The North Sea population of Sandwich Terns is highly mobile
after breeding with birds remaining in the vicinity for several months
post-breeding. It has long been known and indeed our ringing has also shown that
Sandwich terns from other parts of the North Sea Population arrive on our coats
in late autumn prior to migrating south for the winter. Although this is a phenomena we know occurs
it is still poorly understood. Hopefully some of the efforts we and Dutch
researchers are undertaking will shed some light but for now little or no
information exists on the inter-annual movements of individuals. As the study
is no reaching its 3rd year we are now starting to gather some intriguing
evidence. Today I received several sightings from a local researcher that had
spotted 8 colour ringed sandwich terns while reading shag colour rings on the
local coastline. One of the birds was a real gem of a sighting having first
been caught and colour ringed in late August 2010 and subsequently located
breeding in the Netherlands in both 2012 and 2013 (see photo). That information alone is interesting
but in 2012 I observed it in early September again in north-east Scotland. So we
know that this individual that breeds in the Netherlands has returned in late autumn
to the same stretch of coast in Scotland at least 3 of the last 4 years prior
to migrating south. Fantastic information that we would never have been able to
get without the use of colour rings and the dedication of international
observers! Hopefully with further ringers using colour rings in the UK and a
lot more sightings we can shed some light on this fascinating behaviour.
Sandwich tern EKA breeding in the Netherlands (Fred Visscher)
EKA on a pre-migration trip up to Peterhead (Jenny Sturgeon)
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