Currently on a pretty wet and windy ferry crossing back to
Islay for the winter and quietly hoping i’m not going to be that guy that gets
sea sick.. Which seems as good a time as any to re-start the old goose blog;
once again you can get all your exciting goose related facts and anecdotes all
in one place!
But for those still reading (a pretty grand assumption, i
know..), you’ll no doubt be pleased to hear I’m going to start by talking about
ducks. Ducks are cool. Everybody likes ducks. And over the summer I was lucky
enough to work on what has to be our most enigmatic and mysterious UK breeding
duck – the common scoter.
Scoters are sea ducks, spending almost all their lives in
shallow seas feeding on shellfish, only fleetingly visiting a few Scottish freshwater
lochs in order to breed. Because of this marine lifestyle, most people only
ever see them from a coastal vantage point as a series of small black and brown
dots bobbing around in the waves, which, i have to admit, has never really
excited me before. But when seen close up they are actually a pretty striking
bird – well, the males are at least; jet black with a splash of bright yellow
on the top of the bill, the females are the classic fairly dull brown of so many
duck species.
Male common scoter
Don’t let the “common” part of the name fool you – scoters
are in real trouble as a British breeding bird, likely having declined by well
over 50% in the last 20 years to the current population of maybe 40 pairs. We
also know virtually nothing about them – which is a bit of a problem when it
comes to coming up with conservation measures to stop them going extinct as a breeding bird in this country.
So it was pretty lucky that us species research folk at the
Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust got some funding to investigate their breeding
ecology on a couple of West Highland lochs over the summer. We started by
finding some nests; easier said than done when you only have 15 females between
two lochs that are both about 12 km long – serious needles in haystacks time.
With a lot of effort and fair bit of luck we managed to find 9, not bad
considering only 20-30 have ever been found before. We could monitor these
nests using cameras and temperature loggers placed in the bottom of the nest
cup to see how many hatched successfully and if they failed why, were they
predated and, if so, by what? Similarly, any ducklings that hatched were
followed to the point that they either disappeared, or successfully fledged.
All pretty basic stuff, but never done before.
Cosy looking nest
Early impressions suggest that when nests were located
within good cover (nice tall and thick vegetation, like old-growth heather)
hatching success was pretty good, although some birds nested on some small
grassy islands with very little cover – and these did very poorly indeed, not
surprising really!
Scoter ducklings are very sweet. They leave the nest after a
day or so and trundle down to the loch after mum, often a trek of a few hundred
metres over rough ground and through thick, snaggly vegetation. Once on the
water though, they are completely at home, diving to feed on aquatic
invertebrates almost immediately, bobbing back up like fluffy corks and quickly
bunching up behind an ever alert mum. Sadly though, more than half of them died
within the first week – thereafter survival is fairly constant, but fewer than
one in five of those that hatched survived through to fledging.
Common scoter female with week-old ducklings
Trying to reduce duckling mortality might prove tricky, but
we think we can quite easily improve the nesting habitat available on these
lochs – hopefully this will mean more successful nests and we get more
ducklings onto the water; if mortality rates remain the same then a few more
ducklings should survive to fledging.