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Entries in Little Auk (5)

Monday
Oct282013

Little Auk - 1949

Alle alle alle

Occasional winter visitor (seen especially by fishermen offshore) both now (R.M.L.) and in Mathew's time.  One picked up dead Solva, 18 Dec 1936 (H.W.Evans) and one found dead Freshwater East in winter 1945

R.M.Lockley, G.C.S.Ingram, H.M.Salmon, 1949, The Birds of Pembrokeshire, The West Wales Field Society

Thursday
Dec222011

Little Auk - 1994

Winter visitor. Not recorded in April and from June to August

Mathew (1894) considered the Little Auk to be an occasional winter visitor, with birds being picked up dead upon the shore or at some distance inland in rough weather. Lockley et al. (1949) agreed with this and noted dead birds at Solva on 18 December 1936 and at Freshwater East in the winter of 1945. One flew down Milford Haven after gales on 23 October 1942 (Ball 1943).

The remains of at least 13 were found on Skokholm in 1950 which were estimated to have been "wrecked" during February. Otherwise up to six have been recorded in 20 years since 1950, annually since 1983. They have been recorded all around the coast from Newport Bay to Amroth, as well the islands, including the Smalls, but principally at Strumble Head where an exceptional 21 were seen on 20 November 1983. They have also been blown inland, to Haverfordwest on 11 December 1950, to a swimming pool at Keeston on 4 January 1978, to Trecwn on 5 February 1984 and to Clarbeston on 5 February 1984.

The earliest recorded Little Auk was on 10 September and the latest on 4 March, apart from one bird in summer plumage at St Govan's Head on 30 May 1983.

Donovan J.W. & Rees G.H (1994), Birds of Pembrokeshire

Sunday
Oct092011

Little Auk: 1980s winter atlas

 

The BTO winter atlas showed that Little Auks were noted in three Pembrokeshire 10km squares during the winters of 1981-82, 1982-82 and 1983-84. These were single birds noted inshore following onshore gales.

 

Graham Rees

Tuesday
Mar012011

Little Auk - 1894

Species account from M Mathew, 1894, "The Birds of Pembrokeshire and its islands"

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
May122010

Little Auk

Alle alle

Occasional visitor.

The Little Auk is a high Arctic bird breeding westward from the Bering Sea to Baffin Island. Wintering areas include the Norwegian Sea, northern North Sea, Iceland and Greenland waters. Migratory and dispersive Little Auks have occurred as far south as France, the Mediterranean, Madeira and the Azores.

Recorded occurrences in Pembrokeshire have increased over time, from 30 occasions between 1880 and 1981 to 137 times between 1982 and 2006. This is most likely a reflection of observer activity rather than a change in status. Most have involved birds being pushed near to shore by strong winds.

The largest incursion may well have been in February 1950, when the West Wales Field Society reported “many washed up dead on the coast”, one was picked up near Haverfordwest on the 11th February and the remains of at least 13 were found on Skokholm when the island was re-occupied in April. These were part of a “wreck” affecting the south west of Britain and Ireland between the 8th and 11th February, following powerful south west winds. 

Subsequent records have related to very small numbers, 75% involving sightings of single birds but eight were noted on the 1st October 1995, 13 on 24th September 1995 and 21 on 20th November 1983. Mostly live birds, but some dead or moribund, have been recorded at many places around the coast from Amroth in the south to Newport Bay in the north. They have also been recorded from the offshore islands of Ramsey, Skomer and Skokholm and further out to sea around The Smalls. Singles have been found beyond the outer coast at Fishguard Harbour, the Gann/Dale, Angle Bay, Pembroke, Haverfordwest , Keeston, Walwyn’s Castle, Clarbeston and Trecwn.

Cumulative totals by month of occurrence.

The earliest date recorded was of one passing Strumble Head on the 10th September 1987, the latest one at St Govans’s Head on the 30th May 1983. The majority (79 %) recorded between 1983 and 2006 were from Strumble Head, reflecting the intensity of seawatching at that locality. 

Occurrences on the west coast of Britain seem to bear no relationship to the not infrequent “wrecks” of large numbers along English North Sea shores. The Norwegian Sea into the North Sea, almost south to the Dogger Bank, is a major wintering area and prolonged strong winds from the north could be expected to push Little Auks further south into the funnel shaped southern North Sea. Such winds would be unlikely to result in a westerly displacement of these birds into the Atlantic but might well affect birds wintering in the Iceland and Greenland sea-area. These would find themselves pushed into the wide Atlantic where they could conceivably become dispersed, or if still concentrated to any degree be a long way from land. Subsequent strong westerlies could push some of these into Irish and western British waters but events documented so far suggests that, with no known concentrations in adjacent areas, would result in small numbers being involved. The largest numbers involved, as in 1950, were small compared to southern North Sea incursions. It also seems relevant that birds reaching the south western area would have travelled over four times the distance from known wintering areas than those in the southern North Sea would.

Graham Rees