Monday 17 April 2023

A thick fog smothered the Island for the whole morning but thankfully cleared later on in the afternoon, and revealed a good arrival of birds. A fall of 331 Willow Warblers, 84 Blackcaps, and 36 Chiffchaffs was recorded, most of which were seen in the plantation at Nant. It was an impressive sight as virtually every tree seemed to be moving as birds were constantly flicking from branch to branch as they went about feeding.

Willow Warbler © Ollie King 

Students bird ringing © Steve Stansfield

Other migrants had also made landfall as the first Tree Pipit of the year was seen at Nant, a Black Redstart was at the South End, alongside two Grasshopper Warblers and two Sedge Warblers. The two male Dotterel were still on the South End, and showed much better too. 

Dotterel © Ollie King 
Black Redstart © Ed Betteridge 

It was a good day for visible migration (vismig) - hirundines and finches were on the move in the fog whilst waders were seen passing through once the fog had lifted. Passerine movement consisted o  22 Sand Martins, 44 Swallows, eight House Martins, 130 Linnets, 51 Goldfinches, two Lesser Redpolls and a Siskin. Wader passage was fairly strong, with 45 Whimbrels (most moving north off the West Coast), five Curlews, a Grey Plover, a Golden Plover, a Redshank and a Common Sandpiper all logged. 

Other migrants seen today included two Red-throated Divers, three Buzzards, a Black-headed Gull, three Sandwich Terns, three Sparrowhawks, six White Wagtails, and six Rooks


Students rock pooling © Steve Stansfield

Students rock pooling © Steve Stansfield

Sea Anemone © Steve Stansfield 

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