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Updates from our Cuckoos

Read the latest updates from our Cuckoos on their epic migration between the UK and tropical Africa, or track their movements in real-time on our Cuckoo migration map.

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Four Cuckoos unchanged

11 Jan 2013

Chance, Lloyd, David and Chris all remain in their previous positions according to locations received in the last two days.  

2013 transmissions

08 Jan 2013

So far in 2013, we have heard from four of the five remaining Cuckoos. We received tag transmissions from Chris and Chance today and from Lloyd and David yesterday showing there had been no substantial movements to report.

However, we haven’t heard from BB since the 30 December - at this stage this is nothing to worry about, though, as at this time last year we regularly went longer than this without hearing from the Cuckoos. A combination of poor charging conditions and a gradual decline in battery charge mean that they are transmitting less often, whilst as they are within the forest interference from trees reduces the chances of transmissions being picked up by satellites. Once they move on, or the weather at their current locations improves, we should start to receive positions more regularly again. 

Waiting to hear from Chance

02 Jan 2013

We received a transmission from Chance's tag on the afternoon of the 29 December confirming he was still in the same location. We expect further transmissions soon. 

Transmissions continue from Gabon

27 Dec 2012

Transmissions received from Chance's tag in the early hours of this morning show that he is still in Gabon. He is roughly 25km (16 miles) west from the border with Congo.  BB, the only other remaining Scottish-tagged Cuckoo, is the closest to his position, around 100 km (60 miles) to the southeast.

Christmas Cuckoo update

20 Dec 2012
It looks like the festive period will be spent in Gabon for Chance, Congo for Chris and BB and the Democratic Republic of Congo for David and Lloyd. All five Cuckoos' tags have sent transmissions in the last couple of days. Chris is the only one to have moved. The five Cuckoos are now all at a similar latitude however, 1270km (791 miles) separates our most westerly Cuckoo, Chance, from our most easterly Cuckoo, Lloyd. 
 
If you can't do without your Cuckoo fix over the Christmas and New Year period, then you can listen to Phil Atkinson on Radio 4's Saving Species at 11.00 am on New Year's Day talking about this year's tagged Cuckoos.
 

Cuckoo wintering locations

06 Dec 2012

Now that BB has moved south, the five Cuckoos that we are still tracking all appear to be at, or close to, their final wintering locations. Although we can’t draw firm conclusions from such small numbers, the Scottish-tagged Cuckoos are wintering in the same area as the Cuckoos tagged in England (bar Chris) did last winter. The two Welsh Cuckoos are further to the east. This is really interesting but whether it reflects general differences in the wintering areas used by the different breeding populations will need to be confirmed by the results of further tracking work in the coming years.

Scottish Cuckoos sitting pretty

23 Nov 2012
BB’s tag transmitted this morning and shows that he is still in Chad. If you zoom in to his position on the map you can see he has not moved from his position on 18 September.  He is 174 km (108 miles) northwest of Sarh, the third largest city in Chad and the capital of Moyen-Chari region.
 
We received signals from Chance’s tag yesterday and he remains in Gabon, although he is about 32km (20 miles) SW of his position on 12 November. Roy has still not reappeared, with the last date we received any information from his tag being the 4 October. We had hoped that we may have received some news by now.

Chance in Gabon

12 Nov 2012

Chance was still in Cameroon on 7 November, having been there since 16 October. He has, however, moved rapidly south since then and by the evening of Friday 9 November, he was on the western edge of the Teke Plateau in eastern Gabon. This is a movement of 985km (611 miles) just east of due South within two days. 

Chance is now one of the more southerly of the Cuckoos we are still tracking and becomes the first we have recorded in Gabon. He is, however, biogeographically the first Cuckoo from this year to enter the Teke Plateau, the area of gallery forest and savannah situated mostly in Congo where four of the five Cuckoos tagged in England last year spent the mid-winter period. We expect that BB and Lloyd will follow Chance south soon, as the northern savannahs they are currently occupying in Chad and CAR continue to dry out and areas further south receive more rain. 
 

Cuckoo update

09 Nov 2012

There are currently just five tagged Cuckoos from which we are still receiving regular transmissions. While BB, LLoyd and David have all transmitted in the last couple of days, none of them have moved from their previous positions. Chris's tag transmitted on 7 November and showed he had made a small movement south of about 34km (21 miles), taking him closer to the Ubangi river. Chance also seems to have made a small movement recently and is now south-west of the Faro Reserve and only 54km (34 miles) from the border with Nigeria. 

Receiving regular transmission from BB and Chance

01 Nov 2012

BB is still in Chad, with a transmission received late last night, while Chance’s tag transmitted the day before, on the evening of 30 October, from Cameroon. About 572km (355 miles) separate Chance and BB from each other.  

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