Friday, 27 June 2014

Skomer update, birthday, degree results and seabird progress

It's been a month since my last post, mainly due to the heavy workload I'm currently coping with. Things on Skomer are still going very well and, with the help of the other staff and volunteers, I'm managing to keep on top of all my work.

End of May 
My first full day off since coming to the island (in mid April) was on the last day of May. This was my 22nd birthday and I celebrated with a fun day. It started at 04:15 with a CES (constant effort site) ringing session. It was so nice to extract and handle some small birds again, particularly as they don't bite and scratch! The sunrise was gorgeous and the weather was fantastic. After CES I took a slow wander back to the accommodation and managed to hand catch this tiny bunny.

Birthday Sunrise on Skomer
Tiny hand caught baby rabbit
Getting presents by post is awesome!

Bee, the warden, has been joking about having a pet black baby rabbit for months, so I couldn't resist. I had a fun 15 minutes holding the apathetic cutey and then let it go back where I found it. 

After lunch I went snorkelling in North Haven. This was an incredible experience! Once a little way from the shore, the Puffins and Razorbills surrounded me and watched me from above and below the water. There were also some fantastic bio-luminescing cone jellyfish, massive spider crabs, urchins, moon jellyfish and fantastic, life-rich, kelp forests. It also felt great to be back in the water. I've sincerely missed scuba diving recently and this snorkel took the edge off that longing.

The evening was spent having a long overdue shower (only about once every 5 days now) and then a surprise party where the other island staff turned up to celebrate with me. All in all a fantastic day and a birthday to remember! 

June
June has been an incredibly busy month. I've checked 200 Manx Shearwater burrows every 4-6 days and recorded and ringed both adults in each of these. I've also recorded whether an egg is present or not. This, combined with chick ringing at the end of the season, will give a good indication of adult survival and breeding success/productivity. The first chicks have started hatching now, along with the puffins. The puffin breeding season seems to be about 2-3 weeks behind average here. We've only started seeing lots of fish carrying puffins (adults with chicks) in the last week! 

Day old Manx Shearwater Chick
Puffin Chick (Puffling) - couple of days old

I've also finished colour ringing adult Kittiwakes and Razorbills, and am currently BTO ringing the Razorbill chicks (50+ chicks). I take wing and weight measurements of the chicks and repeat these a week later. I also managed to hand catch a Fulmar that was sitting at the top of the cliff where I do Manx burrow checks. A very long and slow army crawl got me close enough to the stubborn bird to catch it. I didn't get any good pictures whilst ringing it, as I was terrified of being covered in more sick, poo and bites. The picture below is of it in roughly the same position as where I caught it.

Hand caught this Fulmar whilst doing Manx Shearwater burrow checks
Kittiwake colour ringing
Colour ringed adult razorbill ready for release
and prepared to give me a parting bite
Razorbill chick checks & ringing - a first class way to celebrate

The first Razorbill chick checks I did were a form of celebration of my degree result. I'm incredibly pleased that I managed to get a 1st class honours degree despite all the difficulties I've had in the last year, and having to juggle my final exams and assignments with Skomer work. It's a real relief. I'm also honoured to have been recommended by my School (School of Biological Sciences) for media coverage at graduation. It will be nice to have some pictures and video taken of me without being covered in bird poo for once!

Champagne & cream tea celebration
thanks to the researchers living at The Farm.
Particular thanks to Alastair for the meal
before this and the Champagne!

Island life and the demands of the work started to get to me a couple of weeks ago, so I decided to take a break before the chick ringing and monitoring season began. I went to the Northumberland coast to see Chris and find out where he's working. It's been incredibly hard being away from him for 2 months, and was so nice to see the tern monitoring he's doing with his 4 colleagues. As a 1st class treat, to celebrate our first anniversary and both having jobs, we treated ourselves to a couple of nights in a beautiful B&B on the beach in Beadnell. 

Panorama of luxury for 2 field workers!
A room with a view towards Chris' office - heaven!

Chris' office rivals mine for its beauty and continuous cacophony of birds. The team of 5 are valiantly managing to keep a colony of nesting Little Terns alive through high tides and against badgers, foxes, otters, egg collectors and dog walkers!

Chris on the job with a stunning view
Feeding Arctic Terns right on Chris' doorstep
Ringed Arctic Tern perched right next to the visitors platform
Hungry tern chicks

I was only planning to stay Thursday - Saturday morning and then get back to Skomer on the first Sunday boat. However, a turn in the weather on the west coast meant there were no Sunday boats, so I got to stay an extra day! Fortuitously this meant I could join Chris and his colleagues on a National Trust "get together" picnic on The Farnes. The density of nesting terns is unbelievable! It was great to meet The Farnes team, and a real treat to be there at the same time as the Bridled Tern. All in all a brilliant way to round of the holiday. This is the first time I've ever had a real holiday, away from work, with no lingering guilt that I should be doing an essay, revising, or something along those lines. It made me feel quite grown up and really did mark the end of my academic career (for now). 

Flat calm seas at Seahouses
On our way around The Farnes
The welcoming committee
Oblivious to the beauty above him...
...or the imminent dangers...
...but he did make a new friend.
Freshly hatched Arctic Tern chick
1 or 2 day old tiny chick
Slightly older Arctic chick (1 - 2 weeks)
Bridled Tern Sandwich ... get it.
Poor record shot, but got to love that forehead!
We had gorgeous views of the Bridled Tern

Since I got back I've been catching up with work. I've had 2 trips back to the Razorbill colony to get repeat wing and weight measurements of the chicks, and find the newly hatched one. Liam Langley, a fellow NGB (Next Generation Birders) member (http://nextgenerationbirders.blogspot.co.uk/) and Skomer researcher helped me with some. 

Liam cuddling his new best friend
Some of the chicks are becoming proper little adults now

I'm also trying to get better at moth and butterfly ID. It helps that 2 traps are run most nights, and that the moths come into our kitchen at night.

Buff Tip (Phalera bucephala)
Burnished Brass (Diachrysia chrysitis)
Poplar Hawk-moth (Laothoe populi)

The weather has continued to be nice, so I'm slowly working through my suncream supplies. Today has been very rainy though, so I'm catching up on data entry and this blog post.

Sunrise, 45 mins after starting my 24hr Puffin feeding watch
2 down, 3 to go

The next month will involve ringing and measuring 50 - 100 Razorbill and Puffin chicks, ringing 300 - 500 Lesser Black-backed Gull chicks, colour ringing adult Puffins, three 24 hour Puffin feeding watches, 4 nights counting ringed : non-ringed Lesser Black-backed chicks, and the continuation of colour ring resightings and Manx burrow checks. All in all it should keep me busy and I'll be glad of a 3 day break for graduation mid-July!


Sunday, 25 May 2014

How to make Razorbill colour rings

Making Razorbill colour rings - Introduction to the problem
Skomer has had a colour ringing study on adult Razorbills (Alca torda) for the past 44 years. It seems to have worked really well, despite the obvious problems of them wearing the rings away. Razorbills walk on their tarsi, and so any rings placed there get worn very quickly. This is why the metal rings used are specially shaped, to reduced the wear that occurs to the inscribed unique number. 

Razorbills walk on their tarsus.
Rings must be shaped to avoid excessive wear.

Part of my job is to catch new adults each year and colour ring them. This means that the numbers of colour ringed adults remains relatively constant, and adult survival statistics can be calculated. These rings do not come preformed, and I therefore needed to make them myself. 

Having never made colour rings before, I tried to do a bit of research to see if there was any information on making triangular colour rings. I failed to find any, and so thought this blog post might be of use to anyone else wishing to make Razorbill or Guillemot colour rings. It took a bit of trial and error, but I've found the following method is the best for making rings of consistent size and shape.

Making the colour rings:

Step 1
Use a closed Razorbill special and push it as far up a pair of pliers as possible. I used needle nose pliers, but a pair with more square edges would be ideal...so long as the Razorbill special fits over them. 

Mark the point at which the ring fits across the pliers. This will give you a gauge of where the pliers match the internal width of a Razorbill special and ensure all the colour rings you make have the same internal dimension.

1) Push Razorbill special onto the pliers until they can go no further
2) Mark the point at which the ring reaches

It's important to mark both sides of the pliers at this point, and to mark them in a form that wont get rubbed off when submerged in boiling water. I scratched the mark in with my penknife. Make sure the marks made on both sides of the pliers line up (seems obvious but I did it wrong the first time). You can then see where the colour ring plastic needs to go whichever way you hold the pliers.

Step 2
If you have to cut your own colour ring strips (as I did), then 45mm seems to be the best length. This allows enough spare for a good overlap, but ensures the internal triangle doesn't become too large. When placing 2 rings on 1 tarsus the width must be less than 8mm. Razorbill tarsi are remarkably short and anything wider than this will not allow 2 rings to fit on one tarsus. Make sure the ends are rounded off so there's nothing sharp for the bird to catch its leg on.

Colour ring strip: 8 x 45mm should make good rings

Step 3
Line this strip up with both marks on one side of the pliers, leaving a little bit poking out of one side (picture 4). This extra bit will form a small overlap inside the finished colour ring.

3) Line up with marks on 1 side of the pliers

Then ensure the strip is lined up with the marks on the other side of the pliers. This should mean that the plastic is perpendicular to the mid-line of the pliers and will make it easier to line the edges up with each other when you form the ring.

4) Ensure the strip is perpendicular to the mid-line of the pliers

Step 4
Now heat the strip in boiling water until it goes soft and malleable

5) Heat in boiling water until soft

Step 5
Once the plastic is soft, quickly wrap it around the pliers to form an "e" shape. Ensure all the edges of the plastic are parallel so there is no twist in the ring. With these tapered pliers it was easy to follow the line of the pliers so the edges didn't line up. Make sure this doesn't happen.

Also make sure there is quite a bit of extra sticking out beyond the curved part you've just formed. This extra will form an overlap once the colour ring is finished.

6) Wrap the plastic around to form an "e"

Step 6
Once the plastic has cooled slightly (enough to hold its shape), readjust the grip to bring the two ends together. Again, make sure all the edges are lined up and there is no twist in the ring.

7) Readjust grip to bring 2 ends together

Step 7
This is the tricky bit that takes a bit of practise to form a nicely shaped ring. Reheat the plastic until it's soft. Then bring it out and quickly squeeze the two sides together, applying even pressure, to form the triangular shape. I couldn't take a picture of this as it requires two hands, but it's quite obvious when you get it right.

Make sure that you fold the extra bit of plastic up to form the overlapping section seen in picture 8, on the left of the ring. If you apply too much pressure then this extra bit causes a kink in the internal triangle. Too little pressure, or uneven pressure, and you don't get a good triangular shape. Also if you apply the pressure in the wrong direction then you end up with a right angle triangle rather than an isosceles triangle. As you're pinching the two sides, try and get the top of the triangle over the mid-line of the pliers. This should ensure you form a nice isosceles shape, rather than a triangle skewed to one side.

This part took a bit of practise to get right, so try it a few times to get comfortable with the technique. Due to the shape of the pliers, I sometimes found that one side of the bottom of the triangle was the right width, but the other was too thin because it had followed the taper of the pliers. In this case, turn the formed ring around and force the pliers into the thinner side. Then gently reheat and repeat the pinching process. This should mean that both sides of the triangle are the same width and match the internal dimensions of a Razorbill special.

8) Pinch sides together to form isosceles triangle

Final Step
Repeat steps 3-7 until you are happy with the shape. Compare the finished colour ring to the closed metal ring to make sure the shape is correct, and the internal dimensions are the same as the Razorbill special.

This method ensures that the bottom of the ring (the part at the back of the Razorbill tarsus) is double thickness, and should increase the time it remains on the Razorbill. Some of my study adults have lost colour rings, presumably because they have been worn through and fallen off. By making the bottom double thickness, it extends the time it will take for the bird to wear them through, and so they will remain on the leg longer.

9a) The finished ring with a double bottom layer
9b) The finished ring with an overlap for gluing

The extra bit of plastic left outside the pliers in Step 3 forms the internal fold, and ensures the double thickness extends across the full width of the bottom of the ring. The extra plastic left in Step 5 produces the overlap seen in picture 9b. This can then be glued easily after placing the ring on a Razorbill, and ensures the ring cannot open up after release.

I also recommend making lots of spare rings to take into the field, ideally of variable widths. Some of the Razorbills I've ringed have exceptionally short tarsi and I've had to pick narrower rings to go on these birds.

I hope this has been informative for anyone who wishes to use colour rings on Razorbills. The technique can also be used to create colour rings for Guillemots when using a closed Guillemot special as the template ring.

Please feel free to leave comments if any of this doesn't make sense, or you have any suggestions for improvements to the technique. I will have to do this for a few seasons so any improvements would be much appreciated.


Saturday, 24 May 2014

C Permit, Degree completion and Skomer continued

I can hardly believe how much life has changed for me in the last month.

The last month

I'm now a C permit holder, and have already started getting extra endorsements (Herring Gull noose carpet)! It's been a little scary having to organise all the seabird ringing for my job. This involves ringing and colour ringing adults and chicks of 6 different species (Lesser Black-backed Gull, Herring Gull, Kittiwake, Puffin, Razorbill and Manx Shearwater). Ringing without a trainer in the vicinity is a whole different ball game! 

1st bird ringed as a C permit holder
in charge...and colour ringed too!

I do find forming colour rings quite therapeutic though, and a great way to spend a rainy day.

Preparing Puffin, Kittiwake and Razorbill colour rings
Razorbill colour rings - tricky to form

I just about managed to avoid a big storm and get off the island in time to hand in my last 2 uni assignments, and take my last exam. It was all a bit hectic but I enjoyed being back in Bangor. I got to see all my friends, catch up with Steve (my ringing trainer) and Rachel and a couple of my lecturers, go birding with Zac and Conor, go climbing, do a nest box check, finish the assignments, revise and clear out my uni room. It's a massive relief having all the uni work behind me now. It was getting quite difficult juggling both that and Skomer work. It was also lovely to get back to the island and celebrate my degree completion with all the staff, Pimm's, a 4 course meal and our tame jackdaw (Jack) in the sun

Pimm's outside the house, overlooking North Haven.
Our tame Jackdaw - Jack

Skomer work itself is going well. Almost all my study species have started laying now (except Kittiwake), or are well into incubation. I'm incredibly busy and get very little sleep (except on rainy days), but I'm loving every minute of it. I can't believe how lucky I've been to land this as my first contract! I see incredible things on a day-to-day basis and feel very privileged to experience them. I've had 2 lifers (Little Owl [my bogie bird unlocked] and Black-headed Bunting), ringed/handled 3 new species (Lesser Black-backed Gull, Short-eared Owl and Crow), seen Herring Gull chicks hatch, touched the wing tip of a Fulmar as it flew past, seen Razorbills, Kittiwakes, Guillemots and Lesser Black-backed Gulls mating no more than 10m away from me and seen some great scenery and invertebrates. All in all I'm loving life here.

Little Owl - 1st Island lifer
Adult Short-eared Owl
checking me out as we ringed the chicks
2 cute Crow chicks - they thought I was mum
Herring Gull chick hatching -
wish I'd recorded the exceedingly sweet cheeping
Pair of Fulmar sunning themselves 6ft away
A Guillemot totally missing the point of incubating...
...for 20+ minutes!
Gorgeous Twenty-plume moth
Beautiful sunset over the farm

The Job

Well that sums up the best bits of the last month, but what do I actually do?

I've got 6 study species - Kittiwake, Lesser Black-backed Gull, Herring Gull, Puffin, Razorbill and Manx Shearwater - and each has a designated study plot. These are spread across the island. The adult birds in each have been ringed and/or colour ringed for the last 30+ years and adult survival and productivity of each has been monitored long term. It is this monitoring work that I'm continuing. This is a JNCC contract that contributes to the data collected on seabirds around the country.

The 6 species study plots, and their position on Skomer Island

So far the majority of the job has been spent resighting the colour ringed adults from previous years. The Lesser Black-backs and Herring Gulls have darvic rings, but the Puffins, Kittiwakes and Razorbills have unique combinations of 4 colour rings

AK - Darvic ringed Lesser Black-backed Gull
Colour ringed Kittiwake - LSGT
(Light green over Striped red on the left;
Green over BTO on the right)

This is easy enough to do when the birds stand still and are orientated in the right way, but it's quite rare this happens. With the darvic ringed birds I can often see the ring but not the 2 letter code, and with the colour ringed birds I can often see one leg, but not the other! This can be very frustrating after a while, especially in poor light and bad weather. It's frustrating times like that when I make sure I look up from the scope, remind myself of where I am, what species are surrounding me, and how much better being outdoors in bad weather is than being stuck inside all the time!

Standard darvic situation - 1 ring readable, 2 facing the wrong way!

Now that everything has started laying eggs/incubating/hatching, the next few months will be taken up with productivity monitoring, chick ringing, adult colour ringing and further colour ring resighting. It'll keep me busy throughout the daylight hours, so I'm anticipating being pretty exhausted by mid-August, but I'm excited about the challenges ahead