Wednesday, 19 June 2019

Gwylans today! Always fun and it really was a productive day. The team set off at 09:30 and began ringing Shag chicks straight away. As before, each Shag that gets a metal ring also gets a darvic, these mean that the birds can be identified as individuals in the field. As apposed to metal rings where the birds really need to be re-captured in order for the number to be recorded, meaning that darvic yield far more data.

Other birds targeted today were Great Black-backed Gull chicks. They hide in the long grass on the Gwylans so you simply have to slowly walk around the colony area and check for chicks. 30 were fitted with metal and darvic rings today and will soon be out and about slaying puffins and other seabirds. 
Josie, George and a Great Black-backed Gull chick

The inevitable consequences of being around seabirds! 

A well developed Razorbill chick 

Some of the team catching Shag chicks

The team departed the islands at 16:15 with their hands in tatters, but it will always be a pleasure to enter a seabird colony, especially one such as this on an uninhabited island.

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