Tuesday 24 May 2016

Access Trail


A nice walk down the section of the Access Trail from the Victoria Road lay-by, focusing mainly on insects. I saw quite a few Azure Damselflies along the sunnier parts of the trail.

This is a male Azure Damselfly, Coenagrion puella.


This next male with a dip in its abdomen, is munching away on an aphid. Nice view of the beerglass on S2.


And here is a closer-up view, interesting to see how the pronotum is angled upwards.


This next picture is a female, a common dark variation on the blue homochromic form. The colours on the top of the head and thorax seem fairly pale - recently hatched perhaps?

Monday 9 May 2016

Dungeness and Rye

I don't know where the time went today. I went to RSPB Dungeness and the Patch, where I saw Black Terns in with the Common Terns and the Gulls (Herring, Black-headed, Mediterranean) and 11 Common Scoter, but it was already gone 2 pm by the time I got to Rye Harbour.

Little Tern, Common Tern, Oystercatcher, Whimbrel, Redshank, Ringed Plover (Tundra race?), Sanderling,  Dunlin, Knot, Curlew Sandpiper,

Sunday 8 May 2016

Reed Bunting and Hobby at Oare Marshes


A quiet lunchtime at Oare Marshes. I actually arrived at 11.30 and ate my chicken salad sandwiches early!

I got a very cropped shot of a Reed Bunting with a metal ring on its leg.


I hadn't really noticed the amount of grey on the rump and scapulars(?), picked up also on the underparts, and contrasting with the white pattern around the neck. The undertail coverts and belly are also whiter than the rest of the undersides. In some pictures on the internet the grey on the rump is complete (a male characteristic), but here it is streaked with brown - it might possibly go more completely grey later in the breeding season with further plumage wear? I think the same might be said of the black head, it also still looks a little streaked with brown, not truly jet-black yet.


This picture suggests that the upper bill may be quite dark, and the lower bill a little lighter - horn-coloured as in BWP. Also a bit of a suggestion of the convex culmen, supposedly seen in the species.


Interesting how the wings are dropped, and the rump exposed - also seen in some other photos on the web! I wonder if this is a sort of display? BWP suggests the song display involves rump and head "fluffing", but this doesn't seem exactly comparable.

The annual survival rate is about 45%. The UK population dropped considerably around 1975 - 83 from an original figure of around 600,000 pairs, allegedly because of harsh winters and has now apparently stabilised at around 400,000. Habitat is normally the tall vegetation generally associated with wetter land. May also be found, on chalk scrub, and perhaps increasingly, in drier farmland, and young conifer plantations. Now, about half the UK population is found in "farmland", as opposed to "wetland" although boundaries are likely to be permeable and indistinct.

Chiefly sedentary in the UK, although some move a little, and there is a bit of movement towards the southwest. The UK gets a few winter visitors, mainly from NW Europe and Scandinavia. In contrast, West Scandinavian birds are almost entirely migratory, to here or countries in Western Europe such as France and Spain, and East Scandinavian birds are entirely migratory, to countries in Southern Europe such as Italy. Autumn movement chiefly mid-September to mid-November, spring mid-February to April.

Mainly feeds on seeds and other plant material, but primarily invertebrates in breeding season. May feed on ground or low or high in vegetation, for example taking grass seed. Can take insects from the air, for example when seen from perch. Will visit garden feeders and farms in winter.

May flock in winter, perhaps with other buntings and finches. Can roost communally to reduce weight loss, for example in warmer, moister reedbeds. Largest flocks on migration. In spring the males may start to visit their prospective breeding territories in the mornings, returning to the flocks after 9 am. Age of first breeding is one year. Generally monogamous, but extra-pair paternity rife. Polygyny may be increasingly common in older male birds. There is no evidence as yet as to any clear genetic benefit from increased immuno-competence (contrary to previous experimentation in Bluethroats) or increased heterozygosity.

Only the females build the nest and incubate, but both sexes feed the nestlings and young. Territory size is very variable. Territories are used for pair formation, maintenance of pair-bond and nesting. The birds collect food from a wider area, seemingly with little conflict with neighbours. Birds may also continue to roost communally until the eggs are laid, when they start to roost on their territories.

Females visit a number of territories, with males responding by stopping singing and approaching her, perhaps with bits of grass, while she avoids them giving "see" calls. She gradually focuses on one territory (and thus one male) in particular. At pair-formation stage, males start to use "fluffed run" in more open spaces as a courtship display, and increasingly attempts to copulate. He accompanies her closely, making increasing approaches, including physical, rejected at first. Once she is esconced however, he spends a lot of time "teaching" her the territory by following her around its boundaries, in effect gradually confining her to it. When female ready to mate, she begins to attack other trespassing females. Then mating starts, continuing until egg-laying. Female adopts soliciting posture, then male flies directly over to female, and either hovers or lands on her back. Female chooses nest site, accompanied by male, and she then builds the nest itself.

Sings much of the summer, but regarded as not very musical. "Tweek, tweek, tweek, tititick" seems to be a common pattern. Repertoire more complex when carefully analysed, complexities tending to be shared between neighbours, and there may be something of a factor of local dialects. Nestlings and young birds have a range of begging calls.

As I parked up, Cetti's Warblers singing welcomed me to the car park. I walked along towards the East Flood, and watched the 210+ Black-tailed Godwits resting up on the bank on the North side of the East Flood, seen from my favourite spot.  With them were 2 Oystercatchers (2 more on the grassy marsh a bit further to the north). Eventually I noticed three Knot, which took me quite a while to recognise - I tried to think of various migrant sandpipers first, as seen on the other side of The Swale the day before. There were two or more Lapwings around, probably more at the peak of high tide.

I think there were about 8 Avocets, several with brownish tinges to their wings.

Just as i walked back to the car park I noticed first one, and then two, birds in a small tree on the West Flood. They seemed to be perhaps a little large to be starlings, but that was still my best bet. Once I focused the telescope however, I realised that they were a small falcon and a Woodpigeon. Surprised to find both birds in the same tree, I saw a peregrine-like dark hood and moustache, a dark back and a heavily streaked underside, with a rich red-brown tinge around the legs. My first Hobby for several years. It took off, and I followed it with the telescope, eventually noting, both through the telescope and by eye, its rapidly flashing scythe-shaped wings, as it flew towards me, over the Flood, and then back towards the seawall to the west.

Saturday 7 May 2016

Stonechat at Samphire Hoe

There were several Stonechats on the Hoe, and although I counted 6, it is possible that I double counted some of the five males. So, 3+ males I would think, and 1 female. None of the males seemed particularly continental.



Wednesday 4 May 2016

Wonderful Whimbrel at Oare

I think all the birds on the salt marsh seaward of the West Flood at Oare Marshes seemed to me to be Whimbrel, and certainly the pictures I took seemed to confirm this.

Here is a clear indication of the central white line along the middle of the crown.


This severe crop of the single bird on the sheep pasture does show a reasonable head stripe and typical Whimbrel beak shape. The overall bird shape is fairly in proportion.


I heard Cuckoos and a Water Rail squealing. Particularly interesting were the "Blehh" mating calls of Common Pochard flying in a group of four over the West Flood. Also very pleasant were the bubbling calls of Little Grebes, and the songs of Reed Bunting, together with multiple Reed Warblers and Sedge Warblers. I was very pleased to get a good view of a Reed Warbler in the sallow seaward of the car park.

Tuesday 3 May 2016

Grizzled Skipper at White Hill

While I was photographing a Peacock Butterfly, Aglais io, in the middle of his territory, it flew off and was almost immediately replaced by a rather nice Grizzled Skipper, Pyrgus malvae, which somewhat amazingly I recognised!

Here are a few photos of it nectaring on Wild Strawberry, Fragaria vesca, a little cropped, but a nice fresh specimen.




This species is decreasing, and this is the first individual I have seen for certain. Its abdomen looks like that of a male.

The males bask, chasing rivals in fierce dogfights, and are more commonly seen than the females. However, the females can sometimes also be spotted fluttering about, investigating possible egg-laying sites.

The small bun-shaped eggs are laid on Rosaceous plants such as Wild Strawberry, Agrimony or Creeping Cinquefoil among others. They take 10 days to hatch and the first stages feed around the edges of a silken shelter, then fold leaf edges over to make tents of increasing size. Warm wet weather in July tends to correlate with better emergence the following year.  The pretty chrysalis is found at ground level in silk webbings, most overwintering over 9 months, in warm springs a very few forming a second generation in August.

Preferred habitat is a mosaic of short vegetation, bare ground and taller plants, on land such as chalk, rough ground, railway cuttings and unshaded woodland glades and rides. Now rare north of the Cotswolds and Chilterns. 

Sunday 1 May 2016

Dingy Downs

A nice Dingy Skipper, Erynnis tages, on Fackenden Down - I wish I'd found my own, but very gratefully received anyway! This is a butterfly in trouble nationally, and I've only seen a very few, and only singles at any one time. It might be worth repeated visits to try to hit the peak.

Its not at all bad patterning when you get up close. I like the abdominal edging and the antennal stripes. This one might be a male (left hand forewing):


Its quite a hairy butterfly on the underside - I wonder if that helps it to collect warmth from the ground?


And this is a slightly better view of the underside of the wing:


This species lives in fairly small colonies, say of 50 adults at peak flight time, and is relatively sedentary, a few individuals flying perhaps a few km from the original colony. Meta-populations may not remain very effectively linked as habitats become increasingly fragmented and distant. The species is a priority species on the UK Biodiversity Action Plan.

Common Bird’s-foot-trefoil Lotus corniculatus is the usual foodplant in all habitats. Horseshoe Vetch Hippocrepis comosa is also used on calcareous soils, and Greater Bird’s-foot-trefoil L. pedunculatus
is used on heavier soils.

Eggs are laid singly on young leaves of the foodplants and females choose the longest shoots of large plants growing in sheltered situations. The larvae hide in tents formed by spinning the leaves of the foodplant together and feed through the summer months. When fully grown, each larva spins more leaves together to form a hibernaculum in which to spend the winter. Pupation occurs the following spring in the hibernaculum, without further feeding.


It was great to see the cowslips, Primula veris, out


The dark blue of the Germander Speedwell, Veronica chamaedrys