yet now isolated in an impoverished countryside, such key reserves are a magnet for predators.  Too many nature reserves are in poor condition and are clearly acting as a ‘sink’ for the species.  Even worse, habitat is created to attract key species but the issue of predation ignored as it is considered too difficult for the organization to handle.

So how do we tackle the problem of high levels of predation on nature reserves yet distance ourselves from the likes of intensive game bird operations?  Killing anything has to be the option of last resort.  First must come habitat design and management, to reduce the impact of predators.  Many of our older traditional reserves desperately require a design re-think and tweaks to improve the situation may be relatively easy to implement. Secondly, non-lethal methods of dissuading predators need to be considered.  The best options here may be predator-exclusion fences (see below).  Ok, they may look a bit ugly and we need to improve design and positioning but their impact can be substantial.  Finally, if we come to consider lethal control (and this is essentially foxes), it needs to be based on a clear understanding of the ecology of both predator and prey.  It also needs to be undertaken effectively and professionally. We do not want to, nor is it possible to, completely remove predators but the aim should be to create a window of opportunity for key threatened species to reproduce where the options for safe nesting are limited.  An ineffective predator control programme achieves nothing.


Is it another silent spring on your local reserve?  Think it through and start the journey to noisy, smelly success.

Below: predator-exclusion fence set within a ditch at Wallasea (ditch yet to be flooded).

A short video on a predator exclusion fence trial at Titchwell - here