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On the south side six Schwegler no17 all occupied and six soffit boxes each within a foot of the Schwegler's all occupied.That's swifts for you.
Brian ,
Crumlin..
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That's swifts, I agree. In our long-standing 5 'bathroom' natural eaves sites, 4 are occupied yet no3 in the middle has never been, not even a peep from a prospector or a 'mistake' by one of the others. In our 12 Cambridge system sites, 3 remain steadfastly unoccupied. Although there it's possible a swift just stayed in the pipe, the cameras only record in the box. We have huge numbers of bangers too, yet we're not full.
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The first swift arrived back at Swift House on 28th April.
May was a mostly dry and warm month, although the mornings were a tad nippy. The colony slowly re-established itself as last years breeders arrived in dribs and drabs throughout the month.
June turned out to be an exceptional month – the hottest June since records began. It was sunny and warm for almost the whole month. More and more swifts arrived a back and by the end of the month we had 19 breeding pairs, which was a record number at Swift House. 18 were in my camera boxes and the other was in one of my non-camera boxes. The camera boxes produced 40 chicks between them.
July on the other hand was a truly awful month. A shift in the position of the jet stream to the south of the UK brought in a succession of deep low pressures. Week after week of rain and wind followed. The prolonged poor weather eventually took its toll on the colony with 7 chicks dying from starvation. On top of the poor weather we also had the unwanted attention of the local Sparrowhawk who caught at least four adults, leaving another 9 chicks without any parents. Luckily, I managed to foster 7 into my other boxes. The remaining 2 had to be hand-reared. We named them Stanley and Oliver.
Augusts weather started in the same vein as Julys. Thankfully though by the beginning of the month I only had 7 chicks left in my boxes. The last chick in my boxes fledged on 24th August. The following day the last adult departed. The chicks we were hand feeding fledged as followed – Oliver on 20th August and Stanley on 30th August.
Total number of eggs laid 46. Total number of infertile/reject eggs 6. Total number of chicks 40. Total number of chick fatalities 7. Total number of chicks fledged 33.
Mark
Bristol Swifts
ps. Another topic for discussion for another day is can you have too many swifts nesting in one location? We have almost 20 pairs and they make quite a bit of noise especially in the evening. Their activity definitely hasn't gone noticed by the local predators. The last couple of years we've been targeted by sparrowhawks who have worked out how to ambush the swifts as they return. Maybe having fewer pairs would make their nest sites less conspicuous. Maybe there's an optimum number which once passed is counter-productive to the overall health of the colony.
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just for a simple comparison Mark: our colony is 34 pairs but only half on camera so can only report from those.:
Total eggs 49 laid. Total unhatched/ejected/knocked out 10. Chick deaths 4. Chicks fledged 35.
A mixed year for us, wih very early arrivals (28 April) and largest number of clutches of 3 eggs (12) probably reflecting good weather in May.
From: swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com <swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Bristol Swifts
Sent: 26 September 2023 14:59
To: swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [SLN] Swifts Diary 2023: Oxford University Museum of Natural History
Hi All
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Very interesting to see success rates, IF my maths is correct looks like success rates have indeed been similar at these 3 big colonies;
Oxford 114 eggs – 86 fledglings = 75%
Bristol 46 eggs - 33 fledged = 71%
Sedbergh, Cumbria 49 eggs - 35 fledged = 71%
And at a fairly new colony in Bolton at Len Riley’s house;
Bolton 11 pairs 24 eggs – 19 fledged = 79% *( 3 were removed for hand rearing by myself)
16 would have fledged without this intervention making 66.6%
(NOTE ;of the 3 removed- 2 not being fed due to poor weather/1 not fed due to loss 2 adults we believe taken out by neighbour’s new washing pole, raising height of their washing line, right in the flight path and sadly caught both adults at dusk exit to get more food for the chick)
Sorry to hear about you Sparrow Hawk predation too Mark. Sadly, I know of two other big northern colonies where Sparrow Hawks have caused losses.
I think though in view of the very wet July these fledgling rates are not bad at all. As a rehabber I received almost 50 chicks this season only slightly less than the number I received last year when the problem in July 2022 was extreme heat.
Louise
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One can also calculate by Productivity: Number of chicks fledged per breeding pair:
Landbeach 18 pairs - 40 chicks (assume fledged) Productivity 2.2
Oxford 44 pairs - 114 eggs – 86 fledglings = 75% Productivity 1.9
Bristol 19 pairs - 46 eggs - 33 fledged = 71% Productivity 1.7
Sedbergh 17 pairs - 49 eggs - 35 fledged = 71% Productiviy 2.1
Len, Bolton 11 pairs - 24 eggs – 19 fledged = 79% * Productiviy 1.7
Tanya & Edmund
(1) Sedbergh Community Swifts | Facebook
From: swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com <swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Dick Newell
Sent: 26 September 2023 21:44
To: swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [SLN] Swifts Diary 2023: Oxford University Museum of Natural History
All Saints' Landbeach had 18 breeding pairs this year producing 40 chicks. don't know how many eggs were laid.
Even if 3 eggs per pair, then 40/54 = 74% - so they must have been way in excess of that, as all pairs certainly did not lay 3 eggs.
Dick
On Tue, 26 Sept 2023 at 20:42, Super Swifts <super...@outlook.com> wrote:
Very interesting to see success rates, IF my maths is correct looks like success rates have indeed been similar at these 3 big colonies;
Oxford 114 eggs – 86 fledglings = 75%
Bristol 46 eggs - 33 fledged = 71%
Sedbergh, Cumbria 49 eggs - 35 fledged = 71%
And at a fairly new colony in Bolton at Len Riley’s house;
Bolton 11 pairs 24 eggs – 19 fledged = 79% *( 3 were removed for hand rearing by myself)
16 would have fledged without this intervention making 66.6%
(NOTE ;of the 3 removed- 2 not being fed due to poor weather/1 not fed due to loss 2 adults we believe taken out by neighbour’s new washing pole, raising height of their washing line, right in the flight path and sadly caught both adults at dusk exit to get more food for the chick)
Sorry to hear about you Sparrow Hawk predation too Mark. Sadly, I know of two other big northern colonies where Sparrow Hawks have caused losses.
I think though in view of the very wet July these fledgling rates are not bad at all. As a rehabber I received almost 50 chicks this season only slightly less than the number I received last year when the problem in July 2022 was extreme heat.
Louise
Bolton & Bury Swifts
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On 27 Sep 2023, at 08:18, 'Mike Priaulx' via swiftslocalnetwork <swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
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