Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust (WWT)

Success! hatch confirms doubling of population

The short text sent from Madagascar by Team Pochard’s Owen Joiner (Aviculture Manager at WWT’s Washington Wetland Centre) said it all: “100% hatch just complete. Massive grins”

Fantastic news that all seven eggs from the third clutch of Critically Endangered Madagascar pochards have hatched successfully at the hotel – incredibly, the total number of chicks we’ve hatched in captivity in the past few weeks outweigh the small number of birds left in the wild! From a precarious 19 adult birds (of which just 6 are female on a single lake in northern Madagascar, we now have 40 Madagascan pochards.

This amazing feat is down to the avicultural skills of WWT’s very own Nige Jarrett and Sparky – now back in the UK after handing over to the second team in Madagascar. Before he left the country, one of Nige’s last jobs was to rush these ‘just laid’ eggs from the lake to the hotel as the rains threatened to cut them off. It was a gamble as the eggs were moved earlier than they would have liked and it was touch and go whether the treacherous and bumpy journey would have damaged the growing chicks in the eggs and stopped them from hatching successfully.

This decision was totally vindicated, as while the seven final chicks were hatching to the sound of heavy rain outside, they knew that, if they had waited, it would have been too late!

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Madagascar pochard population set to double

The race against time to save the Madagascar pochard from extinction is well on the road to success.

WWT’s ‘Team Pochard’ in Madagascar, along with colleagues from Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust and The Peregrine Fund look set to achieve the incredible – doubling the population of the Critically Endangered Madagascar pochard in just one month!

The emergency rescue mission, mounted after a reconnaissance visit in July revealed the situation was worse than feared (discovery of just six females and evidence that chicks from 2008 had died at just a few weeks old), hatched the first eight precious ducklings two weeks ago.

This week (Wednesday) a second clutch of eight more chicks hatched and were taken on the perilous journey by road to transfer them the makeshift rearing facility hurriedly set up by the team in a hotel. A ninth egg then hatched just as the team reached the safety of the hotel.

Amazingly, a third clutch of seven eggs has also been collected but, although they are not due to hatch for another week, they are also being moved now for fear that the rapidly setting in rainy season will make the road impassable until spring.

This is the start of a major project to prevent the extinction of the species. A conservation-breeding programme will, in time, reintroduce birds to wetland sites in the species’ former range, and will work with local communities to protect the remaining site.
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First super whooper completes migration in ‘Supersonic’ time

A satellite-tracked Super Whooper swan has lived up to his name and completed the migration between Iceland and Scotland, flying 800km non-stop over the ocean in just 14 hours. The aptly named Supersonic Bill was just three hours short of the shortest ever recorded journey time by a whooper swan.

Supersonic Bill arrived at Caerlaverock on Monday, with mate C9U, just in time for the morning feed. The satellite data received today not only reveals the very quick journey, but also shows that he seemed to accelerate towards the end of his journey to Caerlaverock, almost as if he knew when the morning feed was due and wanted to make it in time. Caerlaverock Reserve Warden Richard Smith said: “We know that Supersonic Bill was travelling at 114kph past Auchencairn Bay on the Solway at 8am on Monday. He covered the final 25km in just 15 minutes before flying onto the whooper pond here at Caerlaverock to be greeted by me with a barrow of grain! Not surprisingly he looked a bit tired, but otherwise not bad given that he was in Iceland only the day before!”

The unseasonably mild conditions in mid to late October saw a lull in swan migration following the arrival on 7 and 8 October of Baldur, a WWT Welney bird, and K9H, a Caerlaverock bird to Britain after spending the summer in Iceland. Baldur has since shed his satellite transmitter, but we are confident he will soon turn up at Welney where we will be able to identify him by his leg ring. But as well as Supersonic Bill and his mate, today’s satellite data download shows us that three more of our 50 Super Whoopers have taken advantage of the colder snap since the weekend. Y6K, a Welney visitor, and Y5T (a yearling) – both tagged in Iceland in August, completed their migration to Ireland at the weekend, and Sigrunn – a WWT Martin Mere regular – arrived in Northern Ireland on 4 November.

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First step to save the world’s rarest bird taken successfully!

A complicated and challenging mission to a remote lake in Madagascar has resulted in a huge step being taken in efforts to save the world’s rarest duck from extinction.

A collaborative team of specialists were hampered by electrical storms, gruelling journeys and illness in their bid to secure a precious batch of eggs laid by the Critically Endangered Madagascar pochard (Aythya innotata) in early October.

Madagascar pochard ducklings credit RE Lewis, Durrell

The pochard, a medium-sized diving duck, was feared extinct by the late 1990s but it was rediscovered in 2006 when biologists from The Peregrine Fund, who were scouting for a threatened bird of prey, the Madagascar Harrier, observed 20 adult pochards living on a single lake in northern Madagascar.

Thanks to funding in 2009 from the Mitsubishi Corporation Fund for Europe & Africa, Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, WWT, The Peregrine Fund and the Government of Madagascar joined efforts to establish a conservation-breeding programme for the ducks, with the hope of reintroducing them back into their wetland habitats.

However, an emergency rescue plan was mounted after a reconnaissance visit in July revealed the situation was worse than feared – with the sighting of just six females and evidence that the young had died just a few weeks old.

As a result, members of the team monitored the tiny population during their breeding season, reporting that three female birds were preparing to lay eggs. A team of duck specialists from WWT and Durrell immediately flew to Madagascar in an attempt to bring the eggs into captivity.

Patience was becoming a required skill, as Glyn Young from Durrell describes; “It was a race against time to get the team and the equipment to the lake before eggs started hatching. The situation was not made any easier as massive electrical storms had delayed our arrival in the country. Once all the equipment had cleared Customs, we had to wait for three days as a bridge was repaired on the only access road to the lake. To add to our woes, having finally made it to the lake, we all fell ill!”

Having commandeered part of a local hotel in order to create a temporary breeding facility, a batch of eggs was removed from a lake-side nest as near to hatching as possible. With extreme care, the day-old ducklings were transported to their make-shift rearing facility, 12 hours away.

Transporting the ducklings credit HG Young, Durrell

Peter Cranswick from WWT describes the significance of this achievement, “This is conservation at the cutting edge. The urgency of the situation has meant a great deal of invention and improvisation – but next year simply may have been too late. Safely bringing birds into captivity marks the start of a 20- or 30-year conservation project that will also help restore wetlands across the region.”

Eight ducklings are now reported to be doing very well, but work continues as the team attempts to secure two more clutches from the wild over the next few weeks. However, this collaborative rescue mission has provided hope for the future for the Madagascar pochard.

“This is the first important step toward saving this rare species from extinction,” said Russell Thorstrom, a biologist in charge of The Peregrine Fund’s Madagascar program. “It shows how organizations working cooperatively can overcome challenges and continue onward in their conservation effort for this critically endangered duck.”

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First Bewick’s swans return to Slimbridge

The first group of Bewick’s swans arrived last night. Around 13 of swans, which winter in the UK having migrated from their breeding grounds in Arctic Russia, flew in under strong south westerly winds, much to the surprise of staff at Slimbridge.

The usual conditions for the arrival of the swans are clear nights with a north easterly wind, which helps them on their journey from the continent. For birds the size of swans, flying into the gusty weather of last night would have been exhausing. They will benefit from the sanctuary and good foraging available at Slimbridge.

Visitors to Slimbridge will be able to see the swans at commentated swan feeds each evening. Check the centre pages for more information.

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