Thursday, 1 December 2022

RRG November 2022

Only two sessions took place this month - both at Woolley Firs. EP, while recovering from a broken leg, returned to the hospital for a heart op. The op went well and EP is, once again, on the recovery path. We wish her well.

** Welcome SHA (and father). SHA, fourteen and a keen birder, has joined us for a couple of taster sessions and hopes to join the group for 2023 to train with CHR **

Woolley Firs – WF (CHR)

We ran two sessions in November (12th & 19th), both at the woodland feeders

Opening the site produced 60 captures where we taped Mistle Thrush, Firecrest, 9 Goldcrest, and 2 Coal Tits. Numbers were very much down on last year when 150 birds were recorded when opening the site. Woolley set a new group longevity record for Great Tit (9+ years) which is only a year behind the national record, set at a site I trained at in Teesside - small world!

Z304562 Great Tit Adult male Ringed in 15/11/2014

& next seen 12/11/2022


Note the blue edging to the bird’s primary coverts

The following week we ran a public ringing demonstration for BBOWT. Turn out was good and though the birds weren’t as exciting or as numerous (at 35) as the opening session we had plenty to talk about. Thank you to EW, KDT, MEM, PMW, RJD and SHA (and his father) for their support.


Mistle Thrush LH96997 Aged: 3

Firecrest LDT385 3M







Saturday, 1 October 2022

RRG October 2022

A reccie of Chobham Common by CHR/KDT found a very quiet site (a few Stonechats were the only highlight) so we decided to wait with the hope that Redpolls are on their way. EP was recovering from a broken leg, had returned to Bedfont, when… she found out she needed a heart-value operation. That curtailed ringing activities for the rest of October, but the op was successful and EP, is once again, on the mend.

*** Congratulations to EW for her A permit upgrade. EW put the effort in this year, processing around 1,000 birds, by helping out neigbour Hughenden RG to run two CESs, still getting our Wraysbury CES done and ringing with TA at his finch site ***


** Welcome to BJD - a trainee from Sandwich Bay BO who will be training with CHR **


Ageing Cetti’s Warbler

There is a reference in Demongin suggesting that some young Cetti’s Warblers can be aged after their post-juv moult. Some individuals retain one or more undertail coverts: these are longer than the adult-style feathers and their tips are slightly less bright. To my eye, they can be a little more worn too.

A Jubilee River, Taplow Cetti’s Warbler, 9th October 2022 (CHR)


Bedfont Lakes (EP)

Managed one session at the main site with AAB and my friend Noel. Was very busy with tits and chiffs. A commotion between a Sparrowhawk and parakeets ended up with 3 adult male rinpa being caught. Quite a rarity these days at Bedfont just because of where we place our nets.


Wraysbury – WGP (CHR)

We ran two sessions in October (2nd & 8th) but then poor weather got the better of us. Blackcaps trickled through the site (8 & 5) as Redwing arrived (1 & 6) - will the crossover of these species broaden as our summers get milder?


Chiffchaffs managed a total of 17 but it was the pipit triangle that produced our most populous species (22 &10 Meadow Pipits).


One of those 32 Meadow Pipits, ARX2039, was curious. The inner OGCs were more deeply defined than the outer OGCs, though without the short ‘tooth’ of an adult feather.


ARX2039 Meadow Pipit with two variations of old greater covert

Recoveries

Ringed by RRG: boxed in green.


LDT347 Chiffchaff Phylloscopus collybita   Scheme:GBT

Duration: 18d Distance: 10 km Direction: 305° (NW)

Ringer: Runnymede Ringing Group, 9073; Ringing date: 15-Sep-2022 11:50:00

Age: 3J Wraysbury Gravel Pits, Windsor and Maidenhead, UK County code: GBWAM, Grid ref: TQ0173 Coords: 51.450000, -0.533000; Wing: 59.0mm; Weight 8.0g

Finder: Hughenden Rg, 9106; Finding date: 03-Oct-2022 (0) 11:00:00

Age: 3 Jubilee River, Slough, UK

County code: GBSLO, Grid ref: SU9479 Coords: 51.500000, -0.633000

Wing: 60.0 mm.; Weight: 7.2 g., Time: 11:00hrs

Subsequent Capture by Ringer, Intentionally Taken


AHE4084 Blackcap Sylvia atricapilla   Scheme:GBT

Duration: 2yr 26d Distance: 41 km Direction: 344° (NNW)

Ringer: Runnymede Ringing Group, 9073; Ringing date: 06-Sep-2020 12:30:00

Age: 3, Sex: M Sex meth: P Wraysbury Gravel Pits, Windsor and Maidenhead, UK County code: GBWAM, Grid ref: TQ0173 Coords: 51.450000, -0.533000; Wing: 75.0mm

Finder: Tring Ringing Group, 9171; Finding date: 02-Oct-2022 (0) 07:00:00

Age: 4 Sex meth: P, Sex: M Wilstone Reservoir, near Tring, Hertfordshire, UK (WIL)

County code: GBHES, Grid ref: SP9012 Coords: 51.783000, -0.683000

Wing: 78.0 mm.; Weight: 16.5 g., Time: 07:00hrs

Subsequent Capture by Ringer, Intentionally Taken


AFV8250 Cetti's Warbler Cettia cetti   Scheme:GBT

Duration: 11m 29d Distance: 88 km Direction: 39° (NE)

Ringer: Titchfield Haven Ringing Group, 9216; Ringing date: 09-Oct-2021 07:00:00

Age: 3, Sex: F Titchfield Haven National Nature Reserve, Hampshire, UK (TFH) County code: GBHAM, Grid ref: SU5302 Coords: 50.800000, -1.233000; Wing: 57.0mm; Weight 10.7g

Finder: Runnymede Ringing Group, 9073; Finding date: 08-Oct-2022 08:50:00

Age: 2 Sex meth: S, Sex: F Bedfont Lakes, East Bedfont, Greater London, UK (BFT)

County code: GBGLO, Grid ref: TQ0772 Coords: 51.433000, -0.450000

Wing: 56.0 mm.; Weight: 11.5 g., Time: 08:50hrs

Subsequent Capture by Ringer, Intentionally Taken


EY67908 Black-headed Gull Chroicocephalus ridibundus   Scheme:GBT

Duration: 9yr 3m 15d Distance: 355 km Direction: 247° (WSW)

Ringer: Runnymede Ringing Group, 9073; Ringing date: 07-Jul-2013 11:00:00

Age: 1 P.ringed: 1, P.alive: 0 Bedfont Lakes, East Bedfont, Greater London, UK (BFT) County code: GBGLO, Grid ref: TQ0772 Coords: 51.433000, -0.450000

Finder: West Cornwall Ringing Group, 9210; Finding date: 22-Oct-2022 (0) 17:00:00

Age: 0 Swanpool, Falmouth, Cornwall, UK (FAL)

County code: GBCOR, Grid ref: SW8031 Coords: 50.133000, -5.067000

Sight record by a ringer, Metal Ring Read In Field


Ringing this September 2022

No ringing at group sites took place in the last half of the month so totals were historically low. We had a Devon-ringed Blackcap at Wraysbury, a Dunnock ringed in Iver and died in Iver and a young Chiff from Wraybury in July, turning up on Jubilee River this month - where will it choose to breed next year?

We had run three sessions by mid-month, when I took a week off up north. On return the 25/26 looked too windy for the site and no further visits were made.

The first two sessions each returned 150+ birds and the third session’s 100+ reflected a reduction in team/nets (CHR/EW). Blackcap (193), Chiffchaff (103) flavoured catches throughout but it was good to get Meadow Pipits from 10th and 15th (45) and Willow Warbler (22) were the fourth commonest species.

TA took a smart 5M Sparrowhawk out at the start of a round on 10th. This is the only hawk ringed this year by the group and follows a trend of one bird per annum. This wasn’t always the case and we’ve had more years of 5+ hawks this century than not!


5M Sparrowhawk - bird survey, Wraysbury September 2022
5M Sparrowhawk - bird survey, Wraysbury September 2022


Sparrowhawk totals C21st

Year

Total


Year

Total

2022

1


2010

12

2021

1


2009

10

2020

1


2008

6

2019

3


2007

6

2018

6


2006

8

2017

2


2005

7

2016

4


2004

8

2015

4


2003

11

2014

13


2002

6

2013

7


2001

9

2012

3


2000

4

2011

7




Monday, 5 September 2022

Another CES year completed - August 2022

It’s always satisfying when you get the final CES “in the bag”. After last year’s windier trends, this year was dominated by drought. Check out the Wraysbury write-up to see how the site performed.

The BTO has published new guidance on bird welfare with respect to disease transmissionThis new guidance is intended to help reduce the spread of avian influenza.

Bedfont Lakes (EP)

Treecreeper in-hand ahead of release
After a bit of a kick up the backside by KRP the Bedfont crew got out for the first time since
went splat and broke my leg back in June. All the team turned out and my friend came along to help me carry stuff. All 9 CES nets were put up, although we didn't do CES this year, so it was good to cover the area. 

The catch was slow to start with but picked up throughout the morning: 31 new birds and 4 retraps. As expected, juvenile Reed Warblers were dominant but a juvenile Sedge Warbler was caught, we only seem to get them on migration these days, none have knowingly bred at Bedfont for a few years. A new juvenile Cetti’s Warbler was caught and an adult retrapped. The biggest surprise was a juvenile Treecreeper (opposite).

Migrant Hawkers were the main dragonflies flying; one was caught in a net and a few Willow Emerald damselflies were also found - a species on the rise in England over the past few years.

Wraysbury SSSI (CHR)

We completed the CES with sessions 10, 11 and 12 in August (6th, 18th & 28th  respectively). Starting a smaller CES in 2021 paid off as four sessions were run by a two-person team.

CES 2022 started below 2021 figures, bettered CES 5 and then got worse at mid-season sessions (CES6-10) as the site dried out (as much of South England did). A downpour on the day before CES 11 really demonstrated what the site needed and numbers tripled from CES 10. Autumn migration had begun for CES 12 where numbers doubled (158 birds were processed when extra nets are included).

If we look at 3J J birds - birds most-likely fledged on-site - we can see that Blackcap (22 versus 24 in 2021) held their own, despite the drought and Chiffchaffs really prospered (32 versus 17 in 2021).

For all ages the catches for 2021/2022 were:

Garden Warbler 29/16
Lesser Whitethroat 7/5
Reed Warbler 6/8
Sedge Warbler 4/0
Whitethroat 48/20
Willow Warbler 4/11*

* migration is earlier in 2022 and August recorded 13 Willow Warblers passing through.

The 18th saw a species we last recorded at Wraysbury on July 2014 and not regularly since 2010: an adult Grasshopper Warbler (below), with heavily worn feathers, heading through the site.




An adult Garden Warbler was also present. This is a species that undertakes a long winter moult and is renowned for its good feather condition. Unusually, this individual was relatively worn.

Note the missing and wear on the upper-tail coverts, tail thinness and tip wear, and worn primaries and tertials. Tertials are heavily worn and I’ve taken to looking at tertials as an aging guide on many more species in recent years.

missing or worn upper-tail coverts

worn (for an adult Garden Warbler) tail feathers

worn (for an adult Garden Warbler) primaries

DemOn Q/A: How can I find same-day retraps?

This is a useful task to perform after entering any sizeable number of records which include
some retraps:
  1. Perform a search for the day and site of interest.
  2. From the results click Crosstab results.
  3. Enter Ring No and Record Type (see below) and you’ll see your birds in a table
  4. Any row that totals more than 1 denotes a same-day retrap
  5. Go back to the search where you can delete the duplicate