Monday, 5 August 2024

Island Update - July on Skomer

Summer is well underway, and autumn is fast approaching, and by some measures, already here! The last of the Guillemots and Razorbills have headed out with only a handful of sightings every other day. The last few Puffins are seen busily ferrying fish to their chicks, plenty of Kittiwake fledglings are around and the fuzzy Fulmar chicks are popping up across the cliff-tops. The Grey Seals are hauling out in larger and larger numbers across the island over the last few weeks, and we’re all eagerly awaiting the first pup of the season to arrive.

We sadly had to say goodbye to our two LTVs Huia and Mike who have been with us since March, but have welcomed our new ones Pete and Nick who will be staying with us until early October.

A sunny day with a coastal view of jagged rocks and steep cliffs
A sunny view of the Mew Stone from The Neck



A sunny view of a small valley with a path running away from the camera. Mostly bracken in view but in the distance, the yellow flowers of ragwort and a few rocky outcrops
A sunny view of Moorey Mere and South Stream Valley


Gull ringing

In early July, we managed to ring over 350 juvenile Lesser Black-backed Gulls, in order to monitor their breeding success and see how many return to the island in the following years. This involved searching through the bracken (made denser and taller this year thanks to the unusually wet spring) for the juveniles which would either hunker down in the foliage, making it easy to pick them up (apart from some which had your wrists at the top of their menu), or having to follow the shaking vegetation to chase down your gull. These gulls were then handed to our licensed ringers to be fitted with their rings before being released.

Two people standing in a bracken covered area looking at the camera. The person on the left is holding a small juvenile gull at their side
Our new LTVs Nick (left) and Pete (right) helping with the gull ringing

Manx Shearwater research

The OxNav masters students, Bridget and Layla, have been working hard with their daily weighing of the Manx Shearwater chicks. Recently, they have also started night work, which involves working on the colony in the early hours weighing adults and chicks. With the help of Lewis, several adults have been fitted with GPS devices in order to learn more about foraging behaviour and their day to day movements. As this work can carry on until 3am, the researchers are virtually in a different time-zone whilst these night shifts are happening.

A small, grey, fluffy chick sitting in a red mug. The mug is on a weighing scale reading 341g.
The quickly-growing Manx Shearwater chicks being weighed in a mug

Kittiwake fledglings

With the auks all out at sea, the sounds of the cliffs are now dominated by the Kittiwakes. On the 24th July we had our first fledgling, spotted by Will at High Cliff. Seeing the juvenile Kittiwakes getting to grips with flying is always a joy to see, and are a highlight for the visitors.

Red Campion Anther Smut Fungus

One particular highlight for me has been finding several sites across the island with Red Campion Anther Smut Fungus (Microbotryum silene-dioicae). As the name implies, this is a type of smut (from the German for “dirt”) fungus which takes over the sexual organs of the Red Campion flower. The usual bright white anthers are instead coated in a dark brown mass of spores where the fungus then utilises pollinators in order to spread from one host to another. This can often lead to a trail of infected flower heads showing the path of the fungus-carrying pollinator. These smut fungi could be seen as a type of horticultural STI. This is a heavily under-recorded species which is likely to be common all across the UK but with only a handful of records, so if you do spot a dark-anthered Red Campion, take a closer look and submit it to your favourite recording organisation!

A hand holding a pink-petalled flower. The centre is coated with a dark brown powder
The dark smut-covered anthers on a Red Campion flower

Ragwort

As the Red Campions are going to seed, the season of Ragworts is in full swing, with large areas of the island being carpeted by this glorious wildflower. Taking a closer look at them, the characteristic black and orange caterpillars of the cinnabar moth make themselves known, with some plants covered in over 40 of them. As I learnt from Ceris this week, the Welsh translation of the Cinnabar moth is “teigr y benfelen” which means “tiger of the golden head”, with the tiger being the black caterpillar with the orange stripes, and the golden head referring to the yellow flowers of the Ragwort. A lovely translation of a beautiful caterpillar with their foodplant.

A black butterfly with orange and white markings feeding on a yellow ragwort flower.
A Red Admiral butterfly enjoying the Ragwort


A green plant with yellow flowers covered in around thirty small black caterpillars with orange stripes.
A multitude of Cinnabar moth caterpillars munching on Ragwort


Skomer Voles

The annual work to monitor the Skomer Vole population has begun, with some of the early starts being rewarded with stunning sunrises and plenty of voles. Over two weeks, hundreds of traps will be monitored to calculate the population of Skomer’s only endemic mammal across the island.

A hand holding a small brown vole which is facing the camera.
The Skomer Vole - Skomer's only endemic mammal species


A sunrise over the fields. The sky, with a mixture of clouds, is a mix of yellow, orange, and blue.
A glorious sunrise at the Farm

With the Ragwort in full bloom, the auks all out at sea, and the Grey Seals making their way to the caves, coves, and beaches to have their pups, Autumn has arrived here on Skomer. 

- Nick (Skomer LTV)

A view of the sunset with a few streaky clouds in the sky being lit to a warm yellow and orange. In the foreground, a still pond with the silhouettes of plants and birds being seen.
A beautiful sunset from North Pond


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