After lunch we joined the island's ecologist Jo Porter to help her carry out a vegetation survey in the maritime heathland plant community at the north end of the island. It gave placement student Eve the chance to learn about how the island's lowland habitats are classified and monitored, with grazing regimes being altered according to how the plant community matches up to its specific criteria. It was also a good chance to brush up on our plant identification skills.
The bulk of today's bird sightings included a Fulmar, 695 Manx Shearwaters, 18 Gannets, a Grey Heron, two Kestrels, a Peregrine, two Dunlins, six Whimbrels, six Curlews, three Redshanks, three Black-headed Gulls, 13 Kittiwakes, a Little Owl (where are they all?), 17 Swallows, six House Martins, a Stonechat, 14 Wheatears, two Sedge Warblers, a Chiffchaff, two Willow Warblers, three Chaffinches, 26 Linnets and a Lesser Redpoll.
Two pairs of Chaffinches have fledged young around the island in the past week. The pair in the observatory garden appear to have produced just one very fresh-faced youngster that spent most of the day learning to fly.
Shore Sexton Beetles have more of a coastal distribution than some of the commoner carrion beetles. They fly around at night searching out carcasses and can often be covered in small red mites which hitch a lift with the beetle from one rotting food source to the next.
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