BBC Countryfile Magazine

WHERE DO OUR MIGRATING BIRDS GO?

Each spring, thousands of birds flock to British shores from the far-flung lands where they spend the winter months. As we anticipate their imminent return, we visit them in the exotic destinatio­ns that serve as their second homes

- By Dominic Couzens

It won’t be long before our beloved swallows, cuckoos and warblers return to our shores – but, asks Dominic Couzens, just where do they spend the months of winter?

As you wake up on a frosty February morning, it’s hard not to envy a swallow, 9,600km away in southern Africa with the sun on its back. Some of our swallows will spend this very day flitting around herds of grazing animals, such as elephants, buffalo and wildebeest, snapping up flying insects disturbed by the herbivores’ feet. Once back in the UK, they will do the same around herds of cows.

Many of our familiar bird species are ‘on tour’ right now. About 50 species in all leave our shores each year on a substantia­l southward journey, to spend the British winter in gentler climates. Most of these species go to Africa, but not all. The Manx shearwater flies across the oceans to spend the winter off Argentina, while, famously, the Arctic tern swaps the extreme north for the extreme south, reaching and sometimes circumnavi­gating Antarctica. At the other end of the scale, birds such as blackcaps may take the short-haul option and while the winter away in Spain, alongside human ex-pats.

Wherever they end up, there is no doubt that their immediate surroundin­gs will look

considerab­ly different to the frigid, bare British countrysid­e in winter. In Spain or North Africa, migrants will forage among olive leaves and evergreen scrub. Willow warblers in tropical Africa feed in the crowns of acacia trees on lush savannah, where only giraffes can reach. Cuckoos will disappear into dense forests, while garden warblers will head into thick montane scrub with a biodiversi­ty many times higher than ours. Northern wheatears swap moorland for semi-desert landscapes, and nightingal­es will sometimes throw off the reticence they show in the UK and feed in gardens and patches of cultivated land in Africa.

However, much as ‘our’ birds find themselves in a changed landscape, they do not become fundamenta­lly different. A spotted flycatcher in tropical Africa does what a spotted flycatcher does in Britain: it makes darting sallies to catch insects in flight. It might catch termites and other exotic invertebra­tes, but its feeding methods are much the same. Arctic terns dive for fish, turtle doves eat grain on the ground and reed warblers climb up and down stems of marshland plants with their strong feet, just as they do every day of their lives in the UK. If anything, it is our resident birds that change diet the most when our migrants leave these shores; blue tits and many others switch from feeding on caterpilla­rs and other insects to a diet of seeds and nuts.

It’s easy to forget that our migrants don’t just wake up one morning under African skies. Most take a month or more to get to their wintering grounds, and they must adapt to any places they pass on their travels, as well as their destinatio­n. They need to overfly the English Channel and the Mediterran­ean, then the Sahara Desert. Settling into the African bush must be easy by comparison.

The advantages of going south are obvious, particular­ly for insectivor­ous birds. Swallows and nightingal­es would be taking a big chance to risk a British winter, when just a few very cold days could be enough to starve them to death. Further south there is more food all year round, but there is also much more competitio­n. Not only are there African resident birds, but also migrants from Europe and Asia. A patch of scrubby African forest is quite a melting pot of nationalit­ies between October and March.

The most intriguing question about our summer visitors is not why they go south, but why they come back at all. On the whole, there are two factors that compel them to come here. First, there is plenty of room to hold territory without being crowded out by African birds. And secondly, the long daylight hours allow birds to feed their young for longer every day, helping them to grow quickly. And it is this, on a February morning, that beckons the swallow northward. February is the big moving month – soon it will be on the wing.

OSPREY

The osprey’s practice of hunting fish by plunging into water from a height is easily translatab­le from Britain to West Africa, where our birds winter. The practice also works equally well in salt water as in fresh. Five thousand kilometres away, our birds mainly stay on the coast in winter, fishing in the shallow, sheltered water just offshore, or along large rivers. They compete with African fish eagles in some areas.

In Britain, ospreys arrive in March and April to inhabit freshwater lakes, mainly in Scotland. They’re also found at Rutland Water, in the midlands, and in Poole Harbour, Dorset.

WHEATEAR

The wheatear is mostly a bird of cropped grassland and moorland, commonest by far in northern Britain. In October it departs for

“February is the big moving month – soon the swallow will be on the wing”

Africa, with European birds spreading across from west to east just south of the Sahara. They settle in distinctly arid areas, often at altitude, with rocky outcrops, where they keep a territory and defend it aggressive­ly from other birds. They feed on invertebra­tes in the same way everywhere, perching on a rock or bush-top to survey the scene, then running or flying after their prey.

CHIFFCHAFF

Migrant chiffchaff­s leaving these islands can winter anywhere between Spain and tropical West Africa, with the bulk settling around Senegal, just south of the Sahara. They live in a wide variety of scrubby areas, often in arid regions – rather a different profile from the tall, lush deciduous woodland that is their typical British breeding habitat. Chiffchaff­s use the same foraging methods, restlessly searching the leaves for small invertebra­tes. They leave their wintering grounds in February and arrive back here in March. The chiffchaff is widespread, breeding in woods throughout Britain.

YELLOW WAGTAIL

This buttery-yellow delight is a much-declining bird of meadows, wetlands and arable farmland. One of the best ways to see it is at the feet of horses and cattle, feeding on the flies disturbed by hooves. Translate that to Africa, and you can add in zebras and elephants. The yellow wagtail winters across tropical Africa, but most of our birds are in the west. They feed in much the same way everywhere, dashing after invertebra­tes on the ground, or darting into the air. In Britain, they’re found mainly in central and eastern England, from April to September.

REDSTART

In Britain, this delightful robin-like bird is strongly attached to the sessile oak woods of the north and west with their tangles of lichen and moss, dripping with insect life all summer long. Perhaps surprising­ly, it swaps this lavish habitat with much drier, scrubby habitats in the Sahel of West Africa, even in Mali, much of which is desert. In Africa, it probably spends more time feeding on the ground, like a robin.

Common in much of Britain, you can find redstarts in the New Forest, Central Wales and the Lake District, as well as much of Scotland.

SWALLOW

The swallow has one of the longest migrations of any bird, with the British population

“Cuckoos fly to West Africa then journey into the Congo Basin – at least 6,500km”

heading for the eastern part of South Africa, where they arrive in November as harbingers of spring. They feed there in much the same way, swooping low to catch juicy flying insects, although they also nab some seeds from Acacia cyclops, hovering at the tips of the branches. They also roost in huge numbers in reed beds.

TURTLE DOVE

It’s quite unusual for a seed-eating bird to be a long-distance migrant, but the turtle dove breaks the rule, leaving in September to fly to the Sahel region, a dry, scrubby belt south of the Sahara, in countries such as Mali and Senegal. Here it is much more arid that in the farmland of Britain, although the turtle dove simply feeds on seeds and grains, as it does here. Now rare in Britain after a drastic decline, the turtle dove occurs principall­y in South East England. Look for it in summer at the Knepp Estate in West Sussex, Martin Down in Hampshire, and much of East Anglia, such as RSPB Fowlmere, Cambridges­hire.

CUCKOO

Tracking of cuckoos in recent years has revealed much about their extraordin­ary migration. Many adults leave Britain on their southward journey as early as June. They then fly to West Africa (Nigeria for example), followed by a journey into the deep rainforest of the Congo Basin – a minimum of 6,500km – where they spend most of the winter. This is a completely different habitat to the marshes, moors and farmland they inhabit in Britain, and they are hardly ever seen in the rainforest.

The cuckoo returns to Britain in April. Following a big population decline in the south of England, they are now most common in northern England and Scotland.

COMING UP IN OUR MARCH ISSUE

Next month, look out for our follow-up feature on where and when to see our summer migrants return, including a handy timetable.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? British ospreys cover up to 5,000km on their migration to overwinter on West African shores. Travelling solo, the journey can take months
British ospreys cover up to 5,000km on their migration to overwinter on West African shores. Travelling solo, the journey can take months
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? TOP Wheatears migrate by night, relying on their fat stores for the journey across the Mediterran­ean ABOVE When spending the winter in West Africa, osprey hunt for fish in Atlantic coastal waters
TOP Wheatears migrate by night, relying on their fat stores for the journey across the Mediterran­ean ABOVE When spending the winter in West Africa, osprey hunt for fish in Atlantic coastal waters
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT The yellow wagtail is equally at home among zebras and antelope as British cows; some chiffchaff­s take a shorter migration, overwinter­ing in Spain; redstarts mainly feed on insects, but also eat berries and worms
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT The yellow wagtail is equally at home among zebras and antelope as British cows; some chiffchaff­s take a shorter migration, overwinter­ing in Spain; redstarts mainly feed on insects, but also eat berries and worms
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT Come September, turtle doves fly as far as the Sahel; swallows arrive in South Africa in time for the southern spring; the cuckoo overwinter­s deep in Congolese rainforest­s
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT Come September, turtle doves fly as far as the Sahel; swallows arrive in South Africa in time for the southern spring; the cuckoo overwinter­s deep in Congolese rainforest­s
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom