Wednesday, 18 January 2012

Make Your Move on to the Wildlife Property Ladder



Despite the festivities of Christmas and the New Year remaining fresh in most of our minds, the ever lengthening days and lighter evenings provide a cue for many bird species to start prospecting nesting sites for the forthcoming spring. In the case of Tree Sparrows and House Sparrows, some species may have done so already, using a nestbox or nest site as somewhere to roost through the winter. Just this morning I was even welcomed on to the Nature Reserve by the spring-like sounds of an enthusiastic male chaffinch in full song.

With the start of the bird breeding season already underway it could be a cue for you, if you haven’t done so already, to consider placing a nestbox in your garden to provide a habitat for, and encourage breeding birds.

A Need for Nestboxes

People often ask the question: "Do nestboxes in gardens really serve any useful purpose other than giving pleasure to us humans?" The answer to that question is quite simply - yes they do! Gardens are an extremely important wildlife habitat. The total area of all gardens in Britain well exceeds that of all nature reserves. Over the past 50 years, the landscape around us has changed dramatically. Towns and cities have become larger and the countryside has become more intensively managed. This has led to the loss of valuable wildlife habitat to the extent that natural nesting sites are now in decline. Nestboxes placed in gardens can therefore make a real difference to the success or failure of a breeding species in a given area.

Even on a Nature Reserve as wild and diverse as Attenborough, nestbox schemes have provided a lifeline to local bird populations such as the Tree Sparrow, which may otherwise have fallen victim to habitat loss in the surrounding farmland. In January 2009, 12 nestboxes were erected on the Willow Peninsula (the Nature Centre’s wildlife garden). Many of these boxes attracted nesting birds within the first year, and subsequently went on to raise multiple broods. So successful has this scheme become that over 100 Tree Sparrow chicks have been raised since it began (based on ringing data).

More recently, in 2011, we launched our Willow Tit nestbox scheme. This species has suffered an alarming decline of 91% in the UK since the 1970’s, through the destruction of its damp woodland habitat. It is hoped that careful habitat management combined with the installation of special nestboxes (designed to resemble rotting tree stumps) will provide an opportunity for this once common woodland bird to thrive again at Attenborough.

Tips for Choosing and Siting Your Nestbox

If you’d like to provide a home for birds in your garden there are a few simple tips to follow: The size of the hole will dictate which species of bird will use the box – a 32mm hole will suit most common garden birds such as Great Tits, Blue Tits and sparrows. When siting your box, make sure that it is out of reach of predators; Site your box in a position where it will not be in direct sunlight for a large part of the day (preferably north facing); Robins like their open-fronted boxes fairly low down and in the cover of an overhanging ivy or shrub, but again think about predators; For the hole-type boxes for Starlings and House Sparrows, the higher the box, the better. Make sure there is a clear flight path in to the nestbox; Make sure that wherever you site the box, that it is securely fixed.

Wednesday, 14 December 2011

Put it on the Bill


Shoveller (Male and Female) - © Jack Perks
There’s probably not many cafés or restaurants where you can enjoy a coffee or a meal whilst watching some spectacular wildlife in their natural environment. But at the Attenborough Nature Centre, you can do just that.

The Reserve plays host to a wide range of species throughout the year, but it is through the winter months that the ponds fill with life as migratory wildfowl use the Reserve as their temporary home. Over 10 different species of duck visit Attenborough for the winter, having flown from their breeding grounds in northern Europe. Many of these can be seen on Coneries Pond surrounding the Nature Centre. The panoramic windows of the centre café give impressive views over the water and enable you to birdwatch in even the worst of the winter weather!

From ‘dabblers’ (surface feeders) to ‘divers’, many species manage to co-exist on the same patch of water. But if you’ve ever wondered how so many different ducks can share the same food resources without competition, then maybe you should look a bit closer at their behaviour - or more importantly, their bills. Just as we would select a spoon rather than chop-sticks to eat our soup with, species of wildfowl have evolved bills of different shapes and sizes for acquiring food.

The most common species of duck you are likely to encounter at Attenborough is the mallard. The mallard is a dabbling duck and a generalist feeder, eating almost anything it can get down its throat – reflected in the large size and rounded shape of its bill. The shoveler on the other hand is a more specialist feeder that feeds on microscopic aquatic organisms. The shoveler’s bill resembles a flattened spoon, within which lie hundreds of tiny comb-like hairs called lamellae. The shoveler uses its strangely shaped bill to filter organisms out of the water to feed on. Species such as the teal and the wigeon are specialist grazers. Like grazing geese, their bills are much shorter and stubbier than the mallard’s or shoveler’s and are therefore perfect for shearing the tops off of fresh green vegetation.

In very cold winters, as some of the shallower ponds freeze over, you may be lucky to see goosander on Coneries Pond. This large diving duck is one of the sawbill family. As the name ‘sawbill’ suggests, the goosander’s bill is long, thin and has sharp serrated ‘teeth’ – perfect for catching fish. The goosander’s rarer and smaller cousin, the smew, can also be seen occasionally on the Reserve. Although the smew’s bill is much shorter than the goosander it is equally equipped for catching fish.

These many adaptations enable a plethora of species to inhabit the ponds and wetlands of the Attenborough Nature Reserve. So next time you’re tucking in to a nice bowl of soup or a sandwich at the Nature Centre, why not think about the different ducks methods of feeding and how they’ve developed great tools for accessing their favourite foods.

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Scramble for a Squacco


The Squacco Heron at Attenborough with a Perch - © Neil Walker
As a keen birdwatcher you often dream of the day that the many hours you put in to watching your ‘local patch’ will be rewarded with a real gem of a bird, a mega rarity. Despite getting much enjoyment from watching our common resident and migrant species, you can’t help but get excited by the presence of a bird that has turned up some thousands of miles away from its normal range.

On the 28th October that dream became a reality for one local birder when during a visit to the Nature Reserve, he discovered an unusual heron tucked away in some reeds on the River Erewash. After a hurried visit home to pick up a bird field guide, the birdwatcher finally identified the heron as a rare juvenile squacco heron – only the fourth ever reported in Nottinghamshire (previously 1871, 1944 and 1998)!

I was first alerted to the heron’s presence when a very calm (not jumping all over the place as I would have been) and collected gentleman came in to the Nature Centre to say that I might be interested to know he had seen a squacco heron earlier that day. My first reaction was to question the bird’s identification as a similar bird, the little egret, is a more regular visitor to the Reserve. But no, this was definitely a squacco.

A frantic five minutes of phone calls to local birdwatchers soon followed in order to find someone who was nearby to confirm the report. After an anxious ten minutes more, the call came in confirming that it was indeed a squacco. Within half an hour crowds had already started to gather in what would become the biggest ‘twitch’ on the Reserve since the American sora rail in 2003.

The squacco is a short, stocky heron standing less than 50cm tall (body length only 20cm). It has a short neck and bill with an impressive wingspan of over 90cm. Juvenile birds have a buff brown back and buff, striped neck. However, the squacco’s appearance is completely transformed in flight when they reveal brilliant white wings.

Little and Large - Squacco and Grey Heron
Squacco herons breed in the marshy wetlands of southern Europe from the Mediterranean to the Middle East – the nearest population [in the Camargue] is over 1000 miles from Nottingham. They migrate south for the winter to Africa so it is very rare to see them further north of their breeding range. It is thought that this juvenile had been blown off course during migration, resulting in its arrival at Attenborough.
 
Visitors from all over the UK came to see the squacco over the next few days from as far away as Liverpool and the south coast. In all, around 1500 people were lucky enough to see the heron as it remained in its favourite fishing spot for over a week. It was last seen on Sunday 6th November when it eventually flew off in the early evening. It was the first squacco I had seen in my 25 years of birdwatching and will hopefully not be the last.

Wednesday, 19 October 2011

Breeding Success for Mediterranean Warbler at Attenborough


A Family of Cetti's Warblers - © Ingeborg Van Leeuwen
Nottinghamshire may seem like a million miles away from the sunny climes of the Mediterranean, but that’s not to stop one little warbler from calling Attenborough Nature Reserve its home. Even after one of the coldest winters on local records, we have been delighted to find out that the cetti’s warbler (pronounced chetty) has gone on to have its most successful year ever - with six pairs breeding on the Reserve this summer.

If you’ve walked around the Reserve in recent weeks you may well have heard a cetti’s warbler singing. You can’t miss their explosive bursts of song as it is delivered from deep within the undergrowth. They are almost around every corner. Presumed to be mostly juveniles from this year’s bumper breeding season, you can even see one singing in the reedbed in front of the Nature Centre! Double figures (of birds) can now be counted on a single visit to the Reserve and they are becoming so frequent that local birders have named them ‘Reed Robins’.

However it has not always been so easy for the cetti’s warbler. They first bred in the UK in Kent in 1972 and went on to colonise many parts of Southern England. Unlike most of the warblers in the UK the cetti’s is a resident species and does not migrate south to Africa for the winter. This species is therefore very susceptible to our cold winters. The severe winter of 1986/87 caused the British population to crash and for many years they were largely confined to warmer regions of the south, south-east England and southern parts of Wales.

The mild winters of recent years have since enabled the cetti’s warbler to expand its range and in 2007 the first breeding record for Nottinghamshire was confirmed – at Attenborough Nature Reserve. This pair successfully went on to raise four chicks (pictured).

The cetti’s is a small rich brown warbler with short wings, pale eye stripe and a broad rounded tail. The shy skulking behaviour of the cetti’s deep within the vegetation of its wetland habitat often makes them difficult to see. Despite this, the extremely loud song of the cetti’s warbler is guaranteed to give its presence away. Like the sweet song of the robin the sound of a cetti’s warbler always brightens up a cold winter walk around the Reserve.

Wednesday, 31 August 2011

They're After Your Chips!


Yellow-Legged Gull - © Richard Rogers
On a number of occasions I have found myself explaining to visitors at the Nature Reserve that there is no such thing as a seagull. However, a similar conversation that I had with a visitor the other day led to the discovery of a rare species of gull on the Reserve that would normally feel more at home in the Mediterranean – a yellow-legged gull.

Gulls are birds from the family Laridae and include a number of species commonly seen at Attenborough. Most of which are confusingly similar in appearance. To make matters worse, most species have about three or four different plumage states as they moult each year from their juvenile plumage through to gaining their adult feathers.

The most common species that you are likely to see at Attenborough (again confusingly) is not the common gull, as you might expect from the name, but the black-headed gull – which incidentally has a chocolaty-brown head, not black. Larger gulls such as the lesser black-backed gull and herring gull can also be seen frequently – especially in the early evening as they make their way from their daytime feeding grounds to communal roosts at sites such as Church Wilne Reservoir.

The yellow-legged gull is very similar in appearance to both the lesser black-back and herring gull. It has only just recently been recognised as a species in its own right, having previously been thought to be a Mediterranean sub-species of our herring gull. Adult yellow-legged gulls (like the bird currently at the Reserve) have lighter grey upperparts than the lesser black-back gull with larger black wing tips than the herring gull although with smaller white ‘mirrors’ (the white spots on the wing tips). They have a yellow bill with a large red spot and a red eye-ring - and of course as the name suggests, they have bright yellow legs. Each year at least one individual is seen at Attenborough through August into early September – where it tends to spend most of it’s time on the sailing marker buoys on Coneries Pond. 

Next time you are at the Reserve, why don’t you try to get to grips with gulls? On a good day during the autumn migration you could see up to seven different species on Clifton Pond alone. A good field guide is a must as there is much variation in the plumage. However with a little practise you could see gulls as something more than just menacing birds that steal your chips at the seaside.

Saturday, 21 May 2011

'Not so Smart' Phones

The Cetti's Warbler - Photographed Using Traditional Field Skills
There has been an unusual amount of media interest surrounding the Nature Reserve over the last week (and I’m not just talking about Phil Spencer’s visit from Location, Location, Location on Thursday the 19th). The main focus of the media frenzy has been the use of smart phones by a small minority of photographers. They are being used to lure otherwise shy and skulking birds from the undergrowth so that they put on a display for the cameras with very little need for patience or traditional field craft.

As the popularity of smart phones has increased there have been some very useful applications (apps) developed that have quickly become the modern day equivalent of a wildlife field guide. With photos, videos, illustrations and songs for almost every bird species in Europe at your fingertips, there could be no need to cart around heavy field guides again. However, there have been a number of cases on the Reserve over the last few weeks where the songs from these apps have been used for a more selfish purpose.

© The Daily Mail, 12th May 2011
Tape luring (as it is called) is very much frowned upon by birdwatchers and conservationists alike as it disrupts a bird’s natural behaviour and causes them to waste precious energy. During the spring months, male birds will be singing frantically in order to secure and defend a territory from rival birds and to attract a female to mate with. Such is the likeness of the pre-recorded bird songs on smart phone apps that even the birds are fooled and look to see off the ‘intruder’. This causes the birds a great deal of stress and regular disturbance, throughout the day in the breeding season, could potentially cause nests to fail as adult birds waste time seeing off non-existent threats - when they should be tending to their young.

One species in particular that has been targeted is the Cetti’s warbler - an uncommon species in Nottinghamshire which first bred on the Nature Reserve in 2007. This normally shy and retiring species skulks around the dense undergrowth as it patrols its large territory, stopping at various points to give deafening bursts of staccato song (usually the only indication of their presence). If you are lucky enough to actually see one, you might notice their rather nondescript appearance. Resembling a large wren they have chestnut brown upperparts with a faint pale eye stripe and pale belly – often sitting with a cocked tail.


Breaking the law

The Cetti’s warbler is one of the more recent colonists of the UK (first breeding in 1973) and therefore is included on Schedule 1 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act (1981) – which makes disturbing one in the breeding season a criminal offence!

Friday, 15 April 2011

Going for a Song


Reel 'em' in - A Grasshopper Warbler in full song. © Sean Browne
Anyone who has been up at the crack of dawn and made an early visit to the Nature Reserve over the last couple of weeks would have no doubt noticed (or heard) that the delights of the spring dawn chorus have well and truly begun. From the moment you arrive in the car park and step out on to the Reserve you are immersed in one of the most magnificent and beautiful natural events in the wildlife calendar. In fact, the last two weeks of April and the first couple of weeks of May are arguably one of the best times to witness what can best be described as ‘the biggest open-air concert on earth’ – what’s more is it’s free to attend!

For many of the Reserve’s resident bird species such as the robin, blackbird and song thrush, the dawn chorus started back in late January and February when some individuals even continue to sing throughout the night! However, by early May most of the migrant warblers would have arrived back at Attenborough for the summer and this is the time when birdsong is at its most intense and varied.

Despite numerous species performing songs of differing complexity, the common goal of a bird’s song is to attract a mate and secure a breeding territory. In almost all species found on the Reserve, the singing is performed solely by male birds who attempt to ‘woo’ a female with their impressive repertoire of fluty and scratchy notes. The earlier a bird starts to sing in the day is a good indication of the individual’s fitness and therefore quality as a mate (singing requires a huge input of energy). In the early morning, sound also travels further due to calmer winds and there is less background noise -created by humans - for the birds to compete with, meaning there is a greater likelihood of the song being heard by a potential mate.

The best thing is you don’t need to be an expert on birdsong to enjoy the sounds of the dawn chorus and once you get over the initial shock of a 4am alarm call (usually by drinking a jug of coffee), an early morning walk can be a most uplifting and exciting experience.

One of the top spots on the Reserve to compare different species in song during the dawn chorus is the scrubby grassland adjacent to the River Trent and Clifton Pond. This species rich habitat attracts a great many warblers including sedge warbler, common whitethroat, lesser whitethroat, blackcap, and willow warbler, you might even hear the strange ‘insect like’ reeling of the grasshopper warbler.