Sunday, 20 May 2018

May at Alkborough Flats

An early morning trip to Alkborough flats. It was cool and very still with a light mist as I arrived. A Cetti's warbler singing greeted my at the car park. In the approach to Prospect hide several bearded tits were very showy. Reed Warblers and Reed Bunting sung too, but the former stayed well hidden in the reeds.
Male Reed Bunting.
Reed Warbler.
Male Bearded Tit.
I stayed in the hide for about an hour. Not long in and I heard a single 'boom', a bittern? A little later it repeated, two calls this time. It called occasionally but the noise was a bit distant and hard to place from inside the hide. Other than this there was a large flock of Black-tailed godwits, some avocets and many Shelducks in the lagoon. A few Black-headed gulls were about but it was very quiet. Two swifts flew over. Funny to watch a black-headed gull trying to chase one.
Black-tailed godwits.
Greylag family crossing the lagoon.
Shelduck and Avocets.
Grey Heron.
Grey Heron.
I moved on with the hope of seeing the bittern. A birdwatcher had just seen in flying into the reeds. I waited for a while but no luck. A male Marsh Harrier flew over with prey in his talons.
Male Marsh Harrier with prey, looks like a young coot or moorhen.
 I carried on with my walk to Trent hide. A number of damselflies near the hide, and also a nnursery web spider, Pisaura mirabilis, my first this year. The nice surprise was on the way back, when a Whimbrel flew in and fed on the wet grassland.
Singing Reed Bunting.
Greylag geese with a white one.
Azure damselfly.
Blue-tailed Damselfly.
Wet grassland.
Pisaura mirabilis.
Roe deer.
Whimbrel.

Monday, 14 May 2018

Walking the Humber. Stage 13. Welwick saltmarsh

A sunny day with a light northerly wind. I only put a jacket in the car as an afterthought, but I end up wearing it all the time as the breeze is cool. Welwick saltmarsh is a YWT nature reserve, a wide expanse of saltmarsh and mudflats. I drive from Welwick village and park on the side at Sheep Trod Lane, a farm road a short distance away. I walk to Winestead Outstrays pumping station to start the stage (there is no access across Winestead drain by the station) and then retrace my steps on the sea wall until the next pumping station, Skeffling.
 There are expansive views across the saltmarsh, with the pumping station in the distance. Today the sheep keep me company, most of them with two or three lambs grazing on the sea wall or the marsh, or dozing under the hawthorn hedges, cautiously getting out of the way as I walk. But you may wonder what are sheep doing in a nature reserve...
Conservation Grazing
Before farming and domestic animals were introduced in the UK, saltmarsh grazing depended on now extinct large native herbivores such as European Bison, Aurochs, wild horses and Elk. Animal grazing contributed to maintain plant biodiversity. When cattle, sheep and horses were introduced in the UK they replaced the native megafauna as grazers in saltmarshes. Indeed, saltmarshes subject to spring tides provided excellent grazing grounds. However, grazing in marshes has been reduced considerably since medieval times due to land reclamation and the construction of floodbanks, as the land is of very good quality for crops. In the absence of grazing, rank coarse grasses and uniform stands of reeds tend to develop, reducing plant biodiversity.
 In order to manage saltmarsh, grassland or heathland biodiversity, conservation organisations use domestic animals - often hardy breeds - to graze nature reserves. The Yorkshire Wildlife Trust has introduced sheep and cattle grazing in several of its reserves, such as North Cave wetlands, Spurn and Welwick. The RSPB uses Konik ponies at Blacktoft Sands. Conservation grazing in other reserves often uses YWT own stock of hardy breeds such as Hebridean sheep or Highland or Longhorn cattle. In contrast, at Welwick grazing is carried out also part of a program of development of links with local farmers. A small flock of mule sheep were introduced in the reserve in summer 2012 with a view to develop a commercially viable sheep flock in collaboration with a local farmer.

Just a few minutes after starting my walk I watch a male Marsh Harrier quartering the marsh. It flies just in front of the pumping station.
 A view across the marsh. A patch of old reed and freshly growing grasses.

Little egret.
Little egret feeding on the marsh.
The sea wall by a drain.
A patch of relic dune showing a small bank with plenty of bee holes. No bees today though.
The sheep have no trouble grazing even in the water.
Many shelduck rest or feed on fields. This one sat in the middle of a bare patch on a rapeseed field.
Goldfinch feeding on dandelion seeds on the side of the path.
A new scrape teeming with birds: Lapwing, Avocet, Oystercatcher, Shelduck and Redshank.
One of eight Avocets. At least two seem to be sitting on eggs.
There was a large flock of vagrant Carrion Crows. One of the crows found something on the mudflats, probably a crab, and the rest chased him. 
Shelduck flying over the fields.
About 50 Dark-bellied Brent Geese were resting or feeding by the tide line.
Brent Geese.
The breach on Spurn Head in the distance.
Grey Heron.
The end of the stage is Skeffling pumping station. I have lunch on the fence stile, watching the comings and goings of Linnets and Meadow Pipits.
Meadow Pipit.
I was thinking that I hadn't seen any Roe Deer when I see a pair crossing the mudflats in the distance. 
 They trot across the mud and reach the saltmarsh at Welwick.
 They cross the saltmarsh, walk over the sea wall, jumping at least two electric fences and stopping briefly at the scrape to feed...
The avocets start mobbing them as soon as they get near their nests, harrying them along to the fields.
 Shortly afterwards, a pair of young Lesser Black-backed gulls arrives to the marsh. Avocets and Lapwings mob them.
 The sheep grazing the marsh.
 Many butterflies on the wing today. This Red Admiral the most obliging. Also seen at least two Orange tip and a Green-veined white.

Raptor Roost
Welwick Saltmarsh is known in birdwatching circles for their raptor roost. In an evening visit in winter up to nine species are possible: Marsh Harrier, Hen Harrier, SEO, Barn Owl, Merlin, Peregrine and Kestrel. Today I saw two Kestrels and the Marsh Harrier. The roost is really a winter feature and I wasn't expecting much more!


Featured bird: Reed Bunting
Many male Reed Buntings were singing from the marsh, and the side of ditches by the sea wall. Their song is not very melodic, just three or four earnest notes repeated at regular intervals (I use the mnemonic 'cheese--on--toast' to contracst with its relative the Yellowhammer, which has a more pleasant, longer sentence). The male in the photo above sung in between gusts of wind, when it could keep his balance on the grass. As other buntings they sing with their head kept high and the bill wide open. Reed Bunting are a success story. They were red listed in the 70s but are now listed amber after a striking recovery, which means they could soon be out of the list altogether. Their recovery has been quite astounding in Yorkshire, with 82% increases in breeding pairs since 1995 (BBS 2017 report). Although they are tied to wetlands in the breeding season, they are more widely distributed in the winter where they feed on seeds.
Today's walk, about 9 km round trip.

More information
Chatters, C. 2017. Saltmarsh. Bloomsbury.

Conservation Grazing at Welwick Saltmarsh. See this and this.

YWT homepage for Welwick Saltmarsh NR.

Monday, 7 May 2018

Full spring at North Cliffe Wood

 A Bank Holiday family trip to North Cliffe Wood. It is sunny and very warm. It surprises me that the bluebells are in full bloom. As soon as we arrive I hear a garden warbler singing. I have great views of it, but I hadn't even taken the camera out of my backpack! A Cuckoo starts singing and carries on persistently in several bouts during the walk. By the heathland a Mating pair of tiger beetles and a dragonfly (I assume a Hairy Dragonfly given the time of the year).

Stellaria holostea, greater stitchwort,

Path through North Cliffe Wood.






Young Rowan
I think this is a Hoof fungus Fomes fomentarius

Mating Green Tiger beetles.
 

Wolf spider Pardosa sp.
 North Cliffe Village
Copiced hazel

Iridescent earthworm.
7-spot ladybird.