Skip to content header Skip to main content Skip to content footer

Wildlife sightings for 18th April 2012

4 Shelduck - main lake 2 Little Ringed Plover - main lake 4 Sand Martin - scrape 2 Common Tern - sat on main lake long shingle island 1 Reed Warbler - singing SE corner of main lake [...]

4 Shelduck - main lake

2 Little Ringed Plover - main lake

4 Sand Martin - scrape

2 Common Tern - sat on main lake long shingle island

1 Reed Warbler - singing SE corner of main lake

 

Additional sighting from yesterday:

1 Kingfisher - flew across succession boardwalk towards sheltered lagoon

 

Recent bird highlights:  Peregrine, Buzzard, Curlew, Black-tailed Godwit, Jack Snipe, Redshank, Green Sandpiper, Little Ringed Plover, Dunlin, Common Tern, Short-eared Owl, Yellow Wagtail, Wheatear and Swallow.

 

With spring in the air the Cetti’s Warbler are becoming more vocal with at least 8 birds to be found across the reserve. Many Chiffchaffs have arrived along with smaller numbers of Willow Warbler, Blackcap and Garden Warbler. Goldcrests can be heard singing away by the Trappers Lodge cabin in World Wetlands along with many other common songsters like Blackbird, Wren, Great Tit, Greenfinch, Song Thrush and Chaffinch.

 

Lapwing are scraping out nests on the main lake shingle islands and grazing marsh fields, and performing territorial flight displays. Great Crested Grebe and Little Grebe are displaying regularly on the sheltered lagoon. The first few Sand Martins have also arrived (mid-March).

 

The marsh will remain wet through early spring to attract a host of visiting waders and other wildfowl as well as early Wagtail species. The wader scrape will now start to be drained and wetted on a weekly basis to also attract feeding waders

 

Moths:  Common Quaker, Hebrew Character, Chestnut, Clouded Drab, Esperia sulpurella, Epermenia chaerophyllea, Powdered Quaker, Light Brown Apple Moth, Early Grey.  

                                          

Flowering plants:  Cowslip, Cuckooflower, Cow Parsley, Hawthorn, Blackthorn, Wild Cherry, Wood Anemone, Ramsons, Common Mouse-ear, Field Wood-rush, Marsh Marigold, Snake’s Head Fritillary, Red Dead-nettle, Primrose, Oxford Ragwort.   

                                  

Water Voles:  5 seen in world wetlands, waterlife and wildside

 

 

Butterflies and insects:  Comma, Brimstone, Peacock, Small Tortoiseshell, Orange-tip, Holly Blue, Speckled Wood, Small White, Common Bee-fly, 7-spot Ladybird, Large Red Damselfly.

 

 

Reptiles:  75% refugia on the western side of the reserve had a Slow Worm underneath. 8 adult and 2 juvenile Common Lizards recorded from 8 locations in waterlife, wildside and pond zone area.

  • Share this article