Spring at Minsmere is well and truly in full swing and as we draw to the endof May we have had many natural events and coming and goings to celebrate.Now that the weather is heating up so too is the number of species found inour moth trap. There is something of a changing of the guard in this sense.The regulars of the past month e.g. hebrew character and common quaker mothsare now replaced by the swarms of cinnabars and frequent brimstone moths.We have new Konik foals on the Levels, often joined by lots of goslings fromany of the three species of geese we have breeding here. With a quick scanof the Scrape you can quite easily identify the small balls of fluff aschicks of some sort. I'm not a professional ID whizz and the approach Iemploy is the "if its standing next to an adult avocet...it's an avocet" one.Although spring is most frequently associated with life it is also very muchfilled with death. Death of one species often means life for another,although this is sometimes hard to understand whilst you sit helplesslywhile a Montagu's harrier systematically rifles through nest after nest onour beloved Scrape (as happened two weeks ago).The Scrape is a purpose built breeding ground for many duck, gull and waderspecies. It boasts an electrified anti predator fence which is the lastdefence against large mammals such as foxes and mink.This brings me nicely onto recent incidents here at Minsmere. The Montagu'sharrier, whilst a great record for Minsmere, decided to stay almost twoweeks doing untold damage to this year's crop of chicks. More recently, our problemscome from our furry friends...the mammals. Our scrape and the birds nestingthere are under constant attack from one particular fox. Its nightly raidsare somewhat hard to quantify, but the tufts of feathers strewn around thearea suggest it's quite a problem. That animal is feeding young, there is nodoubt. All we can do is mobilise wardens to repair the fence and make it asdifficult as possible for the animal to gain access. We must balance ourrepairs and improvements with disturbance to nesting birds, which is justanother challenge we face.At the weekend, we were quickly introduced to another mammalian mother withyoung to feed. A stoat has discovered the apparently endless larder of sandmartins. The stoat's visits are frequent and in broad daylight. Its brazenattitude has had many people upset and asking what we do to prevent this. Wehave filled in burrows, made repairs to the fence, but it is a determined andvery agile animal. We will continue to keep an eye on the sand martins andhopefully they will try for another brood. In the case of the sand martins,death sustains life as do the fox's nightly visits.There seems to be more to spring than meets the eye. The cycle of life willcontinue and come mid to late summer when the birds finally fledge we soonrealise that these trials are all part of life and indeed all we can do isour best. Our role involves hard work and understanding of nature'srequirements. We will move into next year's breeding season with ourexperience from the last and try to improve and move forward to face newchallenges in a changing environment.
Awesome post Ricky.
Matt Williams, Assistant Warden, RSPB Snape.