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Press Releases - March/April 2005
Item 2
1st March 2005
What a difference a year makes!
During the first week of March last
year, the first of the summer migrants were arriving on our shores
during a period of high pressure and southerly winds. With the forecast
for the week ahead of further cold weather and wintery showers,
the prospect for birdwatchers seeing their first summer visitors
is not good! Nevertheless, Dawn Balmer is urging us all to be on
the lookout for new arrivals from Africa.
Last spring was quite exceptional, with an influx of Swallows in
late February - about two weeks earlier than usual! These were quickly
followed by Sand Martin on 1 March (Cornwall), Wheatear on 4 March
(Kent), Sandwich Tern on 6 March (Kent), House Martin on 7 March
(Cornwall, Devon) and Little Ringed Plover on 8 March (Slough and
Wokingham).
Do I stay or do I go?
Each winter a small number of summer visitors decide not to migrate
to warmer climes but to spend the winter here. Our summer visitors
are insectivorous, so they need a reliable source of insects during
the breeding season. Staying in Britain and Ireland over the winter
is tough; insects are hard to find and that’s why our migrants
head south to southern Europe and Africa where there is a predictable
surge of insects. The winter months are important times; many species
renew their feathers through the process of moult so they have a
fresh set of feathers to fly north again come the spring.
This winter a small number of Swallows have been reported with
records widespread from Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Pembrokeshire,
Norfolk, Cheshire and Argyll. There have also been a few Sandwich
Tern (Devon, Hampshire, Kent), Whimbrel (Cornwall, Dorset), Garganey
(Somerset, Gloucestershire) and Common Sandpipers wintering here.
It is well known that some Chiffchaffs and Blackcaps are recorded
during the winter (though mostly originating from other parts of
Europe) but this winter Willow Warbler and Lesser Whitethroat have
also been seen. (Where should these birds be? See Note 7)
Log your first sightings this spring
The organisers of BirdTrack are asking birdwatchers to submit their
records of summer migrants to their website this spring so that
the timing of spring arrival can be recorded and compared with previous
years. BirdTrack is interested not just in first sightings of classic
signs of spring like the Swallow and Wheatear but would like to
keep track of all arrivals through the spring so the flow through
the country can be mapped.
Dawn Balmer, the BirdTrack organiser who works at BTO said
“Most birdwatchers look forward to the start of March
and hope to see their first summer migrants during the first two
weeks of the month. With the current weather systems it is unlikely
that we will get many migrants for a few weeks, unless there is
a big change in the weather.
Instead, birdwatchers will be enjoying the influx of Waxwings
and watching flocks of Redwing, Fieldfare and Brambling as they
feed up ready for their departure back to their breeding grounds
in Scandinavia later in the month. Birdwatchers are encouraged to
enter their birdwatching records to BirdTrack and to contribute
to local, regional and national bird recording.”
Organised by the BTO on behalf of BTO,
Birdwatch Ireland and RSPB
Notes for Editors
1. BirdTrack is an online bird recording scheme www.birdtrack.net
organised by BTO on behalf of BTO, RSPB and BirdWatch Ireland.
2. To register for BirdTrack visit the BirdTrack website www.birdtrack.net
and click on the 'Register for BirdTrack' link. Registering is free.
3. Birdwatchers are encouraged to enter their birdwatching lists
online to support species and site conservation at local, national
and international scales.
4. We need to gather a large number of lists at all times of the
year. Complete lists (all species seen and heard) are preferred
but incomplete lists and casual records will also help build our
understanding of populations.
5. Results produced by BirdTrack will help us to map the migration
and movements of birds and monitor of scarce birds in Britain and
Ireland. Maps are available from for use in publications.
6. BirdTrack follows on from the successful Migration Watch project
that looked at spring migration in 2002-2004. BirdTrack will run
all-year and gather information on spring and autumn migration.
We know very little about the timing of arrival and departure of
winter visitors and this is just one area where BirdTrack will provide
useful information.
7. Most of our summer visitors winter in Africa, ranging from the
tip of South Africa for Swallow to West Africa for the likes of
Sedge Warbler and Whitethroat. Information from bird ringing suggests
that Willow Warbler winters in the Gulf of Guinea; around the Ivory
Coast and Ghana. In contrast, Lesser Whitethroat is the only warbler
to winter in East Africa with records from Egypt, Sudan, Chad and
Ethiopia.
Images are available from
For further information please contact:
Dawn Balmer or Graham Appleton
BTO, The Nunnery, Thetford, Norfolk, IP24 2PU.
Tel: 01842 750050
E-mail:
or
Grahame Madge
Media Officer, Conservation PR
RSPB, The Lodge, Sandy, Beds SG19 2DL
Telephone: +44 (0) 1767 681577 Mobile and out of hours contact:
07702 196902
Pager: 07654 344078
E-mail:
For information about BirdTrack in the Republic of Ireland
contact:
Olivia Crowe
BirdWatch Ireland, Rockingham House, Newcastle, Co. Wicklow, Ireland
Tel: 353 - 1 - 2819878
Email:
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