Wildlife sightings for 21st September 2014

2 Pintail - main lake and scrape

28 Wigeon - main lake

1 Peregrine - perched on hospital

5 Snipe - main lake and scrape

8 House Martin - feeding around Peacock Tower

 

Late August/September bird highlights: Hobby, Peregrine, Buzzard, Garganey, Spotted Redshank, Ruff, Greenshank, Green Sandpiper, Common Sandpiper, Oystercatcher, Whimbrel, Little Ringed Plover, Arctic Tern, Whinchat, Whitethroat, Spotted Flycatcher.

With autumn migration well underway this is a great time of year to find some exciting migrants. Summer birds like Chiffchaff, Whitethroat and Blackcap are starting to leave their breeding territories on site, while other summer visitors such as Wheatear, Whinchat, Yellow Wagtail, Swallow, Common Sandpiper and Redstart are passing through from other parts of the country heading southwards. At the same time there’s wildfowl like Shoveler, Wigeon and Snipe arriving or passing through to spend the winter here. Any species of migrant wader could turn up now, recent species this autumn including Ruff, Whimbrel and Greenshank. September and October generally turns up some more unusual or rarer birds so keep watching the scrub, scrapes and marsh for something a bit special this month.
Butterflies:  Small Copper(17th), Common Blue, Six-spot Burnet, Meadow Brown, Small White, Speckled Wood, Holly Blue, Large White, Red Admiral, Peacock, Comma.

Notable site records for this summer:  Mother Shipton, Barred Yellow (1st recorded at in 2008), Green Hairstreak,  Red-tipped Clearwing (1st site record. Nationally scarce), Cinnabar Moth, Ringlet, Small Heath (UK BAP Priority species), White Admiral.

 

Dragonflies and damselflies: Common Blue / Azure Damselfly, Small Red-eyed Damselfly, Blue-tailed Damselfly, Emperor Dragonfly, Black-tailed Skimmer, Ruddy Darter, Migrant Hawker, Brown Hawker.

 

Bush-crickets and grasshoppers: Roesel’s Bush-cricket, Dark Bush-cricket, Common Green Grasshopper, Field Grasshopper.

 

Hoverflies and other flies: Tropidia scita, Parhelophilus frutetorum and Eupeodes luniger.

 

Reptiles: 19th September survey: 40 juvenile slow worm with 10 adult females. Also 4 common lizards and 3 smooth newts.

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