RSS Nyheder

Søg i RSS nyheder
Indtast del af site/land og vælg forslag der matcher.


Netfugl live (RSS)
30. jun. 2025 kl. 15:09
Despite hearing singing Tawny Owl’s (kattugle) on pretty much every nocturnal spring trip in Maridalen I had not managed to find any occupied nest boxes (I have never come across a natural nest hole in Maridalen). I still expected that nocturnal trips in June would reveal the presence of begging young but it is nice when one has a nest to follow. Just in the nick of time I did find a nest and it was purely by chance. One day I heard the sound of a begging young from a place where Tawny Owls were the absolute last thing on my mind. I knew there was a Goldeneye nest box in the tree next to me and looking at I could see a crack in the side and through the crack I could see the white fluffy feathers of baby owls!! They were clearly close to leaving the box and soon one, then two and finally three appeared at the opening 😊 I was able to follow them as over the next few days they one by one left the box and then perched in bushes and trees nearby. At night they made a heck of noise to let their parents know they were hungry but also called during the day. Very surprisingly I never saw an adult during the day even once the young were out of the box when the adults are normally close by and give warning calls when a threat (me) gets too close. I also didn’t see or hear an adult when I spent close to half an hour by the young one night. I had hoped to witness a food delivery in the thermal imager. The nest box was on the edge of water and I had worried that a young could end up in the water on one of its maiden and uncontrolled flights but I didn’t expect to witness it. On a visit the day the last young left the box what I believe was the youngest reacted to our presence by flying out of its chosen tree (this has never happened with such small young before). It flew, although flapped is a better description, over the water and splash landed about 3m out. We were ready to wade out to save it but it had everything under control and using its wings as paddles made it back to land quickly. It then walked under some bushes and a few hours later was 2 metres up in the same bush begging for food so no harm seems to have been done. The position of the nest in an isolated line of small trees was probably the reason I never saw the adult as they would have been in larger trees further away but presumably with a view of the area where the nest box was. I had hoped that this would also mean that the young would stay close to the box for quite a long time allowing me to easily find them and observe their development aswell as my hope of witnessing the adults bringing food. However they quickly moved away. Within a couple of nights they had moved close to 50m to the north and come to the end of the line of trees. Another couple of nights later though they had moved the other direction and were 100m from the box having crossed at least 60m of open land (or perhaps water depending on the route they took). It surprised me how quickly and far they moved and makes me wonder why they move and how they keep together. Do the adults encourage them or is it instinct? They then moved a further 100m to an area of larger trees and perched higher up than before. There were now only 2 young that I could find and when they call at night it is easy to find them. I still failed to witness a food delivery or see an adult but may have heard one, the noises of which are audible in the final video. The young settled down in this area and were easy to find in the daytime. By 11 days after they had all left the nest box they had moved another 300m which involved another long stretch over open land or water. It was in this new area which was more open woodland that I finally got to see an adult fly in with food and to also hear the young receiving the food. We could also see the young practising their flying skills. Subsequent visits revealed no owls suggesting they had moved at least another 300 metres into a more extensive area of woodland. the day I found them after hearing them calling and not quite believing my ears out of the nest on a wet day the oldest of the young on a wet day and most of the white downy feathers have been lost after the unfortunate and unintended swim in the thermal me and a baby Tawny having moved to larger trees 5 days after all the young had left the nest box it was beyond cute to find them huddled up like this this was in the evening of the 11th day after all the young had left the nest box 12 days after all the young had left the nestbox 13 days after leaving nest box three videos from the evening of day 13 the first being the adult arriving with food: when you are out at night you meet other creatures too


Coupling GPS data and bird count data to improve our understanding of bird migration The post Who are we counting? appeared first on British Ornithologists' Union.


Ringmærkningen: Endelig var vinden faldet lidt efter flere dage med lidt for meget vind. Det blev en god dag med 11 fugle hvoraf de 7 var nye. Ole som har været her nogle dage tog afsted i dag for...


Ringmærkningen: Xxxxxxx Den Store Flagspætte (Dendrocopos major) var let at bestemme til en helt ung fugl fra i år (1k, første kalenderår) på den røde top, som de voksne/adulte Store Flagspætter...


? in up to 17,5 m/s, gusting to 25,8 m/s from west. This weather was not very inviting to spend the morning outside, so we got a little more cleaning and some office work done, Andrew put pictures in...


Ringmærkningen: Endnu en blæsende dag med et snit på 8 m/s, men alt kunne sættes op. På trods af vinden var det faktisk en ok dag med 7 fugle hvoraf de 5 var nye, og alle de nye var 1k/ungfugle. Årets...


Ringmærkningen: Xxxxxx Trækket på Odden: Endnu en stikprøve på sommertrækket. Der er næsten altid en eller anden trafik. Heldigvis er der næsten også altid folk, som gerne vil ud at opleve fuglene...


Today was the big cleaning day around the station where we deep cleaned the station using up the majority of the day.Hanelie had 43 species of moths in the traps today with new for the season including...


Featured Articles Columns & Departments


From the Summer 2025 issue of Living Bird magazine. Subscribe now. If you haven’t already, I urge you to read the 2025 State of the Birds report for the United... Read more »


From the Summer 2025 issue of Living Bird magazine. Subscribe now. Birds in the Paradisaeidae family—more than 40 species collectively called the birds-of-paradise—are famous for their spectacular mating dances. In... Read more »


From the Summer 2025 issue of Living Bird magazine. Subscribe now. Lesser Goldfinch, the diminutive cousin of the familiar American Goldfinch, is found throughout the American Southwest from Texas to... Read more »


From the Summer 2025 issue of Living Bird magazine. Subscribe now. In January, the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s Instagram account hosted Bird Art Week 2025—with a different guest artist featured... Read more »


A Merlin Bird ID user finds the app enhances more than just birding. It fosters attention, pattern recognition, even belonging.


Thousands of birders have submitted around 50,000 checklists from more than 60 eBird hotspots along the C&O Canal, racking up a total of 316 species. The canal path begins at... Read more »


In 1954, a nine-day hike organized by Justice William Douglas saved the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal from becoming a highway. Today it provides a glorious green respite for residents of Washington D.C. and beyond.


As human-altered habitats bring two closely related chickadees together, one species' song seems to be evolving to help them tell each other apart.


For the first time, the State of the Birds report leveraged fine-scale estimates of bird population changes derived from eBird data.


Five years after the 3 Billion Birds Lost research, a follow-up study published in the journal Science showed how eBird Trends can reveal the patterns behind America's bird declines—and pinpoint areas for future recoveries.


From the Summer 2025 issue of Living Bird magazine. Subscribe now. Seventy days. Seventy days of waking up to the faint chips of sparrows, an occasional splash or two from... Read more »


This ordinary-seeming songbird species is teeming with subtle genetic diversity, which allows local populations to respond in various ways to a changing world.


Male Nightjar (nattravn) The Nightjar pair I mentioned in my previous post were not to be seen at the same site again although I did have a pair nearby and believe they were moving around and prospecting for a nest site although it is rather late in the season now. Nightjars proved to be rather common in the area with at least 4 territories along a 1.5km stretch which is in start contrast to up until 5 years ago when I had none on my nocturnal trips from the cabin and it is only 2 years ago that I first recorded a bird along this particular stretch. This is a species which along with Great Grey Owl seems to directly benefit for the surge in forestry work this last decade or so. I have engaged in some sea gazing whilst having my morning coffee and usually saw nothing but yesterday two Sandwich Terns went south - this will presumably now become a species I bump into «all» the time after having waited 24 years for my first in Norway - and today a Caspian Tern went north😊. Apart from these three quality terns I only had 3 Common Terns in total during the week so definitely a case of quality over quantity. Sea gazing from the cabin is a very comfortable affair but the area of sea that can be viewed is very narrow however I am building up a good list of birds now with these two scarce terns adding to Pomarine Skua, White-billed Diver and Surf Scoter. Butterflies have again taken up more time than birds although I have also read a book and gone for walks and spent time with my family☺️. After a couple of days with rain it was sunny on Wednesday and it was noticeable that new species were emerging for the first time with especially Ringlet (gullringvinge) appearing in the area for the first time this trip and being numerous overnight. Sea gazing with coffee, OJ, The Beast and a minute before 2 Sandwich Terns (splitterne) which I did not manage any photos of. The Caspian Tern (rovterne) did however allow itself to be recorded for prosperity A Linnet (tornirisk) flying out of this conifer by the cabin had me suspecting a nest And sure enough there was one. The parents were very secretive when visiting the nest although the male would be perched nearby singing when the female entered with food


Læs den på hjemmesiden: file:///C:/Data/DOF/DOF_Storstr%C3%B8m/Hjemmeside/Turrapporter/DOF%20Storstr%C3%B8ms%20tur%20til%20Nordjylland%20og%20Vendsyssel%202025.pdf...


In 2022, the Migratory Bird Initiative began traveling around North America supporting the growing network of Motus stations installed by Audubon and its partners. We helped build stations in the...


After not so much sleep my day started as the last night had ended, I went to the moths trap, took pictures of some moths outside and took some inside to wait until they were calm and take pictures. While...


Annoncer