Springwatch British Wildlife: Accompanies the BBC 2 TV series. Stephen Moss
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Springwatch British Wildlife: Accompanies the BBC 2 TV series - Stephen Moss страница 5

Название: Springwatch British Wildlife: Accompanies the BBC 2 TV series

Автор: Stephen Moss

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Природа и животные

Серия:

isbn: 9780007494446

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ is a good way to tell the three commoner British buntings apart: the corn bunting sounds exactly like someone rattling a bunch of keys; the yellowhammer sings the famous mnemonic ‘a-little-bit-of-bread-and-no-cheeeeese’; while the reed bunting makes a rather pathetic sound, sometimes rendered as ‘pick-my-liquorice’, though it also sounds something like a bored sound engineer, continually repeating the mantra of ‘testing… one… two… testing’.

      Both yellowhammers and reed buntings now regularly come to bird tables, especially in rural areas or where there is arable farmland or a wetland nearby. This has helped them maintain their numbers at a time when the wider countryside can no longer provide the food they need, and also brought a touch of the exotic among the usual tits, finches and sparrows.

      The odd man out of our buntings is the snow bunting. It doesn’t really belong in Britain, as it is adapted to living in the far north, and is the only small bird to spend the winter months in the Arctic. Nevertheless, a few pairs nest each summer in snow-covered parts of the Scottish Highlands, while in winter little flocks can sometimes be seen along our east coasts. In flight, they are very easy to identify – like a flock of snowflakes scattering through the air!

image

      ©Marcel van Kammen/Minden Pictures/FLPA

      The male reed bunting is one of our most handsome breeding birds.

image

      ©Andrew Parkinson/FLPA

      The snow bunting is one of the toughest birds on the planet.

image

      ©Bill Coster/FLPA

      Blackbirds often feed on berry bushes in winter to supplement their energy needs.

      These are three of our most familiar birds, with distinctive and well-loved songs: the blackbird and song thrush regularly top the hit parade of Britain’s favourite songsters. All three are resident, though numbers are supplemented each autumn and winter with new arrivals from across the North Sea, taking advantage of our milder climate. All three are also well adapted to gardens, though the mistle thrush is also commonly found in more open countryside and parkland, with tall trees from which it can deliver its song.

      Indeed, the mistle thrush is often one of the first songbirds to sing, at the start of the new year – even earlier during mild winters. Thomas Hardy wrote a famous poem, The Darkling Thrush, which celebrates a thrush singing during blustery weather on New Year’s Eve; many people think that this early date and the bad weather point to this being a mistle, rather than a song, thrush. Mistle thrushes have earned the folk name ‘stormcock’ for their habit of singing through the worst of the British weather.

      The song thrush is usually the next of the trio to sing, usually starting off in January or early February. Its song is probably the most distinctive of all our birds: measured phrases, repeated in twos or threes, as if the bird were talking to you! Soon afterwards the blackbird joins in, deeper than the song thrush, with a really fluty tone.

      All three birds often choose a high perch from which to deliver their songs, which makes them easy to see. This is a good time of year to get to grips with the differences between them. Male blackbirds are easy: coal-black in colour, with that distinctive bright custard-yellow bill and – if you get close enough to see it – a yellow ring around the eye. Female blackbirds, which tend to be more skulking in habit, are chocolate-brown above and below.

      The two thrushes are harder to tell apart, though with practice not too tricky. The mistle thrush is much larger, paler and greyer, with heavy spotting below and a permanently surprised expression on its face. Song thrushes are smaller, plumper and a deeper brown colour, and with a much more kindly expression! Beware young blackbirds, especially in late summer, which can be a bit streaky below and a little thrush-like.

      These birds’ nests are easy to find too, often tucked away in a shrub or bush or, in the case of the mistle thrush, in the fork of a tree. All three start to breed very early on, and sometimes have eggs (and occasionally even chicks) before Christmas or early in the new year. The two thrushes have two broods – the song thrush sometimes three – but blackbirds really are the champion nesters, often raising three, four or even five broods of chicks in a single breeding season. This avoids the ‘putting all your eggs in one basket’ problem faced by blue tits, and means that even if there is prolonged bad weather during some parts of the breeding season, they can usually get at least one brood of chicks to fledging.

      The blackbird and mistle thrush eat a wide range of foods, including snails and worms as well as berries and fruit – a mistle thrush will often spend the winter defending a single berry bush against all-comers. Song thrushes are more carnivorous, feeding mainly on slugs and snails, which they bash on a heavy stone, known as an ‘anvil’, to get them out of their shells. Song thrushes suffer badly from poisoning by agricultural and garden pesticides, especially slug pellets – being a natural pest controller, they should be welcomed into the garden! In autumn and winter, all three species, but especially blackbirds, will feed on windfall apples.

      The availability of food and places where the birds can nest means that gardens are incredibly important for both blackbirds and song thrushes – they nest there in densities up to ten times greater than in their natural woodland habitats.

image

      ©John Hawkins/FLPA

image

      ©Steve Young/FLPA

      Mistle thrush and song thrush enjoy a varied diet, including fruit as well as insects, snails and slugs.

image

      ©Erica Olsen/FLPA

      ©Mike Lane/FLPA

      Fieldfare and redwing are two of the commonest species wintering in Britain.

      From time to time, as frost and snow take their grip on the British winter, three beautiful and exotic-looking visitors to our shores turn up in our gardens, to the delight of anyone lucky enough to get close views of them.

      Two of these winter visitors are members of the thrush family, closely related to the more familiar song and mistle thrushes. The redwing and the fieldfare are often known simply as ‘winter thrushes’, as they come in their millions each autumn from Scandinavia and Iceland to spend the winter months here. Like waders and wildfowl, they do so to take advantage of our relatively mild winter climate compared with places to the north and east of Britain.

      Usually they spend most of the time roaming the wider countryside in huge flocks, stripping the hedgerows bare of berries or feeding in muddy fields. But when snow and ice make finding food more difficult, they often head into our gardens in search of windfall apples, berry bushes and other food we provide.

      Of the two, the redwing is by far the СКАЧАТЬ