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Entries in Shoveler (6)

Wednesday
Sep112013

Shoveler - 1949

Spatula clypeata

Not very numerous winter visitor, chiefly on the coast and to Skokholm and Skomer.  Regular visitor to Orielton (over one hundred there 30 Jan 1939). A few pairs breed, eg three or four three-quarters grown young shot Dowrog, 1904, nest and eggs found Angle 8 June 1931 (Bertram Lloyd), adults seen in June at St Davids 1929, and Angle 1930.

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

Monday
May072012

Shoveler - 2003-07

Shoveler have nested at several localities in the county in the past but in the last twenty years seem to have become confined to three places. During the 1984-88 survey breeding was confirmed at Skomer and Marloes Mere. The 2003-07 survey found confirmed nesting at Skomer and probable breeding at Skokholm and Marloes Mere.

Graham Rees

 

Fieldwork 2003-07

Red = breeding confirmed = 1

Orange = breeding probable = 1

Total tetrads in which registered = 2

Thursday
Dec152011

Shoveler - 1994

Winter visitor and sparse breeder

Mathew (1894) regarded the Shoveler as being "not very common". Mackworth Praed (1946) writing about Orielton decoy stated that the Shoveler was comparatively rare before 1914 but "now 100 pairs is a very normal count" while Lockley et al. described it as a "not very numerous winter visitor" but regular at Orielton. Lockley (1956) noted that unusual numbers of Shovelers visited Orielton in December 1955, with at least 300 there on 28 December, the largest gathering recorded in the county. Subsequently it has remained a scarce winter visitor, the only locality used with great regularity being Marloes Mere. At this site they are difficult to count because of the extensive cover, but up to 50 are seen most winters. The islands of Skokholm and Skomer and the pond at Trefeiddan Pool are used as staging posts during the spring departure. Up to six have occurred erratically elsewhere in the county, mostly near the coast at localities such as Dowrog, Bosherston Pools and the Cleddau Estuary.

Lockley et al. (1949) list Angle, Castle Martin Corse, Dowrog and St David's as breeding localities. Breeding was suspected at several sites during the 1970s. Saunders (1976) classified the Shoveler as a casual breeder and notes that "there have been several reports of breeding in the south of the county". They were proved to be breeding at Skokholm and at Marloes Mere during the Breeding Birds Survey of 1984-1988, at Skokholm in 1991 and 1992 and at Skomer in 1989, 1990 and 1992.

Ringing recoveries from Orielton have shown that some of our winter Shovelers come from breeding grounds such as the Volga and Petchora rivers on the western Siberian Plain.

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

Sunday
Nov132011

Shoveler - 1970s breeding

Red = breeding confirmed

Orange = breeding probable

Yellow = breeding possible

Sunday
Oct092011

Shoveler - 1980s winter

The BTO winter atlas showed that Shovelers were present in fresh water and estuarine10km squares during the winters of 1981-82, 1982-82 and 1983-84.

The darkest colour for each 10km square represents 8-34 birds seen in a day, Marloes Mere being the site that regularly held the largest numbers.

Graham Rees 

Tuesday
Jan112011

Shoveler - 1894

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

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