RSPB tips for bird lovers on the Shotley peninsula as spring approaches

By Derek Davis

26th Feb 2022 | Local News

Bird experts have given tips on what to look out for as March approaches, and how to help birdlife on the Shotley peninsula.

Warm days as spring approaches herald new arrivals and trigger the onset of egg-laying in some daring garden birds, which finely balance the advantages of getting started early against the risks of burning out.

A blackbird brings a stick to your hedge, and overnight, alone among the company that customarily visits the diminishing berry supply on the holly or pyracantha, it becomes a regular and a neighbour.

Birds become more recognisable once the breeding season is upon them, and they begin to act in distinctive ways.

Of course, they have always been individuals: some coped with winter better than others because of their different attributes and abilities. It's just that now, with so many tasks confronting them and with so many 'decisions' to take – how often to sing, whom to mate with, when to start nest-building, for instance – the birds express their differences more clearly in March than earlier in the year.

One of the most telling variables is the precise time at which an individual or a pair starts to breed. If we set egg-laying as a measure, most robins or song thrushes, for example, first register in April.

But every year some daredevils audaciously lay in early March or even before, and their subsequent young spill out into an unfamiliar world decorated with daffodils, grape hyacinths and fresh but half-grown leaves. These parents are early birds, opportunists somewhat equivalent to humans who camp out rough before the January sales.

They are taking a big risk. Egg-laying is energetically demanding, requiring intense physical preparation over several weeks.

A female needs to be in peak condition to pull off the feat and must eat a great deal of food to fuel it.

The earlier a pair starts to breed, the more young it can produce in a season.

For birds that have several potential broods, a good start paves the way to maximising productivity, to ensuring that genes are copiously spread.

If you do have a pair of such birds feeding young in your garden, you can assume that they are at least a year old, and probably more. This early breeding game is only played by oldies, and the older the better, too, for birds of a certain age are not 'past it', more past masters. Their previous experience of life and of breeding gives them every advantage in the season to come.

Last year's hatchlings have too much to learn. As well as breeding earlier, older birds generally have larger territories with more consistent boundaries and acquire a mate more quickly than their youthful counterparts.

March doesn't just fly the flag for individuality and seniority, though. It is also a time to show up differences between collectives of individuals – that is, species.

And so, while it is common for a rook or carrion crow to have eggs in the nest by mid-March, it is almost unknown for a tit.

And while pigeons can produce young at almost any time of year, most birds have specific breeding seasons when it is deemed realistic for them to go ahead and produce. March magnifies the differences between these strategies.

All of these species have a reason for starting up early. The rooks are digging the damp soil for worms, easier to reach now than later in the year when the ground dries out. The mistle thrushes are doing the same, but it's also said that their bulky stick structures are less vulnerable early on, when potential predators have not yet got into the habit of searching for nests and eggs.

For their part, tawny owls start early to ensure that, when they are feeding young, the spring's growth of grass has not yet hidden and muffled the activities of the rodents on which their progeny depend. All these species are legislating for difficulties that would hinder them if they began later on.

The long-tailed tit is not yet laying eggs, but its breeding season is also always well underway by March. It has to be, because before any pair can even contemplate starting a family, they must build what is perhaps Britain's most intricate and labour-intensive nest.

The nest is a soft dome constructed from thousands of pieces of moss stuck together by strands of cobweb. It is sprinkled with lichen fragments for protection and stuffed with feathers for insulation. The nest takes about three weeks to build and, when finished, will house an average of eight young.

If you have the chance, don't miss the opportunity this month to watch a pair building nearby – early sunny mornings are best.

Long-tailed tits are not the only diminutive garden birds involved in hard March labour: it's the building season for the wren, too. Or, at least, for the male.

He spends the early spring constructing unlined, unfurnished nests within his territory. Once finished, he sings loudly and shows them off to visiting females, who will assess his aptitude as a mate partly by his handiwork. If he's built well, he stands a good chance of being chosen, and so he puts in heavy effort now, making between three and ten nests, assembling a portfolio.

Of course, there are some birds for which March is not a 'breeding' month at all: they will not be building nests or laying eggs yet. These are the ones that visit us only for the summer, the migrants such as swallows and spotted flycatchers.

They are still on their travels, perhaps a hundred, perhaps a thousand, kilometres to the south of us. They are destined to be forever behind the resident birds in their hectic breeding schedules.

But spring migration is still a race, with some heading the field, some lagging behind. Some species arrive early – swallows and chiffchaffs, for example – and some later, such as swifts and house martins. But, more tellingly, some individuals of a species may also arrive way before the others, rushing north to grab the advantages of early arrival.

     

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