Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust (WWT)

Threatened swans boosted by bumper breeding season

Threatened Bewick’s swans are returning from their Russian breeding grounds with the most young that ornithologists have seen in more than a decade.

Surveys of the swans’ UK wintering sites, such as the Ouse Washes and WWT Slimbridge on the Severn Estuary, have found 17.6 percent young among the flocks. This compares to an average of about 10 percent over the last 10 years.

It is welcome news for the Northwest European Bewick’s swan population whose numbers have declined steeply since the 1990s.

Dutch ornithologists Wim Tijsen and Jan Beekman coordinate synchronised counts throughout the swans’ range in northern Europe. They report that overall there is an average of 14 percent young, the highest since 2001 and a vast improvement for the swans.

Julia Newth is a Wildlife Health Research Officer at WWT. She addresses the threats the swans face throughout their range. Each winter she is able to study the swans in the roost right outside her office window at Slimbridge. She said:

“We still need to find out what is driving down Bewick’s swan numbers and reverse this worrying decline, but this year’s good breeding season is very welcome news.

“This is their best breeding season since 2001 and the higher number of cygnets this year will hopefully boost their numbers. At the same time, WWT is tackling the things we know affect the swans: illegal shooting, flying collisions with pylons and wires and poisoning from spent lead gunshot.”

The factors behind this year’s breeding success are not fully understood, due to the remoteness of the swans’ breeding grounds in Arctic Russia. It is likely that weather, particularly a cold snap at the start of the breeding season, is significant and conservationists are concerned that climate change is partly behind the recent decline.

Bewick's swans, Everton and Rovers, with their six cygnets at WWT Slimbridge (c) JSLees WWT

Bewick's swans, Everton and Rovers, with their six cygnets at WWT Slimbridge (c) JSLees WWT

WWT provides safe roosting for Bewick’s swans at WWT Welney on the Ouse Washes, WWT Slimbridge and WWT Arundel in Sussex. As well as coordinating the counts with the RSPB, WWT identifies and addresses threats to the swans along their flyway.

WWT has been x-raying Bewick’s swans for forty years and has found that nearly a quarter have been shot, despite being protected in every one of the countries they fly through. WWT is working with shooting organisations to pinpoint hotspots, understand the reasons for the illegal shooting and raise awareness of the issue.

Swans are large birds that cannot manoeuvre quickly in flight, making them susceptible to collisions with large man-made structures such as pylons and wind turbines. WWT uses technology to track swans precise movements and uses the data to try to ensure wind farms are located where they won’t affect the swans’ migration. WWT also works with electricity companies to identify where swans are hitting power lines and recommends installing flight divertes on the lines to alert the birds to the presence of the wires.

Swans ingest grit to help their digestion. When they inadvertently eat spent lead gunshot, it may cause severe poisoning. Post mortem results from dead Bewick’s swans found at WWT reserves over the last 40 years show that just under a quarter died from lead poisoning. Recent blood samples taken from live Bewick’s swans found one in eight had high levels of lead.

To donate to WWT’s swan appeal visit www.wwt.org.uk/swans

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Todays sightings

Curlew – 25 on Bank farm feeding around the closest pool to the visitor centre

Barn owl – 1 hunting around the visitor centre

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WeBS count

Highlights from the Wetland Birds Survey which was conducted on Monday 3 December, most duck and wader numbers were down due to the extremely high water levels on the Ouse washes.

Wigeon – 6232
Mallard – 1061
Tyfted duck – 549
Pochard – 228
Pintail – 22
Shoveler – 2

Great crested grebe – 2

Egyptian goose – 2

Curlew – 19
Snipe – 5
Redshank – 2

Buzzard – 1
Barn owl – 1

Fieldfare – 50
Starling – 30
Waxwing – 5
Brambling – 1

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Dawn swan count

Whooper swans – 1766
Bewick’s swans – 243

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WeBS count highlights

Wigeon – 2953
Mallard – 887
Teal – 561
Pochard – 174
Pintail – 107
Shoveler – 50
Gadwall – 22

Great crested grebe – 9

Black-tailed godwit – 245
Lapwing – 32
Golden plover – 22
Curlew – 12
Snipe – 12
Redshank – 2

Marsh harrier – 2
Buzzard – 2

Fieldfare – 350

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Todays sightings

Ferruginous duck taken yesterday by Ken Rowe

Ferruginous duck taken yesterday by Ken Rowe

Ferruginous duck – 1 (female in front of main observatory)

Rough-legged buzzard – 1
Marsh harrier – 3

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Bewick’s are back

Our first Bewick’s swan flew in to WWT Welney yesterday, right on schedule and just a day after the first arrival at WWT Slimbridge.  So that now we have all three species of UK swan on site for visitors to see.  Water levels have peaked and currently only the Reedbed hide is closed with welly boots needed to access Nelson-Lyle, Lyle, Allport and Friends hides.

Sightings from yesterday:
Bewick’s swan – 1
Jack snipe – 1
Little gull – 1
White-fronted goose – 30
Marsh harrier – 3 (roosting in front of the main observatory)
Fieldfare (large flocks)
Curlew
Ruff
Goldren plover
Ring ouzel
Water rail

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WWT Welney welcomes volunteers who say NO to retirement

Volunteer Norman Ridley

Volunteer Norman Ridley

Volunteers are the life blood of charities such as the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust and with over 35 years experience, ranging from wrestling with swans at catches to being a wetland bodyguard, Norman Ridley is a shining example and someone WWT Welney owes a great deal to.

“I was first asked to help on the reserve in the 1970’s, making sure that the carpeted main hide was respected without muddy boot marks and crumbs from sandwiches.  If anyone broke the golden rules they were to be escorted offsite!” says Norman.

“Since then I have helped with a wide range of activities from helping with the car park and kitchen work to giving the swans their supper in the winter and helping with the research which happens at the swan catches!”

Volunteer group building pond-dipping platform

Volunteer group building pond-dipping platform

Volunteers are essential to WWT Welney and where better to spend your free time than enjoying the Fens and learning about its wetland wildlife whilst giving your time to help a charity.  With a huge range of roles there is something for everyone; from those who like to engage with the public and help with events to those who want to connect with nature out on the reserve and those who want to help within the visitor centre.

Norman now plays a vital role in the experience our visitors receive at Welney by welcoming people to the site.  His wealth of experience means that he is able to answer the range of questions fired at him and has seen many people who visited with their school in the past now bringing their own children for their first encounters with wildlife!

Environment Agency team building

Environment Agency team building

WWT Welney is always looking for volunteers to help with day to day activities to the events which the centre has become so famous for, the swan feeds. Click here to read more about volunteering at WWT Welney.  Work parties can also volunteer at Welney as part of team building days away from the normal workplace, contact the centre on 01353 860711 to find out more.

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Birdwatchers get in a flap as rare squacco heron flies in to WWT Welney

Squacco heron by Chris Baines

Squacco heron by Chris Baines

Birders have been gathering at WWT Welney in Norfolk this week to see an extremely rare squacco heron which arrived on the weekend.  The reason why it has turned up in the UK is unknown as these birds normally spend the summer in Southern Europe.

This record is the second for the site at Welney and one of only a handful for the county.  Squacco herons breed mainly in Eastern Europe with a few sporadic sites in Spain and France.

Warden, Steve Wiltshire, commented: “It is always exciting to see a rarity on site but this particular individual is a very striking bird in its full breeding plumage.  The breezy weather over the weekend meant that the plume of feathers on the back of the neck has been in full flow”.

“The bird has been making itself at home in the shallow flooded washes in full view of our reedbed hide and seems quite content fishing in the ditches amongst all the other birds”.

At the end of the weekend the bird was moving further South along the reserve so the team are hoping to partially open the summer walk during the week to allow access for visitors to continue looking for it.

WWT Welney is open 7 days a week, (except 25 December) from 9.30am to 5.00pm during the summer.  The centre is the perfect place to explore the open landscape of the Fens as much of the area once looked.  Flooding of the Ouse washes provides essential feeding and breeding grounds for birds, insects, amphibians, reptiles and mammals such as the water vole.  The eco-friendly visitor centre has an excellent cafe, gift shop with elevated views of the Fen landscape complete with family friendly and disabled facilities including buggy access, wheelchairs and mobility scooters for hire.

To check on the latest status of the heron and all our other sightings  on our wildlife sightings page here.

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Mute swans tower above recent floods

Mute swan nest in flood

Mute swan nest in flood

As flooding affects the nesting season on the Ouse washes at WWT Welney, one pair of swans are towering above the lapping water.

A determined pair of mute swans are refusing to lose their nest to the flood waters at Welney.  Gathering what vegetation they can find, they are trying to weather the rising waters to continue incubating their eggs and hopefully hatch the cygnets inside.

As a result of the flooding on the Ouse washes this spring the breeding season at Welney has come to a standstill.  But one of the many pairs of mute swans which breed on the reserve is not giving up without a battle.  Since the waters came on they have increased the height of their nest from its origins on the banks of the ditch next to the footpaths.

Mute swans are native to the UK and remain close to their breeding territories all year round.  Visitors can see the mute swans up close in the winter at the swan feeds, during which time the reserve is home to an additional 10,000 swans migrating from more northerly breeding grounds.  But during the summer the whooper swans from Iceland and the Bewick’s swans from Arctic Russia are absent leaving the whole wetland site for the mute swans to use to hatch and raise their cygnets.

‘The water levels have now started to drop, relieving the pressure on this particular pair of mute swans’ says Marketing and Events Officer, Emma Brand.  ‘We hope the levels will continue to drop over the next week or two so that we are ready for the June half term activities, which include pond-dipping, moths on display and biodiversity blitz sessions’.

The water levels are now decreasing with hopes that the reserve will start to open up again to visitors and provide feeding areas for the birds once more.  Updated information on the access on the reserve and what activities are available can be found at www.wwt.org.uk/Welney .

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