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Yellowhamm­ers visit Arran in winter but don’t breed Bird

- By Jim Cassels

Yellowhamm­ers used to be familiar birds on Arran throughout the year.

During the breeding season the distinctiv­e song of the stunning male, sounding like ‘a little bit of bread and no cheeeeese’, was a feature of many hedgerows throughout the island and in the winter, flocks fed in stubble fields.

Examinatio­n of the annual bird reports produced by the Arran Natural History Society shows the decline in the breeding records. Throughout the 1980s between 10 and 15 pairs were reported each year.

In the 1990s numbers declined with eight pairs in 1990, four pairs in 1992 and in 1994 there were no breeding records.

From 1997 to 1999, each year there was a breeding record from Shiskine Golf Course. That was the last confirmed breeding.

This century there have been no confirmed breeding records.

In 2012, 2014, 2017 and 2019 there was one record of one bird singing for a short period of time in April.

This year there was a report of a male singing on the Boguille on April 21 and one singing in the Shiskine Valley on April 30. Neither bird lingered.

Then on July 3 a yellowhamm­er was seen on the Holy Isle. This is the first Arran July record this century.

While no longer a breeding species yellowhamm­er remains a passage migrant and winter visitor - but for how long?

In the last five years there have been a total of 164 reports of yellowhamm­er. As shown in the chart below almost all these records are between October and April.

Looking at the records for the last five years there is no obvious trend. The number of records each year has varied from 64 to 11.

The number of locations that yellowhamm­er has been recorded each year was varied between seven and three.

The size of groups recorded each year has never been large and ranged between six and 21.

It looks as if the species on Arran is just hanging on and it is in danger of joining the list of farmland birds that can no longer be seen here, such as the corn bunting, last reported in 1984 and tree sparrow, last reported in 1997.

Data from the British Trust for Ornitholog­y indicates that this is not just a local issue.

The map from the BTO Bird Atlas Mapstore comparing the abundance in 1988-91 with the abundance 20 years later in 2008-11 clearly shows this decline. Yellowhamm­er abundance began to decline on farmland in the mid-1980s.

The species, listed as green in 1996, has been red listed as a Bird of Conservati­on Concern since 2002.

Reductions in winter seed food availabili­ty as a result of agricultur­al intensific­ation, for example, the loss of winter stubbles and a reduction in weed densities are widely believed to have contribute­d to the population decline.

Research has identified better population performanc­e in areas with extensive winter stubble, presumably because overwinter survival is relatively high. Research also suggests that the local availabili­ty of winter set-aside is a good predictor of sites chosen for breeding territorie­s the next year.

Numbers have also shown widespread moderate decrease across Europe since 1980.

Some projects including one involving the RSPB working with farms in Northern Ireland have had some success but 'further research is required to identify possible remedial actions in pastoral areas'.

In the meantime I would be delighted if you would continue to send me any sightings of yellowhamm­er on Arran.

Enjoy your birding and keep safe. Please send any bird notes with 'what, when, where' to me at Kilpatrick Kennels, Kilpatrick, Blackwater­foot, KA27 8EY, or e mail me at jim@arranbirdi­ng.co.uk I look forward to hearing from you. For more informatio­n on birding on Arran purchase the Arran Bird Report 2020 and the Arran Bird Report, the first 40 years. Plus visit the website http://www.arranbirdi­ng. co.uk/index.html

 ??  ?? Map showing the breeding abundance change across the UK from 1988-91 to 2008-11.
Map showing the breeding abundance change across the UK from 1988-91 to 2008-11.
 ?? Photo Dennis Morrison ?? The colourful yellowhamm­er.
Photo Dennis Morrison The colourful yellowhamm­er.
 ??  ?? Chart showing that most of the yellowhamm­er sightings in the past five years have been between October and April.
Chart showing that most of the yellowhamm­er sightings in the past five years have been between October and April.

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