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Entries in passerine (82)

Sunday
Sep262010

Robin - 1894

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

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Sunday
Sep262010

Black redstart - 1894

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

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Sunday
Sep262010

Redstart - 1894

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

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Sunday
Sep262010

Stonechat - 1894

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

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Sunday
Sep262010

Wheatear - 1894

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

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Sunday
Sep262010

Ring Ouzel - 1894

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

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Sunday
Sep262010

Blackbird - 1894

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

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Sunday
Sep262010

Mistle Thrush - 1894

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

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Saturday
May292010

Chaffinch - 1980s winter

Fringilla coelebs

The BTO winter atlas showed that chaffinches were present in virtually all 10km squares during the winters of 1981-82, 1982-82 and 1983-84.

The darker the colour, the higher the relative total count for each 10km square.  The darkest blue represents over 360 birds, with the highest count being 1258 in SM80.

However, it should be noted that the figures show a high correlation with the number of recording cards returned (therefore related to recording effort) for each 10km square. 

LACK, P.C. (1986) The atlas of wintering birds in Britain and Ireland. T. & A.D. Poyser

Saturday
May292010

Chaffinch - 2008 winter

Fringilla coelebs

Chaffinch numbers have been boosted during the winter months when the sedentary breeding population has been joined by immigrant continental birds. Bertram Lloyd (1939) considered the small groups he found around farm rickyards and dungyards to be local birds but the larger flocks in the more open countryside were continental birds.

Since then the farmyard groups have largely disappeared in the absence of spilled grain and dung heaps, which have largely given way to slurry pits. Groups in the wider countryside have varied in size and distribution dependent on the nature of changing agricultural practices. Those areas proving attractive to Chaffinches have been barley stubbles, seeded turnips, unharvested linseed and crops like sunflowers planted for the benefit of Pheasants. Beech mast has also been exploited but the quantity available is cyclical and the trees are local and sparsely distributed in the county.

The size of most winter flocks has been between 50 to 300 birds, with some larger gatherings on record. 500 were at Longhouse on the 6th February 2004 and Castle Martin on the 15th January 2007, 600 at St Florence on 31st December 2005, 750 at Angle on the 23rd December 2008, 900 at Marloes on the 25th January 1993, 2,000 at St Florence on 29th January 2006 and 3,000 at Hubberston on the 5th January 2006. 

Graham Rees. (Covers records up to and including 2008)
References: LLOYD. B. 1929-1939 Diaries, National Museum of Wales.

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