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Owl flies from Arran to Morocco

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A short-eared owl which left Arran in June has been found more than 2,000 miles away in Morocco, revealing significan­t new informatio­n for British Trust for Ornitholog­y (BTO) researcher­s.

The owl, fitted with a satellite tag while breeding in Scotland, is something of a nomad, appearing in an area to breed in large numbers one year and then absent the next. Such changes in distributi­on and abundance are driven by the availabili­ty of the small mammal species on which the owls depend. The short-eared owl’s nomadic nature makes it a difficult bird to study and regular movements across country borders make it difficult to deliver effective conservati­on action.

Researcher­s from BTO Scotland have been working to improve our understand­ing, developing methods for surveying short-eared owls in their breeding haunts and tracking the movements of individual­s across the year. Even though only a handful of birds have been fitted with tracking devices so far – the aim is to track 20 individual­s from sites across their UK breeding range – we have already seen some amazing movements, the most exciting of which has just been revealed.

A breeding female, tagged at her nest site on Arran on 11 June this year, is currently wintering near Oualidia in Morocco. The bird left Arran to visit Bute and Kintyre from 15 – 17 July, returning to Arran for 10 days and then moving to mainland Ayrshire on 27 July. She remained here (near Dalmelling­ton) until the end of October. She then moved to Devon, where she was present on 8 November, leaving the following evening to head south. With the help of a strong tail wind, she travelled 495km into France in just six hours – that’s an average of 82.5km/h! She then continued south, crossing the Pyrenees on 13 November and the Strait of Gibraltar on 24 November to reach Morocco.

The latest fix places her near Oualidia, Morocco’s ‘oyster capital’ (a reference to the significan­t role shellfish harvesting plays in the local economy), which she reached on 29 November. It will be fascinatin­g to see what she does next.

Senior BTO research ecologist John Calladine, who is leading the project, said: ‘This is only the second UK shorteared owl to be reported from Morocco, and what makes this record all the more amazing is that it involves a breeding female. The previous record was of a young bird, which may have been dispersing from its natal area to settle somewhere else. Our tracking work has revealed the huge distances these birds can cover; in addition to this bird wintering in Morocco, we have had birds move to Norway, with some individual­s seemingly making two breeding attempts in one season, one in Scotland and one in Norway.’

Find out more about this project at: http://bit.ly/BTO_shorties

 ??  ?? The map shows the route taken by the short-eared owl.
The map shows the route taken by the short-eared owl.

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