Migration

I don't know if you got this unfinished blog, I pressed the wrong button...sorry.

  1. Why don't the chicks come back for 2/3 years?
  2. How do they 'know' when the 2/3years are up?
  3. How do they know which direction they are going?
  4. Will they come back to LG?

Thanks, in anticipation for answers!!!!

"Birds of a Feather".... ~( :o )

  • Ah Libby, I've had an epiphany, or maybe just a clout across my head !! Anyway, I reckon the yellow TICK is for when someone (no idea who mind!) indicates that the 'suggested answer' is actually, the 'correct answer'. ......or not. But maybe.    :)

  • Watched Garten this pm for ages - she is my favourite - hate to think of her going and then knowing nothing for 2 years and then only maybe knowing what becomes of her.  (your quote)

     

    Mmmmm. Yes, I'm with you there, Libby. The awful chasm of not knowing about precious little Garten for two years - and just hoping that after that time someone spots her leg ring!  Shudder. It's all too much. I don't know that I'm going to do the GoogleEarth thing - I did last year, but Deshar just broke me up.

     

     

  • LLOYD....thank you so much for explaining migration. I can understand them using land marks etc. but what fascinates me is how do they  'know'  when the 2/3yrs are up and it is time to migrate and hopefully breed.

    I guess it is one of life's mysteries!!!!

    PS. I am an avid fan of Walt Disney LOL........wouldn't it be great if life for the wildlife were like that???

    Thanks again and I am sure I will have more questions for you!!!

    "Birds of a Feather".... ~( :o )

  • Unknown said:

    Watched Garten this pm for ages - she is my favourite - hate to think of her going and then knowing nothing for 2 years and then only maybe knowing what becomes of her.  (your quote)

     

    Mmmmm. Yes, I'm with you there, Libby. The awful chasm of not knowing about precious little Garten for two years - and just hoping that after that time someone spots her leg ring!  Shudder. It's all too much. I don't know that I'm going to do the GoogleEarth thing - I did last year, but Deshar just broke me up.

     

     

    This a second attempt!

    I maked the last known 'sightings' for Deshar and Nethy on Google so they are gone but not forgotten. I still upsets me to think of Deshar being exhausted and all alone in the Atlantic. 0% survival last year wasn't good - let's hope this year is better. Can I bear to watch?

     

    Libby  :o)

  • No British juvenile osprey has to my knowledge ever carried a transmitter to Africa and back although two have successfully carried them to Portugal and back.

    I feel feel very hopeful that either Rothes or Mallachie will be the first British juveniles to carry a transmitter to Africa an back but then who knows they may elect to overwinter in Spain or Portugal.

    There is one juvenile osprey that has carried a tranmitter to Africa and back (a number of times) and that was a young Finnish osprey called Mirja. See http://www.fmnh.helsinki.fi/english/zoology/satelliteospreys/2002/mirja.htm

  • Hi Libby

    I too often think about poor wee Deshar and of the exhaustion/fear she must have felt. As you say gone but not forgotten and let's hope for successful migration this year. I am sure it will be, our three sisters are so healthy and just look at their genetic makeup.....EJ and Odin!!!!! :o)

    "Birds of a Feather".... ~( :o )

  • Like you I still have dear Deshar's route on google earth and I marked his final resting place with a star and a name tag, Nethy's route is marked but you never know .......she may return in a year or two.

  • My work colleague also works volunteer for the BTO and is an official ringer in Aberdeenshire. I sometimes attend with this work. Early in the season we spotted a lone Osprey with a Plastic Tag and BTO Steel Tag around the River Don in Aberdeenshire. Through binnoculars the colured tag was easily identified which my colleague reported to the BTO. This was a 3 year old male ringed from a nest in Perthshire. May be this information may help. We are not sure if this was the first return or not as it was the first reported ID since first migration.

    Please report all sightings to the BTO to help build up a study - unfortunately it is very difficult to see the ID on the ring in most cases. Have managed to sight many Ospreys this year around Newburgh area (Good year this year) some with rings some without but the early one was the only positive ID we have managed.

     

  • Hi Libby,

    In your in the "advice" forum (i.e. Q & As) if you post an question, you can "confirm" the answer if you think it answers your posted question. i.e. the answer thats most useful or helpful. Community moderators can also "confirm" answers if it is a difinative answer...

    All all the users can make a post and then mark this as "suggested answer"..  to your question.. Both the question postee and moderators can also "mark as not the answer". Hope that makes sense!

    Lloyd

  • Not only did tagged chicks Nethy and Deshar not make it last year but two other tagged chicks also failed to migrate successfully. These were Logie's two chicks Glen and Moray. Logie herself who was also tagged was lost on migration last year. Details are on Roy Dennis's website

    http://www.roydennis.org/

    The only source of knowledge is experience. Albert Einstein