Since the early 1980s, the numbers of Cuckoos has been in decline and this may be because the populations of some key host species, such as Dunnock and Meadow Pipit, have also declined. Consequently, the Cuckoo is now red list species.
Clement is the first of five cuckoos being tracked on their return migration by the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO), and featured in The Independent last week, to leave Europe behind.
Two days ago he crossed over the Mediterranean from south-eastern Spain to Algeria, and is now resting on the northern slopes of the Atlas mountains before the toughest part of his journey – crossing the Sahara desert.
With his fellow cuckoos Martin, Lyster, Kasper and Chris, all caught in East Anglia in May and fitted with ultra-light satellite tracking devices, Clement is part of a fascinating experiment which hopes to solve the last of the cuckoo's mysteries – where exactly the birds go in winter. Their progress can be followed in detail on their blogs on the BTO website, which are constantly updated.
The work is considered vital, because the cuckoo, whose call is one of the best-loved signals of springtime, is rapidly declining in Britain, having tumbled in numbers by 65 per cent between 1984 and 2009.
The birds may be disappearing because of a decline in their insect food in Britain, but it is also possible that they are running into difficulties on their African wintering grounds, or on the various intermediate "staging posts" they use to refuel on their 3,000-mile journeys. Habitat destruction could be to blame.
The satellite photo shows that his current location, a scrub-covered northern slope of the Atlas mountains in the Sidi-bel-Abbes region, is the very last vegetated area before the vast sandy and rocky expanses of the Sahara, the immense barrier which he will probably cross at night to escape the searing heat and lack of food.
Why not check out the news from the wildlife enquiries team?
The tracked cuckoos still seem to be in southern Europe.
Learning every day.
Martin's blog
Tiger Signature
Thanks Tiger. Yes tracking has certainly been an eye-opener hasn't it?
Shame about poor old Clement.
ChloeB & Tiger's Osprey Data
Unknown said: Tom Yes this is fascinating. I've been following the cuckoos' progress on the BTO's tracking site, since the project was mentioned on Springwatch. Two of them are now crossing the Sahara.
Tom
Yes this is fascinating. I've been following the cuckoos' progress on the BTO's tracking site, since the project was mentioned on Springwatch.
Two of them are now crossing the Sahara.
The tracked cuckoos seem to be languishing down south still.
The latest:
Lyster and Chris have returned to the UK
The project team has concluded that Martin died soon after his arrival in Spain in early April, when there was a spell of wet and cold weather.
Kasper's status is uncertain - he was last heard from in Algeria, when his transmitter battery appeared to have a low charge.
Relly good news. Is anyone going to go out to try and find them?
I have been keeping up with all 5 cuckoos too and it is great news that two have made it back, it is sad though that 3 went all that way not to return again. Thanks Sue C for keeping us informed.
http://scottishwildlifetrust.org.uk/things-to-do/wildlife-webcams/loch-of-lowes/
There have been a new lot of cuckoos tagged See tagged cuckoos
It seems that they migrate much earlier than the various songs suggest.
Lyster causes a surprise. See report here
Interesting. Wonder what the prevailing winds were like then? Mind you, I notice in one of the potential explanations they said he might have 'drifted' off course, rather than got 'blown' off course which doesn't suggest the winds were that strong.