Monday, 20 June 2016

Long-term Volunteers from Australia - a new irruption species?



Irruption [ih-ruhp-shuh n]


1. breaking or bursting in; a violent incursion or invasion.
2. a sudden increase in an animal population.


Hi, I’m Tracey-Ann and I’m the seabird monitoring volunteer on Skomer this summer. The role is a new one this year to help with the huge amount of monitoring work that goes on on the island during the peak seabird breeding time. I’m here for five weeks in total and the time is absolutely flying by, like a Puffin in a very strong crosswind (this is happening outside the window just now – who’d have thought that Puffins could go sideways so fast!) It’s such a fantastic privilege and a pleasure to work on Skomer, to join the amazing team of people here at the moment and, in an albeit extremely tiny way, to contribute to the long history of research and monitoring that Skomer is renowned for.


Summer is a busy time for Skomer’s seabirds and everyone who studies them. This Lesser Black-backed Gull was counted during the gull survey in May. Photo T-A Hooley.


I’ve come to Skomer from Melbourne (there’s a minor invasion of Australians here this year). I’m a biologist and have been hooked on seabird ecology and conservation since first meeting a Shy Albatross while sailing on a Tall Ship in Tasmania about eight years ago. I now crew Tall Ships as often as I can and I love the opportunity it provides for spending vast amounts of time in the seabirds’ realm, far out in the ocean and in every kind of weather. Watching albatrosses in flight in 40 knots of wind is absolutely breathtaking (and it’s why I’m enjoying the Fulmars here on Skomer so much – they fly in quite a similar way.) Back on land, my day job is at Melbourne Museum where I coordinate biodiversity surveys. We get into quite remote places where little or no survey work has been done yet. It’s such a contrast to Skomer with it’s impressively high intensity of monitoring and its robust data sets stretching back to the 1940’s. We’d love to have more data sets like these back home!


One of Skomer’s Northern Fulmars in flight at North Haven. Photo T-A Hooley.

This week on the island we’ve been busy finishing off the shearwater census. We somehow seem to have saved the most burrowy plots til last and so we’re working extremely carefully in the sites, crawling on hands and knees to check each burrow for a response to the playback of the shearwater call. After listening to the tape day in day out for the last couple of weeks, we’ve all managed to perfect out Manx Shearwater ‘impersonation’ – no doubt this will come in handy in a bar somewhere one day!



Jane, Elisa, Bee and Andy doing their cover version of ‘Manx Shearwater, Greatest Hits’. Photo T-A Hooley.

And now we’re getting underway with the second round of the Whole Island Seabird Count. Every year, each cliff-nesting bird on the island is counted – twice! This means all the Common Guillemots, Razorbills, Black-legged Kittiwakes and Northern Fulmars (though this year our job has been made a little easier as we’re not required to count the Guillemots.) Doing the whole island count twice and then taking an average helps improve the reliability of the data. The results of the counts are plotted with data from all the preceding years to help identify trends in populations – are some species increasing or decreasing over time? If so, we can start to investigate why and potentially address any relevant conservation issues.


Razorbills – ‘2’, Puffins – ‘2’, Guillemots – ‘um, 1.75…’ Luckily we don’t have to include the Guillies in the Whole Island Count this year. Photo T-A Hooley.


For the purposes of the Whole Island Seabird Count, Skomer is divided into 45 sections of coastline. There are some classic, though rather hard to interpret, faded black and white photos of each section. To bring things up to date, we’ve just rephotographed each section of the island from the boat and compiled annotated, colour photographs with the boundary sections clearly marked. (This has meant a bit of office work, but luckily the office at North Haven has that view of the Puffins goings sideways in the gusts…)


Old and new photos of the cliff sections of Skomer. And the office window at North haven where the puffins go whizzing by… Photo T-A Hooley.

Finished photo of count section 1

We do most of the cliff counts from the RIB (rigid inflatable boat), and a few from land where there are suitable vantage points. Being out on the boat is one of the best bits of the Skomer fieldwork. We’re out each day that the wind is Force 4 or less and we do the counts from 10 am – 4 pm. This usually includes a little bit of time for a lunch break in the boat, often in a beautiful sheltered cove with seabirds swimming around us.

The Skomer team doing the seabird count - can you guess who I am? The Australian hat is a give away.  Photo Aaron Davies
 

Guillemots sneaking up on us on the RIB. They’re extremely curious and come very close to the boat, but whenever we turn around to look at them they swim away in a very nonchalant manner as if they weren’t really checking us out at all! Photo T-A Hooley.



Today we’re also having a team meeting to plan the Storm-petrel surveys. We’ll be starting these in the next day or so and doing them most evenings after the boat counts, so it looks like the next couple of weeks on the island are going to be well and truly action-packed! I’m really looking forward to it, though I hope it doesn’t make the time going zooming by even more quickly. Skomer is a truly amazing place and it’s going to be hard to leave.

Hmm, was that another puffin hurtling sideways past the window just now?...

Tracey-Ann
(Seabird Long-term Volunteer)
 












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