Sunday, 29 October 2017
Leysdown-on-Sea
A blowy day with quite a few others reporting birds like Pomarine Skuas flying past off the headlands of Kent.
Not quite so much in the brief time I was at Leysdown, but quite a few gannets way out to sea. On the shore some nice Herring Gulls.
This I think is a First Winter bird, as it has a dark eye, dark beak pretty much all the way to the tip, and rather pointy white tips to the primaries. However it might be a relatively immature Second Winter bird. It is possible that this bird is still growing some new outer primaries.
Saturday, 28 October 2017
Stigmella aceris in the front garden
A nice mine to find, |Stigmella aceris on the Norway Maple of course. The only Stigmella known to occur on Norsway and Field Maple, there is a different species, Stigmella speciosa on Sycamore. The mine is filled with brown frass by this stage, my specimen does rather follow the vein a little more closely than in most photos on the web!
I could just about convince myself that I had found an egg at the start of the mine. The mine was paler at the far (expanded) end, perhaps where was less (or perhaps no) frass to fill the mine.
The larvae has been gone for many weeks of course - although I couldn't find an exit hole until I looked very carefully at the top surface of the leaf, where the final section of epidermis above the mine did appear to be missing.!
I could just about convince myself that I had found an egg at the start of the mine. The mine was paler at the far (expanded) end, perhaps where was less (or perhaps no) frass to fill the mine.
The larvae has been gone for many weeks of course - although I couldn't find an exit hole until I looked very carefully at the top surface of the leaf, where the final section of epidermis above the mine did appear to be missing.!
Tuesday, 24 October 2017
Oare Marshes thinking of Golden Plover again
The Golden Plover at Oare
Eurasian Golden Plover, Pluvialis apricaria (Gravenhorst, 1820), (Desvignes, 1856). An interesting bird that seems to have declined in its UK breeding population steadily over the last few decades, perhaps due to changes including reductions in keepering on upland moorland, consequent increased carrion crow predation, reduction in moorland burning, possibly increased raptor numbers, or many other factors.
The much larger overwintering Golden Plover population from northern Europe, Russia and Iceland does also seem to have shifted its wintering distribution in the UK away from pastures in the West towards (particularly) arable land on the eastern side of the country since the 1980s. The Kent birds might seem to prefer grassland still but I well remember seeing birds on ploughed fields in Yorkshire on one journey up to see or pick up Simon.
In the early part of the winter in Kent, large numbers can be seen in the Swale and specifically at Oare Marshes. Today there must have been getting on for a thousand birds here at Oare today. It is one of the twenty two sites listed in the non-breeding SPA for this species, each site being a multispecies SPA.
The plumages of the birds are quite variable in detail. This might be a juvenile or first winter bird on the left - underside more speckled further down the flanks and belly, and ONLY IN MY PERSONAL VIEW, a little warmer in the face and the supercilium thereby a bit less contrasty.
I checked for slender (long-legged?) birds with somewhat clearer supercilia and long wings projecting beyond their tails - but no possible American Golden Plovers as far as I could see!
The overall ecology of the bird is very interesting:
Moorland Breeding
In the small and declining UK population the birds nest on moorland, although during the incubation period the adults really like to feed on neighbouring farmland pastures on worms and cranefly larvae, etc, while their partners are incubating the eggs. During the day the males incubate and the females feed, and during the night the females incubate and the males feed. Tipulids are a key feature of both the later adult and the chick diet. Pearce-Higgins and Yalden showed in one of their South Pennines studies (2003) that the particular arable, improved and pasture fields chosen by the off-duty birds for foraging in were those with appropriate pasture sward heights, appropriate moisture levels and good numbers of earthworms and particularly cranefly (Tipulid) larvae. Over time, sheep stocking density has increased in UK uplands, which might be helpful, but is also associated with agricultural intensification such as drainage, which would probably reduce Tipulid numbers.
According to Whittingham et al., working on moorland in Northern England in 2001, chicks on the moorland tend to use mosaics of dwarf shrubs such as willow, crowberry and bilberry, and more open areas of cotton-grass and bare peat. Again Tipulids and Beetle larvae do tend to be very important in the diet. Rotational strip-burning or careful manipulation of grazing management systems could be used to help maintain these mosaics.
Later in 2011 Pearce-Higgins did some very interesting theoretical modelling on the extent of the impact of expected climate change on this population on the southern edge of its range, and suggested that the impacts would greatly reduce Tipulid numbers, and chick survivability, and proposed equivalent increased management activity to help maintain the population, either environmental management to increase Tipulid food sources by 80%, or by reducing nest and egg predation by 35%.
There are birds in Sweden that also breed in the uplands, like the UK breeding population, although the habitat there is referred to as Fennoscandian arctic tundra. Machin et al in 2017 showed that the chicks in this habitat in Sweden feed on a more diverse diet of beetle larvae, cranefly larvae and St Marks Fly (Bibionids) larvae, and breeding success appears to be at least in part linked to Bibionid population fluctuations from year to year. The Bibionids are found more in willow scrub, and the chicks may move into this habitat as they grow in part according to prey availability, but also in part in order to gain increased protection from predator attack.
Over-wintering
As for field size, Leitão and Peris working in Portugal in the late 90s concluded that Golden Plovers avoided fields less than 10 Ha, and preferred fields larger than 20 Ha, and preferred pastures in this particular environment.
Birds migrating from further North and East in Europe and Russia use arable fields in southern Sweden as autumn staging posts, where Lindstrm et al. showed in 2010 that numbers tend to be quite high and they are able to both moult and then also (critically) put on weight after their moult for the next stages of their journey, perhaps to the UK. The adults and young follow more or less the same pattern although the young do follow the adults after a little delay. The length of stay on these fields is about three months, August to November, indicating the importance of this habitat to this population of migrating birds.
Research reported by Piersma et al in 2003 into birds over-wintering in the Netherlands showed some fascinating patterns. The birds put on weight in the autumn (September - November) and their weights peak in late November and December as they (presumably) put on fat to sustain themselves in bad times. They then lose weight again - I imagine as they use up their reserves, perhaps with somewhat poorer food availability. Then in the spring they start to put on weight again, perhaps as food becomes more available again, in preparation for their spring migration and the breeding season to come.
However between the 80s and 90s, the December peak mass decreased as the weight gain stopped earlier, although the rate of increase during the shorter period of weight gain remained the same. As weather conditions remained similar, this was interpreted as a response to increased raptor numbers, such as Peregrines and Goshawks - possibly leading to slimmer fitter birds more adapted to raptor evasion. However this seems to me to be a rather over-optimistic view of the ability of these birds to plan ahead, and to control their weight!
Machin et al reported in 2015 on individual winter movements of birds from a breeding population in Swedish Lapland, showing that some started their winters in NW Europe in areas such as northern France, and shifted south to Spain or Africa in cold spells, giving a degree of flexibility to their over-wintering, while others sometimes didn't move further and stuck out the cold spells where they were. Cold weather movements were noticeably long and fast, real escape movements.
Saturday, 21 October 2017
Hothfield Churchyard lichens
Ros Bennett took us on a fascinating tour of Hothfield Common and then Hothfield churchyard to search for lichens:
Aspicilia
Aspicilia calcarea. This is the lichen described as being like big white splashes of paint on rocks such as hard limestone (as in the British Lichens website) - or in this case walls and tombstones. In overall appearance it is a very white rounded splash. In detail however it is described as being a slightly bluish-white, with one or more unevenly outlined apothecia buried into areolae, with quite a distinct margin to the thallus. In this picture there are some areas of brownish stains, where there are fewer apothecia present.
Caloplaca
This is probably one of the Caloplaca species, and should I think be Caloplaca aurantia, with flattened lobes on the placodioid margins. That feature distinguishes it from another common churchyard lichen, Caloplaca flavescens, which has more convex lobes.
This species has darker apothecia, orange to dark brown as they go over. Between the older thallus and the fresh creamy orange lobes, there may appear an apparently lighter zone.
Here is a more cropped photo of the marginal lobes, emphasising the flattened lobes. The Caloplaca is fighting for space with the white crustose species.
Caloplaca teicholyta is a grey species, that looks rather "dirty" with some patches darker than others.
Here is a close-up of the "coral-like" lobules.
Haematomma
This should be Haematomma ochroleucum in both its forms, the whitish (var. porphyrium, lacking usnic acid) and the yellow-grey, var. ochroleucum, with usnic acid). The surface is quite powdery, leprose or farinose.
Aspicilia
Aspicilia calcarea. This is the lichen described as being like big white splashes of paint on rocks such as hard limestone (as in the British Lichens website) - or in this case walls and tombstones. In overall appearance it is a very white rounded splash. In detail however it is described as being a slightly bluish-white, with one or more unevenly outlined apothecia buried into areolae, with quite a distinct margin to the thallus. In this picture there are some areas of brownish stains, where there are fewer apothecia present.
The picture below of this thallus from Hothfield is much less cropped:
The Aspicilia genus is generally characterised by its largely sunken "apothecia" although they do project normally from time to time. The genus also often has a slightly cracked to distinctly areolate appearance of a generally light coloured thallus on rocks, usually (but not invariably) calcareous. The growth form is often variable, sometimes dramatically so.
There is a quite similar species of Aspicilia found fairly regularly on concrete in towns, Aspicilia contorta subsp. hoffmanniana.
This is probably one of the Caloplaca species, and should I think be Caloplaca aurantia, with flattened lobes on the placodioid margins. That feature distinguishes it from another common churchyard lichen, Caloplaca flavescens, which has more convex lobes.
This species has darker apothecia, orange to dark brown as they go over. Between the older thallus and the fresh creamy orange lobes, there may appear an apparently lighter zone.
Here is a more cropped photo of the marginal lobes, emphasising the flattened lobes. The Caloplaca is fighting for space with the white crustose species.
Caloplaca teicholyta is a grey species, that looks rather "dirty" with some patches darker than others.
Here is a close-up of the "coral-like" lobules.
Haematomma
This should be Haematomma ochroleucum in both its forms, the whitish (var. porphyrium, lacking usnic acid) and the yellow-grey, var. ochroleucum, with usnic acid). The surface is quite powdery, leprose or farinose.
Lady Amherst's Drive
A quick visit to Lady Amherst's Drive in Goathurst Common this afternoon, parking in the small car park by the cross roads.
In a very brief moment or two I had a look at a few of the young Beech trees in among the sweet Chestnuts, and found Stigmella tityrella and Stigmella hemargyrella. There were also a couple of Phyllonorycter maestingella and one really old but possible Phyllonorycter messaniella.
I thought I might have found a couple of Parornix fagivora, but in the end I couldn't be sure - possibly just a couple of S. hemargyrella mines on the edge of the leaf.
A few "bump" galls as well.
The site is definitely worth another look though!
In a very brief moment or two I had a look at a few of the young Beech trees in among the sweet Chestnuts, and found Stigmella tityrella and Stigmella hemargyrella. There were also a couple of Phyllonorycter maestingella and one really old but possible Phyllonorycter messaniella.
I thought I might have found a couple of Parornix fagivora, but in the end I couldn't be sure - possibly just a couple of S. hemargyrella mines on the edge of the leaf.
A few "bump" galls as well.
The site is definitely worth another look though!
Wednesday, 18 October 2017
High Tide at Oare
The light wasn't very good, but the company was very pleasant!
This particular Ruff, Philomachus now within Calidris pugnax, was very neatly coloured, and with somewhat yellowish-green legs:
This bird shows a very scaly back, one of the characteristic features of the species. It is quite a warm peachy colour (still?). I wonder if it has been breeding up on the High Siberian Arctic.
This particular Ruff, Philomachus now within Calidris pugnax, was very neatly coloured, and with somewhat yellowish-green legs:
This bird shows a very scaly back, one of the characteristic features of the species. It is quite a warm peachy colour (still?). I wonder if it has been breeding up on the High Siberian Arctic.
Sunday, 15 October 2017
A bit misty from the Trosley viewpoint.
A bit difficult to see far over the Weald from the viewpoint from the footpath (Harrison Drive). The mist and other factors.
Monty has been so good to me over the last ten years, and he has still got a few last lessons to teach me - it is up to me to learn them well.
I have been very lucky, but its not really the day for leaf-miners today.
I did spot a remarkable witch's broom on this Beech by the entrance road.
Monty has been so good to me over the last ten years, and he has still got a few last lessons to teach me - it is up to me to learn them well.
I have been very lucky, but its not really the day for leaf-miners today.
I did spot a remarkable witch's broom on this Beech by the entrance road.
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