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“When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains,
however improbable, must be the truth”
Arthur Conan Doyle The Sign Of The Four (1890)
Arthur Conan Doyle The Sign Of The Four (1890)
Strange
things have been occurring at several of the monitored osprey sites,
this season. Unaccountable, worrying things that seem - on the face
of it - to be so far removed from the usual that they defy
explanation.
17.7.2016 Fledgling Z0
“Ceri"
falls from a perch at
MWT CorsDyfi and sustains serious injuries (Infra-red illumination) [Montgomeryshire WT] |
Fledgling
birds have been falling from their perches. Youngsters have appeared
to have difficulty in walking, holding their legs or talons at
strange angles. Some have flown and failed to return; others have
gone off their food, seemingly ill, only to recover later. One chick
(at MWT Cors Dyfi) has been so badly hurt that she went into
circulatory shock and died. And on social media and the forums,
everyone has been asking:-
What
the hell is going on?
These
are wild creatures and every moment of their lives is at hazard. Bad
things can and do happen to individuals, whether they are under
observation or not. It's Nature. Flying is an instinctive ability,
but the judgement of speed, distance and timing are not: these are
acquired skills and they have to be learned and practised.
Young inexperienced birds sometimes have accidents, and the outcome
depends very much on chance and circumstances. Usually, they get
away with it unharmed – but not always.
There's
an app for that...
Statistical
mathematics include a set of tools that can tell us whether the
frequency of an event (or series of events) is higher, lower, or the
same as might be expected to occur by chance. Numbers were crunched
and the answer came back: it was higher. Not by much, but
detectable.
30.7.2016 Osprey W7
sustains
apparent grazing impact
injury.Close-up of bruising and swollen leg joint. [BGGW Glaslyn Wildlife] |
This begged the next question: could there be some underlying factor that was affecting some of these birds but not others, even though the incidents were happening in widely-separated nest locations and at different times? Powerful minds (much more powerful than mine) applied themselves to the problem. The 'usual suspects' were rounded up: provisioning rates, environmental pollutants, fungal toxins... one by one, they were eliminated from the inquiry. Exotic diseases were invoked: could it be bird flu? Avian malaria? Trichomonosis? Any of these can affect lower body function but they have other symptoms, too, none of which seemed to be present.
The leg rings themselves were checked on, and checked on again. But all were the same rings as had been used in previous years, made from the same materials and fitted by the same teams. It wasn't the rings.
Other theories were suggested, from the mildly unlikely to the just-plain-bonkers. Recessive gene mutations? Nope. Calcium deficiency causing paralysis? Can't be. Short term variations in the Earth's magnetic field? Gimme a break.
Perhaps there IS no answer. Alternatively (and it's just another theory) the answer might have been staring us in the face, all the time...
Kielder
osprey Y0 fledged on 15th July, out of
view
from the nest cameras. She did not return
to
the nest after fledging. Current whereabouts
unknown.
[Img: Paul McMichael]
|
“Duuude... real gnarly climbing up there... like, slippy and slidey, y'know... maaad dangerous...”
And this is a bloke who will happily hang from a branch by the crook of one elbow while thumbing tweets into his mobile with the other hand. The boy's prehensile. If Damien thinks that working up in the trees has suddenly become “mad dangerous”, then something is amiss.
My
UK readers will have noticed that, in 2016, the notorious British
Summer has been even less summery than usual. Rainfall - markedly in
the west and north - has produced totals for June that were 30%
higher than the moving average. The figures for July are not likely
to be much better. Cloud cover has been over 90% for almost 90% of
the days. These unsettled conditions have featured blustery winds,
variable in direction and gust strength. In technical terms, it's
been rubbish.
What effect might such unseasonably poor weather over such an extended period have on the environment?
Wet and humid conditions are ideal for growing the algae and moss that has
Any one of these factors could cause a problem on its own – but put them all together and they stack: generating a persistent and cumulative rise in the accident rate that we start to notice.
And so we mustn't give in to that seditious inclination of ours: that everything that happens must have a single identifiable cause and agent, so that we can hold someone or something “responsible” before dashing off in pursuit of the next conspiracy. I find no mysterious or even sinister forces at work here. There's an underlying rough-and-tumble to any wild fledging season - and the rougher it gets, the more tumbles it produces. In certain isolated years, all the adverse factors combine in one relentless stream of bad luck and unhappy accidents.
I blame the weather – but the weather didn't mean it. All these incidents are still just Nature, doing that stuff She does.
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The views expressed in this article are those of the author himself, and are not intended to be representative of any other organization or group.