Today the weather was mild and pleasant, with temperatures hovering around eighteen degrees Celsius, light westerly breezes, and a mix of sunshine and cloud that made for excellent visibility and comfortable conditions for being out and about.
Among the non-avian highlights were 14 Risso's Dolphins seen offshore, which included three juveniles — the first of the year.
Butterfly activity saw Green-veined Whites leading the count at 30, followed by Red Admirals with 24 and Meadow Browns with 19. Painted Ladies were also well represented with 15, while smaller numbers of Large Whites, Common Blues, and a single Grayling added to the diversity.
In addition to butterflies, a single Humming-bird Hawk-moth was seen darting among the fuchsia, and an Emperor Dragonfly was recorded in the night; seen by Lauren as she patrolled the Mountain looking for her Manxes with tags on!
Offshore, 300 Manx Shearwaters passed by in steady streams, accompanied by ten Gannets and 35 Shags, some of which were on Carreg yr Honwy, and some on the east face.
On the shoreline, 16 Oystercatchers were counted, along with four Dunlin, three Curlew, four Redshank, two Common Sandpipers, and seven Turnstones. A single Whimbrel was also noted.
Gull numbers were lower again, with 663 Herring Gulls, alongside 48 Lesser Black-backed Gulls, 31 Black-headed Gulls, and four juvenile Mediterranean Gulls. Sandwich Terns were also seen, with eight recorded. Bethany did an excellent job of reading colour rings on the gulls again today, and as well as many of our own large gulls, she found a Russian-ringed Black-headed Gull and an Irish-ringed Herring Gull.
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Heavily cropped picture of the Russian-ringed Black-headed Gull - Bethany Wilson |
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Heavily cropped picture of the Irish-ringed Herring Gull - Bethany Wilson |
Among the land birds, House Martins were the most numerous with 67 seen, followed by 30 Meadow Pipits, 20 Swallows, and 24 Rock Pipits. Willow Warblers were widespread with 46 individuals. Other passerines included 15 Pied Wagtails, ten Wheatears three of which were trapped on Solfach, seven Stonechats, and smaller numbers of Robins, Dunnocks, and Chiffchaffs. Two Spotted Flycatchers were also seen, and a single Tree Pipit was the first of the autumn.
Raptors were scarce today, but a single Sparrowhawk was logged, and corvids were represented by 37 Magpies, 22 Carrion Crows, and three Ravens. Nine Choughs added a splash of character to the cliffs and grasslands.
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