Posted by Yvonne Verkuil on 3 November 2015
The first papers have appeared in the December issue. Check them out at https://s.waderstudygroup.org/publications/wader-study-volume-122-issue-3/. Have fun reading!
To help to take the pressure off declining British-breeding Woodcock, many estates are already delaying the start of the Woodcock shooting season. How might this make a difference?
Click
here to find out.
Posted by Silke Nebel on 28 October 2015
To help to take the pressure off declining British-breeding Woodcock, many estates are already delaying the start of the Woodcock shooting season. How might this make a difference? Click here to find out.
Read the abstract of the paper
here.
Posted by Silke Nebel on 27 October 2015
Read the abstract of the paper here.
WaderTales blogs are written by Graham Appleton, to celebrate waders and wader research. Many of the articles are based on previously published papers, with the aim of making wader science available to a broader audience.
Recent pieces include
'Volcanic dust increases wader densities'
'New study of migratory/residency in Oystercatchers'
'The Black-tailed Godwits of Cley'
Posted by Silke Nebel on 9 October 2015
WaderTales blogs are written by Graham Appleton, to celebrate waders and wader research. Many of the articles are based on previously published papers, with the aim of making wader science available to a broader audience. Recent pieces include 'Volcanic dust increases wader densities' 'New study of migratory/residency in Oystercatchers' 'The Black-tailed Godwits of Cley'
While most of us along the Atlantic Coast keep our eyes on Tropical Storm Erika churning in the Caribbean, Upinraaq (named for the Inuvialuktun word for summer) the whimbrel has already met with the storm in the middle of the open Atlantic. Upinraaq, wearing a tiny tracking device, was migrating south from Newfoundland to South America when she crossed paths with Erika nearly 1,000 miles east of the West Indies. Erika was a developing tropical storm with sustained winds of 46 miles per hour when the encounter occurred. Amazingly, Upinraaq had been flying non-stop for more than 3 days and 2,700 miles (4,300 kilometers) when she successfully flew directly through the heart of the storm and continued on to the coast of Suriname.
For generations, scientists have wondered how birds migrating from North America to South America during the height of the hurricane season. Do the birds fly around the storms? Do they die at sea? Do the birds have some way of predicting that storms are brewing and wait until the coast is clear? The rendezvous between Upinraaq and Erika represents the 9th such interaction between a migrating whimbrel and major storms that a tracking study has documented since 2007. Information from 31 flights over the Caribbean and Atlantic Ocean is beginning to reveal the migratory behavior of this large, migratory shorebird. Birds launching out over the Atlantic from the high latitudes of the Canadian Maritimes appear to have no inkling about storms forming in the lower sub-tropical latitudes. Despite flying out over the vast Atlantic with no place to hide, no birds have been lost at sea.
The full story, written by Bryan Watts, can be found
here.
Posted by Silke Nebel on 5 October 2015
While most of us along the Atlantic Coast keep our eyes on Tropical Storm Erika churning in the Caribbean, Upinraaq (named for the Inuvialuktun word for summer) the whimbrel has already met with the storm in the middle of the open Atlantic. Upinraaq, wearing a tiny tracking device, was migrating south from Newfoundland to South America when she crossed paths with Erika nearly 1,000 miles east of the West Indies. Erika was a developing tropical storm with sustained winds of 46 miles per hour when the encounter occurred. Amazingly, Upinraaq had been flying non-stop for more than 3 days and 2,700 miles (4,300 kilometers) when she successfully flew directly through the heart of the storm and continued on to the coast of Suriname.
In honor of
WHSRN’s 30th anniversary in 2015,
Manomet’s Shorebird Recovery Program issued a special edition of the
Pablo Canevari Award this year. On behalf of Manomet, which administers the WHSRN Executive Office, we are pleased to announce that the winner of the 2015 award is
Dr. Eduardo Palacios Castro!
Dr. Palacios is Senior Researcher at Ensenada Center for Scientific Research and Higher Education (
CICESE) in La Paz, Baja California Sur,
Mexico. He was selected from among several, highly qualified candidates that had been
nominated for the 2014 award. We had the pleasure of presenting this award to our friend and colleague in person on 15 September, during the 6th Western Hemisphere Shorebird Group meeting in Wallops Island, Virginia, USA.
To read the full story, go to
WHSRNews Special Note 24 September 2015
Posted by Silke Nebel on 25 September 2015
In honor of WHSRN’s 30th anniversary in 2015, Manomet’s Shorebird Recovery Program issued a special edition of the Pablo Canevari Award this year. On behalf of Manomet, which administers the WHSRN Executive Office, we are pleased to announce that the winner of the 2015 award is Dr. Eduardo Palacios Castro!
Scientists are resourceful creatures. Grant funding is tight, fieldwork is expensive, and it is often necessary to use field seasons and technologies for multiple purposes. This resourcefulness is nicely illustrated in a
study1 by Egor Loktionov, Pavel Tomkovich and Ronald R. Porter
in this issue of Wader Study. The researchers used geolocators to investigate the breeding behaviour of Red Knots
Caldris canutus rogersi in Chukotka, Russia. The geolocators were first employed to study migration pathways
2, but being resourceful, the researchers saw and seized an opportunity to use the technology to reveal important information on breeding behaviour. In essence, the researchers used geolocators like parents use baby monitors – to monitor breeding behavior without disturbing nesting shorebirds. But much like I watched my newborn sleep, while listening to the monitor to hear what rolling over sounded like, before the scientists could trust the technology, they needed to verify the signals it was sending.
[caption id="attachment_7191" align="alignnone" width="700"]

Male Red Knot referred to in the study as GL 180, fitted with a geolocator, and photographed near Meinypilgyno Village, Chukotka, Russia. Photo: Simon Buckell.[/caption]
What is a geolocator? Geolocators are light sensitive data loggers capable of storing light levels at regular intervals. Animal ecologists have generally used them to record the time of sunrise and sunset. Using the data stored on the loggers scientists can determine the location of animals wearing geolocators because day length varies with latitude while the time of solar noon varies with longitude (a handy trick that explorers have used to navigate for centuries).
Geolocators have been used to track the position of migrating birds for several years and scientists began using them on shorebirds in 2009. In shorebirds, geolocators are normally worn on the upper leg.
Serendipitously, when a bird is sitting on a nest and incubating eggs they shade the geolocator. Scientists can use this handy fact to gather data on incubation behaviour – and have already done so in the
rufa subspecies of Red Knots
3. Such data are especially useful in birds that breed in the Arctic and sub-Arctic where the nights are short (or non-existent) and, thus, a shaded geolocator is an especially informative tool for studying breeding behaviour.
[caption id="attachment_7190" align="alignnone" width="700"]

Adult male Red Knot brooding chicks near Meinypilgyno Village, Chukotka, 30 June 2013. Photo: Egor Loktionov.[/caption]
Most Red Knots breed above the Arctic Circle in areas with continuous daylight in the summer. Thus for most breeding knots, the only time a geolocator would show darkness for a prolonged period is when a bird is sitting on a nest. However, Loktionov, Tomkovich and Porter studied the most southerly breeding of Red Knots, close to the Meinypilgyno Village in Chukotka. Meinypilgyno is below the Arctic Circle and thus there is civil twilight (when the sun is below the horizon, though there is enough light for objects to be distinguished under clear weather conditions) from approximately 10 pm to 2 am, even in high summer. This period of twilight at night contrasts with other studies that used geolocators to study breeding behavior in waders in the Arctic
3,4 and the researchers called this four-hour period “nightshade”.
Because of the uncertainty introduced by nightshade, the researchers’ first goal was to confirm that the interpretation of light signals from the geolocators (incubation or off-duty) correctly represented actual behaviour. Although they were only able to observe two geolocator-wearing birds, their observations confirmed that they were correctly interpreting the light signals. Once in the breeding area, light levels fluctuated close to maximum most of the day. This changed about two weeks after arrival when the geolocators started to show prolonged periods of intermittent darkness and light, indicative of incubation and brooding. Such “ground truthing” was not possible in the earlier studies on waders.
Because the researchers were directly observing known males wearing geolocators, they were also able to define the incubation period in males at around 23 days and the period between when the last egg is laid and the chicks hatch at about 21 days. An earlier study on
rufa knots of unknown sex
3 showed incubation periods around 23 or 21 days. The ground truthing from this study suggests that birds with shorter incubation periods in the earlier study were likely to have been females (who incubate less at the start of incubation because they are still laying eggs). This difference in periods also correlates with the duration that birds stay on the breeding grounds – females leave soon after chicks hatch, while males stay to care for the chicks.
The authors also showed that that incubation bouts in knots were shorter in the first days of the incubation period and then increased in length. The reverse was true when knots were brooding chicks. Chicks seemed to need the most brooding when they were younger and when the weather was cooler (late June versus early July). Finally, this study showed that the low Arctic nesting Meinypilgyno males spend much longer on the breeding grounds after chick hatch than do their more northerly breeding counterparts.
The Red Knot is one of the most well-studied shorebird species on the planet. Yet information on its breeding biology remains sparse because incubating birds sit tight on their nests, making both birds and nests hard to find and because they nest in remote areas. In the six summers that researchers have been studying Meinypilgyno knots, only six nests have been were found (0-3 per season). Scientists who use the same technology as a means to multiple ends heighten the value of field seasons, and nests found during them. Resourcefulness and perseverance helped the authors of this study to verify geolocator inferred breeding behavior and then describe aspects of
rogersi knot breeding biology. Thanks to studies like these, we have more confidence in geolocator data – just like I gained confidence in the baby monitor once I had seen for myself what the different sounds on the monitor meant.
________________________________________________________________
1 Loktionov E.Y., Tomkovich P.S. & R.R. Porter. 2015.
Study of incubation, chick rearing and breeding phenology of Red Knots Calidris canutus rogersi in sub-Arctic Far Eastern Russia aided by geolocators.
Wader Study 122(2): 142-152.
2 Tomkovich, P.S., Porter, R.R., Loktionov, E.Y. & L.J. Niles. 2013.
Pathways, staging areas and incubation of Red Knots Calidris canutus rogersi breeding in southern Chukotka, Far Eastern Russia.
Wader Study Group Bull. 120(3): 181–193.
3 Burger, J., Niles, L.J., Porter, R.R. & A.D. Dey. 2012.
Using geolocator data to reveal incubation periods and breeding biology in Red Knots Calidris canutus rufa. Wader Study Group Bull. 119(1): 26–36.
4 Gosbell, K., Minton, C. & Fox, J. 2012.
Geolocators reveal incubation and re-nesting characteristics of Ruddy Turnstones Arenaria interpres and Eastern Curlews Numenius madagascariensis. Wader Study Group Bull. 119(3): 160–171.
Posted by Deborah Buehler on 6 September 2015
Scientists are resourceful creatures. Grant funding is tight, fieldwork is expensive, and it is often necessary to use field seasons and technologies for multiple purposes. This resourcefulness is nicely illustrated in a study1 by Egor Loktionov, Pavel Tomkovich and Ronald R. Porter in this issue of Wader Study. The researchers used geolocators to investigate the breeding behaviour of Red Knots Caldris canutus rogersi in Chukotka, Russia. The geolocators were first employed to study migration
The LEGO SBS is part of a trail of nine giant LEGO brick animals – currently at WWT
Slimbridge, but soon to tour around other WWT centres in the U.K..
Assuming an average weight of a SBS of 30g and a world population of 300-400 that gives a total
population weight of 9-12kg. So the Suki at Slimbridge (with metal base), at 50kg, weighs 5 times
the weight of the world population of Spoon-billed Sandpipers! To see a picture, and to read other SBS news, read the Spoon-billed Sandpiper Task Force News Bulletin
No. 14.
Posted by Silke Nebel on 22 August 2015
The LEGO SBS is part of a trail of nine giant LEGO brick animals – currently at WWT Slimbridge, but soon to tour around other WWT centres in the U.K..
The "Decembocadura y Estuario del Río Maipo" recently became the 91st site in the Network, and 4th in Chile.
The area merited this designation for hosting more than 1% of the biogeographic population of two species:
Whimbrel (Numenius phaeopus) and the
pitanay subspecies of
American Oystercatcher (Haematopus palliatus).
Read more at
here.
Posted by Silke Nebel on 31 July 2015
The "Decembocadura y Estuario del Río Maipo" recently became the 91st site in the Network, and 4th in Chile. The area merited this designation for hosting more than 1% of the biogeographic population of two species: Whimbrel (Numenius phaeopus) and the pitanay subspecies of American Oystercatcher (Haematopus palliatus). Read more at here.
The Icelandic breeding population of Oystercatchers is both resident and migratory in winter. To try and understand the trade-offs between these quite different strategies we have recently started a colour-marking programme for Icelandic breeding Oystercatchers.

We would therefore like to ask all waderologists in Western Europe to keep an eye out for colour-full Icelandic Oystercatchers. Both adults and chicks (when big enough) are ringed with two colour rings on left tarsus and a flag above another colour ring o the right tarsus (metal ring goes on either tibia and is not part of the scheme). We really want to know where they spend the winter months to help us figure out if individuals are set or flexible in their migration strategies.
So, if you happen to see some Oystercatcher legs from this scheme, please contact us via
icelandwader@gmail.com.
Thank you!
Dr Verónica Méndez Aragón
School of Biological Sciences
University of East Anglia
Posted by Silke Nebel on 29 July 2015
The Icelandic breeding population of Oystercatchers is both resident and migratory in winter. To try and understand the trade-offs between these quite different strategies we have recently started a colour-marking programme for Icelandic breeding Oystercatchers.