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Earliest and latest since 2006 (last year covered in full by The Birds of Lundy): Earliest 24 Feb 2019 (one); Latest 11 Nov 2011 & 2018 (one).
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| 2008 |
Ringing evidence for occurence of Greenland Wheatears
Tony Taylor has recently reviewed ringing information and comments that: "Forty of the birds ringed between 1972 and 1999 were noted as Greenland Wheatears O. o. leucorhoa and there are others that were not recorded as such but which had wing-lengths well beyond the nominate range. There has been less chance of catching Greenland Wheatears in more recent years, with little ringing activity at the best times for them and Quarter Wall Trap out of action.” (received from Tony Taylor 31 October 2007).
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| 2009 |
Greenland Wheatear ringed
2 May – An immature male Greenland Wheatear O. o. leucorhoa was trapped and ringed.
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| 2010 |
Notable spring-passage count
27 Apr – A total of 200 was among the higher counts recorded during spring passage (the record being 300 on 2 May 2004).
Good breeding season
2010 appears to have been a bumper breeding season for Wheatears on Lundy. A survey of breeding landbirds during the first week of Jun resulted in an estimated 30-40 territories, located mainly along the South End and West Side. At least 24 recently fledged juveniles – most in loose family groups and still being fed by adults – were counted. Other adults were continuing to carry food to nest sites.
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| 2011 |
Notable spring-passage count
20 Apr – A count of 200 matched the high number recorded during late April 2010.
Greenland Wheatear ringed
26 Apr – A Greenland Wheatear O. o. leucorhoa was trapped and ringed.
New record set for the highest ever count during autumn passage
1 Oct – A fall of at least 400, during a period of unseasonably hot weather, with very warm southerly winds, was (at the time) by the far the highest count ever recorded on the island during either spring or autumn migrations, the previous autumn maximum being 300 on 15 Sep 1974. A higher count was made during spring passage in May 2012, but this remains (as of the end of 2023) the all-time record for autumn.
Late birds in autumn
There were unusually late (though not record-breaking) stragglers into Nov, with single birds on 4th, 6th and 11th.
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| 2012 |
New record set for the highest ever count during spring passage
27 Apr to 5 May – Significant falls brought 400 on 27th, 200 on 30th, 500 on 1 May and 150 on 2 & 5 May. The estimates made for both 27 Apr and 1 May established new records for the highest numbers ever recorded in spring (eclipsing the previous record of 300 on 2 May 2004).
Greenland Wheatears
Greenland Wheatears O. o. leucorhoa were trapped and ringed on 28 Apr (one), and 30 Apr (three). Of 100 counted around Castle Hill on 1 May, nearly all appeared to be Greenland Wheatears, typical of this relatively late phase of spring migration, and most had moved on by the next day. Though numbers of Wheatears logged did not exceed 30 after the first week of May, continued passage through the island was demonstrated by the trapping and ringing of six more Greenland birds on 23rd & 24th. Tony Taylor commented: “These six birds were notable because their mean weight was 41.5g (range: 35.8-46.6g). This contrasts with the 29 other Wheatears (probably Lundy breeding birds) ringed in the same week, which had a mean weight of 25.1g (range: 22.4-29.0g). The Greenland birds were not only larger but were carrying much more fat than the local birds, and so were probably about to start a long flight north. They were all one-year-old birds, and would probably arrive on their breeding grounds later than more experienced adults.”
Breeding season
20 Jun – 42 adults and 50 juveniles were recorded during a perimeter walk of the island.
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| 2013 |
Colour-ringing project and breeding population estimate
As a result of a colour-ringing study being led by Tony Taylor & Richard Taylor, the island’s breeding population in 2013 was estimated at about 80 pairs – the highest ever recorded and likely to be attributable, at least in part, to the eradication of rats.
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| 2014 |
Colour-ringing project and breeding population estimate
Further research based on colour-ringing resulted in a breeding population estimate of 115 pairs; another new record. Full details can be found in a paper by Tony Taylor published in the 2014 Lundy Field Society Annual Report.
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Photo: Male Wheatear, Quarter Wall, 25 Apr 2014 © Richard Campey
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| 2015 |
Birds singing in total darkness
29 May – Birds were singing in total darkness below Tibbetts at around 02.00 hrs and near Pondsbury at about 04.00 hrs (Richard & Rebecca Taylor).
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| 2016 |
Colour-ringing project and breeding population estimate
Tony Taylor and Richard Taylor continued their colour-ringing study, marking 48 new birds and logging sightings of 29 birds ringed in previous years. The survival rate from 2015 to 2016 among the colour-ringed birds was 44%. The all-island breeding population in 2016 was estimated at 110 pairs.
Greenland Wheatears
A female Greenland Wheatear O. o. leucorhoa on the west end of the Airfield on 5 Jun was caught and ringed (Richard & Rebecca Taylor). On 8 Sep, an adult female Greenland bird was caught by hand at 23:00hrs in the Old Light Manx Sheawater colony. Perhaps newly arrived, its weight was quite low, but after being kept overnight and ringed, it flew off strongly the following morning (Richard Taylor, Rosie Hall). The last bird of the year, on 27 Oct, was considered to be a first-winter male Greenland Wheatear (Chris Baillie).
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| 2017 |
Colour-ringing project and breeding population estimate
The colour-ringing project under the BTO Retrapping Adults for Survival scheme entered its fifth year. A further 51 birds were newly colour-ringed, whilst 48 birds marked in previous years (2013–2016) were resighted. One of the latter, ringed in 2015, was seen on Guernsey on 13 Mar (2017), then back on Lundy 11 days later. The breeding population within the main study area, from the Castle, along the south and west coast as far as Halfway Wall, was estimated at 53 pairs and for the island as a whole, 121 pairs – yet another new record for the island.
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| 2018 |
Colour-ringing project and breeding population estimate
The ongoing colour-ringing study of the island’s breeding population showed that at least 56% of the birds breeding in 2017 survived migration to and from their African winter quarters and bred on Lundy in 2018. The main study area (from the Castle, along the South End and West Side as far north as Halfway Wall) was estimated to have held 53 pairs in 2018, the same as in 2017, but the whole-island population estimate was down slightly at 114 pairs.
Late date in autumn
11 Nov – A single bird, in Lighthouse Field, equalled the latest date in autumn since publication of The Birds of Lundy (see also Nov 2011).
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| 2019 |
Exceptionally early arrival in spring
Dean Jones’s sighting of a male at Jenny’s Cove during the morning of 24 Feb was (by seven days) the earliest Lundy record for this species and one of the first seen in the whole of the UK in 2019.
Colour-ringing project and breeding population estimate
Summarising the continuing long-term BTO Retrapping Adults for Survival (RAS) colour-ringing study of Lundy’s Wheatears, Tony Taylor reports that 53% of the breeding birds recorded in 2018 survived their migration and returned to breed in 2019. This was slightly below the 2013-18 average return rate. Even so, there were a record 54 pairs in the study area (the south and west coasts between the Castle and Halfway Wall), and the population estimate for the whole island was 118 pairs. This is the second highest total recorded, after 121 in 2017. A colour-ringed male, holding territory on the sidelands just south of Quarter Wall Copse, was originally ringed on Lundy in 2012 (with colour-rings added in 2015).
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| 2020 |
Colour-ringing project
The usual three weeks of fieldwork in late May and early June were not possible because of the Covid lockdown. However, thanks to some dedicated searching by Dean Jones and other islanders, 34 different individuals colour-ringed in previous years were identified. These included 24 birds from 2019, and a further 10 from the preceding three years. Since fieldwork effort was not directly comparable with other years, the BTO was unable to calculate adult survival rates, but the records will still be very valuable in tracking the histories of the individuals involved.
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| 2021 |
Colour-ringing project and study area population estimate
With no Wheatears colour-ringed in 2020, the BTO Retrapping Adults for Survival project resumed with relatively few previously colour-ringed birds still in the breeding population and many unmarked birds to be captured and ringed. The timing of breeding for many pairs was also disrupted by spells of bad weather in spring, meaning that many pairs were not at the ideal stage for trapping during the usual three weeks of fieldwork in late May and early June. Even so, 48 birds were newly colour-ringed, and 19 birds ringed in 2019 or before were re-sighted. The results suggest a mean of 43% adult survival per year between 2019 and 2021, and the 2021 breeding population in the study area was estimated at 48 pairs. Both these figures are a little lower than in 2017-19, but they are minimum values, less reliable than usual because of the relatively large number of unringed birds that remained at the end of the season. In 2022 it should be possible to restore the very high levels of confidence that were achieved pre-pandemic.
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| 2022 |
Colour-ringing project and record all-island breeding population estimate
Within the Retrapping Adults for Survival (RAS) project study area, 56 breeding adults were newly ringed and 39 were resighted from previous years. The latter included a bird originally ringed in 2016 and which had therefore crossed the Sahara at least 14 times! The breeding population within the study area was estimated at 55 pairs. The whole-island population was estimated at 129 breeding pairs – the highest ever recorded. When breeding is over, some colour-ringed adults are known to remain on Lundy in July and August to moult, but the scarcity of such records suggests that others may move away. Firm evidence was provided in 2022 when a male colour-ringed on Lundy on 28 May, had moved to Skokholm (Pembrokeshire) by 1 Jul, when it was in the early stages of its annual moult. It was last seen on Skokholm on 9 Aug, with its moult almost complete.
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| 2023 |
Summary
Spring passage – First: 5 Mar (a male); maximum: 142 on 24 Apr.
Autumn passage – Last: 30 Oct (one); maxima: 59 on 13 Aug and 28 on 11 Sep.
Highest monthly counts (and number of days logged): Jan 0 (0); Feb 0 (0); Mar 63 (16); Apr 142 (30); May 136 (31); Jun 62 (29); Jul 48 (31); Aug 59 (30); Sep 28 (29); Oct 10 (24); Nov 0 (0); Dec 0 (0).
Number ringed during the year: 107*
*Seven birds ringed in early Oct were ascribed to the Greenland race O. o. leucorhoa.
Colour-ringing project
The Retrapping Adults for Survival (RAS) study continued, with 61 breeding adults newly ringed and 57 birds known to have survived from previous years. These included the female ringed in 2016, now at least eight years old. The estimated adult survival rate between the 2022 and ‘23 seasons was 58%.
The breeding population within the RAS study area was 61 pairs, and using that figure a whole-island estimate of 163 pairs was calculated. Both these figures are significantly higher than the previous records, set in 2022.
The same Lundy colour-ringed male Wheatear that moulted on Skokholm in 2022, was re-sighted on Lundy during the 2023 breeding season but returned to Skokholm for its annual moult in the late summer of 2023 (see below for details).
Another colour-ringed bird from Lundy was photographed as an early spring arrival at Portland Bill (Dorset) on 15 Mar 2023. One of its colour-rings was not visible in the photo, but this individual’s identity could be narrowed down to one of three males ringed in 2022. All of these were back on Lundy for the breeding season.
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| 2024 |
Summary
Spring passage – First: 10 Mar (a male at John O'Groats); maxima: 36 on 26 Mar, 49 on 14 Apr, 67 on 20 & 28 Apr; 73 on 10 May, 80 on 26 May.
Autumn passage – Last: 26 Oct (one); maxima: 54 on 30 Aug, 45 on 3 Sep, and 47 on 7 Sep.
Highest monthly counts (and number of days logged):
Jan 0 (0); Feb 0 (0); Mar 36 (17); Apr 67 (29); May 80 (31); Jun 217 (30); Jul 6 (26); Aug 54 (30); Sep 47 (30); Oct 6 (20); Nov 0 (0); Dec 0 (0).
Number ringed during the year: 119
Colour-ringing project
In 2024, the Wheatear Retrapping Adults for Survival (RAS) team (Tony & Ann Taylor, Rich & Rebecca Taylor) arrived on 18 May and left on 8 June. Using spring traps, a total of 61 birds were newly captured and colour-ringed along the island’s southern and western coasts, from Castle Hill to the western end of Halfway Wall. This total included two birds that had previously been metal-ringed only, as nestlings on Lundy in 2023.
During the 2024 breeding season, a total of 63 adults (35 males and 28 females) that had been colour-ringed on Lundy in previous years were resighted – not only by the RAS team but also by Observatory staff and visitors to the island, with photos again proving particularly helpful for confirming exact ring combinations, which are often very hard to see (and remember!) using binoculars only. The oldest of the resighted birds were three females, ringed in 2016, 2019, and 2021. As each of these was already adult when originally ringed, this makes them at least nine, six and five years old respectively, with the 2016 female having crossed the Sahara at least 18 times during her life so far! Overall, resighting data showed that adult survival from 2023 to 2024 was 55% – in line with the average annual survival since 2013 of 56%.
With a total of 63 colour-ringed females in the RAS study area (taking into account both newly ringed birds and those resighted from previous years), plus at least six additional unringed females that eluded capture, there were an estimated 69 pairs in the study area in 2024 – the highest number since the project began.
The colour-ringed male Wheatear that moulted on Skokholm in 2022 & 2023 but present on Lundy during the 2023 breeding season, was photographed at Portland Bill on 20 Mar 2024. A female Wheatear colour-ringed on Lundy in Jun 2022 was photographed at Portland Bill on 23 March 2024 (see below for full details).
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| 2025 |
Summary
Spring passage – The first arrivals were three on 7 Mar. There were further single-digit counts on nine dates up to and including 24th, followed by a notable increase to 16 on 25th and 17 on 30th. The first returning colour-ringed bird from the island's breeding population was seen (and videoed) on 16th – a male at the western end of Quarter Wall. Numbers rose rapidly in early Apr, with 28 on 1st, 39 on 2nd and 53 on 3rd. Peak counts later in Apr included 62 on 10th, 86 on 27th and 65 on 28th, whilst the highest May count was 54 on 18th. Candidate 'Greenland' Wheatears O. o. leucorhoa (based on field assessment of size, structure and plumage characteristics) were logged on 17 dates from 10 to Apr to 25 May, with a maximum of four on 13 Apr.
Post-breeding period and autumn passage – The daily totals logged in Jul & Aug reached 30 or more on just seven dates, with the four highest counts being 54 on 4 Jul, 42 on 25 Jul, 44 on 13 Aug and 41 on 21 Aug. The maximum during the last ten days of Aug and first week or so of Sep was 21 on 1 Sep, with other higher counts including 14 on 4th and 20 on 5th.and 19 on 8th. Thereafter, single-digit totals on nine dates from 9 to 20 Sep inclusive, with ones and twos only on most days, were followed by a major influx of 47 on 21st, coinciding with a marked change in air-mass as strong winds and heavy rain on 20th cleared progressively from the north on 21st.
Highest monthly counts (and number of days logged):
Jan 0 (0); Feb 0 (0); Mar 17 (17); Apr 86 (30); May 54 (24); Jun 123 (22); Jul 54 (27); Aug 44 (30);
Colour-ringing project
A male Wheatear that had been colour-ringed on Lundy in Jun 2024 was photographed at Nouadhibou, on the coast of north-west Mauritania, on 2 Mar, and was relocated back on Lundy, close to the area where he was originally trapped and ringed, on 22 May (Ann & Tony Taylor). This amazing record is the first report of a Lundy colour-ringed Wheatear from outside the UK and Channel Islands.
The male Wheatear colour-ringed on Lundy in Jun 2022, which moulted on Skokholm in 2022 & 2023, was present on Lundy during the 2023 breeding season, and photographed at Portland Bill on 20 Mar 2024, was seen back on Lundy during the 2025 breeding season! See below for full details.
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Ringing
Colour-ring sighting: A Wheatear ringed and colour-ringed as a breeding adult male on Lundy on 3 Jun 2015 (ring no. Z660128; colour-ring combination: left leg, pale blue over black; right leg, metal over stripe) was seen at Pulias, Guernsey, Channel Islands on 13 Mar 2017 (649 days; 244 km; SE 142°) then re-sighted on Lundy from 24 Mar to 4 Jun 2017. This is the first – and to date only – sighting of a Lundy colour-ringed Wheatear away from the island, from among the >200 individuals marked to the end of 2017.
Colour-ring sightings: A Wheatear ringed and colour-ringed as an adult male on Lundy on 28 May 2022 (ring no. AXH2316) was seen (and identified by its colour-ring combination) on Skokholm, Pembrokeshire on 1, 7, 17 Jul and 09 Aug 2022 (34 to 73 days; 74 km; NW 325°). It was logged back on Lundy during the breeding season of 2023, but was re-sighted on Skokholm on 23 & 27 Jul and 24 Aug 2023 (up to 1 year, 2 months, 27 days after ringing). It was seen at Portland Bill on 20 March 2024, then not until it was relocated breeding on Lundy in 2025 and back on Skokholm on 6 Jul 2025!
Colour-ring sighting: A Wheatear ringed and colour-ringed as a nestling on Skokholm, Pembrokeshire on 07 Jul 2022 (ring no. TX22194) was seen (and identified by its colour-ring combination) on Lundy on 03 Apr 2023 (8 months, 27 days; 72 km SE). This is the first record for Lundy of a Wheatear colour-ringed elsewhere.
Colour-ring sighting: A Wheatear ringed and colour-ringed as an adult female on Lundy on 02 Jun 2022 (ring no. AXH2340) was photographed (and identified by its colour-ring combination) at Portland Bill on 23 Mar 2024.
Colour-ring sightings: A Wheatear ringed and colour-ringed as a first-year male on Lundy on 01 Jun 2024 (ring no. ABH2174) was photographed (and identified by its colour-ring combination) at Nouadhibou, Mauritania on 02 Mar 2025. It was seen back on Lundy on 22 May 2025. This is the first record of a Lundy-ringed Wheatear from outside the UK/Channel Islands.
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