Thursday, 2 January 2020

UEARG ringing report 2019


Another successful year of ringing for UEARG with a couple of standout records and a good number of birds processed.

2019 saw us process a total of 5,788 birds across 54 species (pending any unentered records). A large part of our ringing is at feeding stations in the winter months, this is in part a result of being a University ringing group where summer is often when our members are on field work or not around. As a result of the large amount of feeder ringing we do, recaptures make up a large proportion of our catch (45%) but still left us with a total of 3,221 birds ringed in 2019. This is up there with some of the highest year totals for the group according to DemOn (the online data repository for BTO bird ringing data).

It will come as no surprise with our feeder dominated catching that Blue Tits and Great Tits topped the captures list this year, incredibly accounting for 55% of our catch. However, the flip side of this was record numbers for the group of other feeder associated species, such as finches, and blackbirds.

Here’s 2019 by the numbers:

Species
New
Retraps
Total
Blue Tit
915
974
1889
Great Tit
512
787
1299
Coal Tit
126
292
418
Robin
129
126
255
Chaffinch
165
31
196
Long-tailed Tit
90
100
190
Reed Warbler
180
3
183
Blackbird
136
45
181
Dunnock
79
89
168
Greenfinch
128
11
139
Goldfinch
113
15
128
Goldcrest
116
9
125
Swallow
76
0
76
Sedge Warbler
56
1
57
Wren
44
9
53
Reed Bunting
45
1
46
Redwing
43
0
43
Bearded Tit
28
8
36
Jay
17
9
26
Collared Dove
22
1
23
House Sparrow
20
2
22
Mute Swan
7
14
21
Woodpigeon
15
6
21
Starling
20
0
20
Chiffchaff
19
1
20
Blackcap
19
0
19
Whitethroat
14
3
17
Great Spotted Woodpecker
8
9
17
Siskin
11
0
11
Nuthatch
5
6
11
Treecreeper
7
3
10
Bullfinch
7
0
7
Marsh Tit
2
5
7
Song Thrush
6
1
7
Lesser Redpoll
7
0
7
Black-headed Gull
5
1
6
Brambling
4
1
5
Willow Warbler
3
0
3
Sparrowhawk
3
0
3
Snipe
3
0
3
Cetti's Warbler
2
0
2
Egyptian Goose
1
1
2
Magpie
2
0
2
Moorhen
2
0
2
Barnacle Goose
1
1
2
Lesser Whitethroat
2
0
2
Garden Warbler
1
0
1
Woodcock
1
0
1
Jackdaw
1
0
1
Canada Goose
0
1
1
Greylag Goose
0
1
1
Redstart
1
0
1
Skylark
1
0
1
Mallard
1
0
1
Grand Total
3221
2567
5788

Notes on 2019:
  • ·      Two cracking foreign controls came to us this year, the first a Reed Warbler ringed in The Gambia and the second a Norwegian ringed Robin.
  • ·      We had a handful of old retraps this year, but no record breakers. This included Marsh, Long-Tailed, Coal and Blue Tits all hailing from 2014 and going strong 5 years later.
  • ·      We ringed at 15 different sites this year. This included woodland, scrubland, gardens, grassland, marsh, reedbed, and coastal scrub.
  • ·      Greenfinches have continued their slow recovery in the local area this year, and this was reflected in our catch of 128 which is a good total for the group.
  • ·      Permit upgrades were achieved by four members of the group: Josie Hewitt achieved her ‘A’ permit, Alex Starace achieved his ‘C’ permit, Stephen Vickers achieved his ‘A’, and Emma Buck received her American banding permit.
  • ·      We ran our yearly ringing demo at Wheatfen Nature Reserve, a successful day with plenty of eager visitors.  
  • ·      At least 21 of us ringed some birds this year, a big thanks to them all for their help
  • ·      2019 saw the group regain access to one of our best reedbed sites, and whilst we only had a handful of sessions there this year (reflected in the numbers ringed of reedbed species), we hope to increase our reed bed monitoring in 2020.
  • ·      Just the one new species for the group this year, a (feral) Barnacle Goose that turned up at one of our long-standing wildfowl monitoring sites.
  • ·      No scarcities for the group this year, however should the pattern of us catching at least one Yellow-Browed Warbler every other year continue (that pattern goes back to 2012), 2020 should see at least one. 

A big thanks to all those who made UEARG activities possible this year, particularly Dr. Iain Barr and James Cracknell.

Reed Buntings were present in reasonable numbers at our reedbed site this year, including a winter roost but we have only managed limited visits.

Our Norwegian ringed Robin. We haven't got the original ringing data back yet, but it was a first-year bird.


Our only new species this year, a (feral) Barnacle Goose. Regardless of it's origin, it will be interesting to see what happens to this first-year bird in the years to come.

Good numbers of Bearded Tit breed at our reedbed site, and 28 new birds reflect this.

Only 5 Bramblings, each one is a treat but we would have expected more considering the sites and net effort this year. 

3 Sparrowhawks this year, all of them males. Always a welcome addition to a ringing session.

Great to retrap our resident Marsh Tits again this year, however only two new individuals is fewer than we would have hoped for this red listed species.

A great year for Greenfinch for the group, reflecting the continued local recovery.

Just 3 snipe this year, a poor return compared to the numbers on the marsh site. The exceedingly wet end to the year has hampered any catching efforts so far this season. 


43 Redwing was pretty good going compared to other years, and was largely thanks to targeted effort by Alex.

A great year for Jays, reflecting increased use of potter traps in the group. We hope to start colour ringing them in 2020.

The 183 Reed Warblers we caught at our reedbed site was a reasonable number, but we expect to catch in excess of 500 with a a full season of effort (this year we only monitored the site at the latter end of the season).




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