The Scotsman

UK’S oldest seabird found on Scottish island of Canna

● Guillemot first ringed back in 1978 trapped again at age of 38

- By GEORGE MAIR

A guillemot has been found on the Scottish Isle of Canna 38 years after it was first ringed, making it the oldest living seabird ever recorded in the UK and Ireland.

The bird was originally ringed on the Inner Hebridean island in 1978. It was recently re-trapped by naturalist­s from the National Trust for Scotland’s Canna ringing team. The NTS, which owns the island, said it is a new longevity record for any British or Irish ringing scheme.

The conservati­on charity’s Canna ringing team also caught one 36-year-old guillemot, a 35-year-old and two 34-year-old birds.

Establishe­d in 1969 to monitor changes among the island’s seabird population­s, the ringing project is now one of Europe’s longest-running bird monitoring schemes.

Simon Foster, part of the ringing team, said: “It is incredible that a guillemot has survived this long. The birds live in a particular­ly challengin­g environmen­t – the cliffside colonies are noisy and smelly places and guillemots nor- mally spend the entire winter at sea. It’s a hard life. Despite this, the old bird we were reunited with was probably in better condition than any of the people who were out there doing ringing studies.

“I think this finding is a very good example of the value of long-term monitoring projects like this one.”

Canna’s cliffs to the west and north of the island, and south on the neighbouri­ng island of Sanday, are home to around 15,000 seabirds of 14 different species.

Common guillemots make up roughly half of the seabird population, along with species like razorbills, shags, kittiwakes and Manx shearwater­s.

The island once had a problem with non-native rats, which were eradicated.

Richardlux­moore,thents’s senior nature conservati­on adviser, said: “The Canna ringing team has provided us with invaluable data about all of the species of seabirds that nest on Canna. In particular, they have shownhowmu­chprogress­has beenmadesi­ncethetrus­ttook the decision to eliminate the invasive rat population.

“The latest results show that the seabird population is increasing once more, but the importance of such a longlived study as this one is that we can see what effects climate changeando­therenviro­nmental conditions are having.”

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