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Lincs Bird Club Member |
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Joined: Sat Jan 08, 2005 2:13 pm Posts: 316 Location: New Mills, Derbyshire
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Roger Hebb wrote: Ho Alex, was reading your excellent chaptor in Russell slacks book yesterday,had the bk ages thou,,I dont think no body believes anybody anymore,unless its down on digital format of some kind... Regards, Rog. Cheers Rog, hopefully the next won't be too far down the line. I wrote about the 'problem of sea-watching in a Birdwatch column a few years ago: Shelf life: not unfathomableCape Clear, Porthgwarra, St Ives, Flamborough, Sheringham, Strumble, Portland, names synonymous with hours of staring at the sea, usually without seeing much more than water and the odd gull or Gannet. Sit for hundreds of hours (and/or get the conditions right) and you might eventually strike lucky with big shear, storm-petrel and skua movements, maybe even a sniff of a ‘presumed Fea’s’. Wait for long enough (years) and something truly extraordinary will fly by – that longed-for albatross or crazy tubenose from the southern hemisphere. But will anyone believe you? Birding folklore is filled with stories of the ones that got away; Black-capped Petrel at Portland, Short-tailed Shearwater and Great-winged Petrel at Flamborough, Herald Petrel at Dunge etc, etc. There’s no doubt these crazy seabirds do occur, but getting enough ‘proof’ of a flypast on a seawatch is nigh-on impossible. Let’s face it, you can’t really blame the BBRC for rejecting ‘outrageous’ and ‘off-the-radar’ claims of photographically undocumented, difficult to identify rare seabirds, seen for a few seconds through spray-soaked optics. Moreover, how long can you safely stare at the sea before you start seeing Procellaria petrels and mermaids?
Popular it may be, but is seawatching really worth the eye strain, boredom and eventual heartache? Blasphemy! Some of you may cry, but in our opinions a portion of the man-hours put in by British and Irish birders on headlands could be better spent elsewhere. Forget peninsulas, think boats, crisp DSLR images and deep water - really deep water: the shelf edge. At the moment, we collectively manage a measly handful of pelagic trips a year out beyond Scillies, e.g. the annual Scillonian adventure (and more recently a few trips off Ireland) but most boats don’t reach really deep waters. Obviously those pioneering folk plying Scillonian seas in small craft have done very well for themselves with Red-billed Tropicbird, Swinhoe’s and Madeiran Storm-petrels and multiple Fea’s, but surely this is just a taste of what lies 260 miles further out in 1100 fathoms. Off Western Ireland, you can hit the continental shelf edge just 40 miles from port.
The Americans are way ahead of us on this one. Over there, deep water trips in the Atlantic have produced seven (!) species of storm-petrel, including three Black-bellieds in recent years (shades of Sheringham...), four species of Pterodroma petrel on a regular basis, along with Black-browed and Yellow-nosed Albatrosses etc. They go out every week in the peak season and use boats with enough outboards to chase down Pterodromas, so there can be no ‘one that got away’. Over in the Pacific, deep water trips have produced six species of albatross and seven species of gadfly petrels in ABA waters, not to mention the likes of Parkinson’s Petrel and Ringed Storm-petrel. So why are we so slow to catch up? Presumably it’s because of lack of demand for such ventures. Over in the states, folk don’t go in for seawatching like we do on the Celtic Fringe. If they want to see seabirds they go to sea. To be a top ABA big lister you have to do lots of trips; from Mottled Petrels in the Gulf of Alaska to Red-trailed Tropicbirds 100 miles off California and White-faced Storm-petrels in the Gulf Stream. It doesn’t even take that many trips off North Carolina to see the Pterodroma set, but the more trips you get out on, the better your chance of a real mega. Brian Patteson’s company alone ran 52 trips in 2008! One could imagine that we could get a similar snowball effect over here should Black-capped Petrels and South Polar Skuas be found to occur on the Porcupine Bank off SW Ireland.
And why not? The potential doesn’t stop with those species. Bermuda and Trinidade Petrels, both recorded from the Azores must be periodically arching unseen across our offshore deep waters, not to mention two species of tropicbird, two boobies, ‘brown’ terns and other Gulf Stream specials. Madeiran Storm-petrels ought to be annual out there and White-faced remains a distinct possibility. Zino’s may be an enigma, but it’s not actually numerically much rarer than Desertas Petrel - it’s surely only a matter of time before one succumbs to a Canon 50D. This is not to mention the endless possibilities for albatrosses and other Antipodean fayre. You wouldn’t expect every trip to deliver, no more so than you would expect Fair Isle to if it were checked on one day a month. Currently there is no push factor on ‘top twitchers’; our current world of pelagic possibilities is still available from the Bridges of Ross on a good day. Sure, staring at the sea there can be great, but it could be so different. Imagine the brinkmanship as the top guns vie for places on a deep water boat leaving Kerry tickets selling faster than Take That at the O2. Who would want to be the one, the one that just missed out on the trip that got Shy Albatross?
_________________ Dr Alexander C. Lees Lecturer in tropical ecologyManchester Metropolitan University Lab Associate
Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Cornell University http://www.freewebs.com/alexlees/index.htm@Alexander_Lees
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