Catching the Bug – web book


Mark Constantine,
Nick Hopper &
The Sound Approach
Catching the Bug, Web-book
8th April 2019

The Sound Approach team are Arnoud van den Berg, Magnus Robb, Killian Mullarney, Dick Forsman, René Pop and me, Mark Constantine. While the book is written in the first person it is a concentrated mix of the thoughts and opinions of us all. However, any mistakes are all mine.

For this book we enlisted Nick Hopper, who apart from writing and taking many of the photos, also conducted a series of new studies of waterbirds, gulls and corvids especially for our book. The Sound Approach would like to thank Claire, for keeping him sane during the process.

Gilbert White included his friends’ letters in The natural history and antiquities of Selborne (White 1789); I’m sure he reproduced their words faithfully. We have made our own interpretations of our birders’ actions, conversations and emails, and even sprinkled them with a little folklore. Nick and I would like to thank all the bird pub visitors mentioned in the book and ask for forgiveness for the liberties taken, but would point out that we were constantly encouraged by Shaun Robson, who gave his support, collected the photographs of birders for publication and even allowed us to publish stories about him even when there was only a grain of truth remaining. Shaun is also the benign dictator of Out & About, a Dorset-based internet group that grew from a small, local bird newsline. We’ve borrowed freely from the opinions and debates expressed in that forum and would like to thank all the contributors. We thank Mo Constantine who read or had read to her endless drafts, and accompanied Mark throughout the stories told and the writing process.

The Sound Approach would like to single out Ian Alexander who, besides giving us an environmental master class, explained the various agencies and government initiatives. Where we’ve used his opinions we have quoted him. Hamish Murray advised on the management of nature reserves and especially the sounds birds make when migrating. Dave Chown, Neil Gartshore and James Lidster all assisted Nick in our surveys; James also acted as an enthusiastic guide and kindly helped us with the gull chapter. Andy Musgrove kindly listened to and commented on our criticisms of WeBS. Furthermore, we thank Pete Miles of Dorset Oysters who advised on the clams and crabs of the harbor sea bed. Neil Johnson and Chris Thain helped with the history and geography of Brownsea Island. We thank Cecilia Bosman who through the years assisted Arnoud on most of his travels, and materialised this book with Anneke Boekhoudt from Lampenistenpers, Amsterdam, and Mientje Petrus from Em-space, Amstelveen. Spencer Burge, Matt Fairhall, Kerry Fletcher and Paul Morton assisted in various ways.

The Sound Approach would also like to thank Eloisa Matheu of Alosa, who supplied recordings that helped to clarify the geographical variation of Dartford Warbler sounds across Iberia; STRIX, Carlos and Cláudia Cruz and Paulo Monteiro for help with logistics in Portugal; and Pim Wolf who provided accommodation and good company for many a migration recording session in Zeeland, the Netherlands, and also allowed us to use recordings of a first-winter Siberian Chiffchaff making sounds we have not recorded ourselves. Peter Nuyten also supplied a sound recording, and we appreciate all the help he has given with our equipment. Eugene Archer gave invaluable assistance when Magnus and Killian went to study Dartford Warblers in France, Vasil Ananian directed Magnus and René to the best sites for chiffchaffs in Armenia and Brian Cresswell kindly shared his knowledge of European Nightjar sounds. We are grateful to all the people who assisted Arnoud to record sounds of Siberian Chiffchaffs in Siberia, especially Sergey Gashkov from Tomsk State University. We thank José Luis Copete, Pierre-André Crochet, Łukasz Ławicki, Richard Millington and Ricardo Gutiérrez for timely responses to questions on cormorants’ distribution, and Klas Strandberg from Telinga microphones for his continuous support.

The recordings are stereo, digital and were recorded where possible using a SASS or stereo ambient sampling system that gives the listener the impression of being present at the scene. For this reason, they are best listened to on headphones. Rather than use words where we wished to interpret the sounds, we used sonagrams, which we made using Raven Pro 1.3. Sonagrams are just graphic interpretations of sound. They are best approached in the same way you would look at a stocks and shares graph. Just as the shares’ rise or fall is shown by the rise and fall of a line on a graph, on sonagrams the higher or lower the trace appears above the baseline, the higher or lower pitched it sounds. And in both cases the horizontal axis represents time. Just as the success or failure of stocks is tracked over time from left to right, in sonagrams the duration of a sound is represented by the horizontal span of a trace. 

If you are unfamiliar with sonagrams, start with these three simple songs (CD1-01 to CD1-03). Listen to the recordings and follow the notes on the page. 

CD1-01: Common Wood Pigeon Columba palumbus Middlebere, Poole Harbour, Dorset, England, 06:00, 25 April 2005. Song of two different individuals. Background: Canada Goose Branta canadensis, Common Shelduck Tadorna tadorna, Common Teal Anas crecca, Eurasian Collared Dove Streptopelia decaocto, Pied Wagtail Motacilla yarrellii, Eurasian Wren Troglodytes troglodytes, Dunnock Prunella modularis, Common Blackbird Turdus merula, Song Thrush T philomelos, Eurasian Blackcap Sylvia atricapilla, Carrion Crow Corvus corone, Common Chaffinch Fringilla coelebs and European Greenfinch Chloris chloris. 05.005.MC.04630.21

CD1-02: Stock Dove Columba oenas Arne, Poole Harbour, Dorset, England, 07:30, 10 March 2007. Song of two different individuals. Background: Black-headed Gull Chroicocephalus ridibundus, European Robin Erithacus rubecula, Song Thrush Turdus philomelos, Goldcrest Regulus regulus, European Blue Tit Cyanistes caeruleus and Western Jackdaw Corvus monedula. 07.001.MC.11115.02

CD1-03: Eurasian Collared Dove Streptopelia decaocto Middlebere, Poole Harbour, Dorset, England, 05:45, 25 April 2005. Song. Background: Common Wood Pigeon Columba palumbus, Eurasian Wren Troglodytes troglodytes, Common Blackbird Turdus merula, Eurasian Blackcap Sylvia atricapilla, Great Tit Parus major, Common Chaffinch Fringilla coelebs and European Greenfinch Chloris chloris. 05.005.MC.03330.02

Introduction: Tuesday night 9pm

Chapter 1: And did those feet in ancient times
ice ages, climate, history

Chapter 2: Neptune’s poultry yard…
wildfowlers, hunting

Chapter 3: Marooned
environmental threats, first nature reserves

Chapter 4: If that’s a Bibby’s Warbler I’ll eat my hat
sounds and plumages of Dartford Warblers in western Europe

Chapter 5: Where was I?
twitching in the old days

Chapter 6: Paradise regained
history, identification and taxonomy of cormorants

Chapter 7: The return of the natives
Little Egrets and other former rarities

Chapter 8: If that’s a Cabot’s Tern I’ll eat my…
Sandwich and other terns

Chapter 9: ‘appiness
vagrant gulls at tip

Chapter 10: Lady Muck
Yellow-legged, Mediterranean and other gulls

Chapter 11: Blinded by adrenalin
seawatching

Chapter 12: Nearer to God than Godlingston
sounds of European Nightjar

Chapter 13: The glory of migration
watching passage of passerines

Chapter 14: A flock of birds forever in flight
identification of migration calls of passerines

Chapter 15: With this ring
ringing, rare warblers and Aquatic Warbler

Chapter 16: Drab
sounds and taxonomy of Siberian Chiffchaff

Chapter 17: The great Western
wader watching and Western Sandpiper

Chapter 18: How much is that doggie in the window?
bird boat, Brownsea, Bittern and Otters

Chapter 19: Come hell or high water
wetland birds, tides and water levels 

Chapter 20: I love it when a plan comes together
wetland bird counts, Sika Deer

Chapter 21: Dancing with the moonlit knight
sounds and plumages of Woodlark

Chapter 22: Bill Oddie, Bill Oddie, rub your beard on my body
corvids, winkling

Chapter 23: An obsessive Hobby
sounds and plumages of Hobby

Chapter 24: The silent spring of the Anthropocene
farming and disappearing birds

Chapter 25: Completely cuckoo
sounds of Common Cuckoos

Chapter 26: A new England
cold weather movements, bird race

Chapter 27: It’s all right Mark, we believe you
bird listing, sounds of snipes

Postcript: The Rosy Glow
bird listers looking back from the future

References

References

Alerstam, T. 1990. Bird migration. Oxford.

Alexander, H G 1969. A checklist of the birds of Purbeck. Unpublished.

Alexander, H G 1974. Seventy years of birdwatching. Berkhamsted.

Ashby, V (editor) 1995. Dorset Birds 1995. Dorset Bird Club.

Austen, J H 1885. A systematic catalogue of the birds of the Isle of Purbeck. Papers of the Purbeck Society: 61-75. Wareham.

Ball, D 2008. Losing my virginity. The Hoopoe, Dorset Bird Club Newsletter 66 (Autumn & Winter).

van den Berg, A B 1993, 2007. WP reports. Dutch Birding 15: 82-90; 29: 106-119.

van den Berg, A B, Constantine, M & Robb, M S 2003. Out of the blue. Flight calls of migrants and vagrants. CD & booklet. Amsterdam.

van den Berg, A B & The Sound Approach 2009. Calls, identification and taxonomy of Siberian Chiffchaff: an analysis. Dutch Birding 31: 79-85.

Bibby, C 1977. Ecology of the Dartford warbler Sylvia undata (Boddaert) in relation to its conservation in Britain. PhD thesis.

Bromby, A 1983. Poole Harbour. Chapter 8 in: Prendergast, E D V & Boys, J V (editors), The birds of Dorset, London.

Burton, J 1995. Birds and Climate Change. London.

Cade, M 1993. Rare birds in Dorset 1983-92. Dorset Birds 1993. Dorset Bird Club.

Carson, R 1962. Silent spring. New York.

Chandler, D 1995. The Campaigns of Napoleon. The mind and method of history’s greatest soldier. New York.

Chown, D 2004. Important breeding birds of Poole Harbour, part 1, Water Rail. Poole Harbour Study Group, report 7.

Clements, J F 2007. The Clements Checklist of Birds of the World. Sixth edition. New York.

Cocker, M 2007. Crow Country. London.

Collins, D R 1986. Poole Harbour RSPB Ornithological Survey 1984 – 1986. Sandy.

Constantine, M & The Sound Approach 2006. The Sound Approach to birding. Poole.

Cook, K 2004. Important breeding birds of Poole Harbour, part 2, Redshank. Poole Harbour Study Group, report 7.

Cooper, I 2004. Purbeck revealed. Bath.

Cornisch, C J 1895. Wild England of today and the wild life in it. New York.

Cramp, S (editor) 1992. Handbook of the birds of Europe, the Middle East and North Africa 6. Oxford.

Cramp, S & Simmons, K E L (editors) 1977. Handbook of the birds of Europe, the Middle East and North Africa 1. Oxford.

Dean, A R 2008. Colour nomenclature and Siberian Chiffchaffs. British Birds 101: 144-150.

Diver, C 1947. Conservation of Nature in England and Wales. Command 7122. UK government White Paper.

Dixon, B 1966. Wildfowl in Poole Harbour. Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society 88: 76-83.

Dyer, B & Darvill, T (editors) 2010. The book of Poole Harbour. Wimborne Minster.

Eaton, M A, Appleton, G F, Ausden, M A, Balmer, D E, Grantham, M J, Grice, P V, Hearn, R D, Holt, C A, Musgrove, A J, Noble, D G, Parsons, M, Risely, K, Stroud, D A & Wotton, S 2010. The state of the UK’s birds 2010. RSPB, BTO, WWT, CCW, JNCC, NE, NIEA and SNH, Sandy.

Ericson, P G P & Carrasquilla, F H 1997. Subspecific identity of prehistoric Baltic Cormorants Phalacrocorax carbo. Ardea 85: 1–7.

Follett, J C (editor) 1964. Bird report for 1963. Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society 85: 47-69.

Fuisz, T I & de Kort, S R 2007. Habitat-dependent call divergence in the common cuckoo: is it a potential signal for assortative mating? Proceedings of the Royal Society B 274: 2093-2097.

Goostrey, A, Carss, D N, Noble, L R & Piertney, S B 1998. Populations introgression and differentiation in the great cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo in Europe. Molecular Ecology 7: 329-338.

Green, G P 1984. Summary of the Dorset Bird Report 1983. Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society 105: 178.

Hawker, P 1859. Instructions to young sportsmen in all that relates to guns and shooting. 11th edition. London.

Hawker, P 1893. The diary of Colonel Peter Hawker, 1802-1853, volume 1. London.

Helbig, A J, Martens, J, Seibold, I, Henning, F, Schottler, B & Wink, M 1996. Phylogeny and species limits in the Palearctic chiffchaff complex: mitochondrial genetic differentiation and bioacoustic evidence. Ibis 138: 650-666.

Holling, M & the Rare Breeding Birds Panel 2010. Rare breeding birds in the United Kingdom in 2008. British Birds 103: 482-538.

Humphreys, J & May, V (editors) 2005. The ecology of Poole Harbour. Amsterdam.

Huntley, B, Green, R E, Collingham, Y C & Willis, S G 2007. A climatic atlas of European breeding birds. Barcelona.

Isherwood, C 1959. The common cormorant. In: Poems past and present. Fourth edition. Don Mills.

Kortland, A 1938. De uitdrukkingsbewegingen en -geluiden van Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis. Ardea 27: 1-40.

Kortland, A 1995. Patterns of pair-formation and nest-building in the European Cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis. Ardea 83: 11-25.

Ladle, L & Woodward, A 2009. Excavations at Bestwall Quarry, Wareham 1992-2005, volume 1: the prehistoric landscape. Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society Monograph 19. Dorchester.

Legg, R 2000. Corfe Castle Encyclopedia. Wincanton.

Lindholm, A 2011. Crossbill call types in Finland 1998-2009. Caluta 2: 7-18.

Mabey, R 1972. Food for free. Glasgow.

Marion, L 2009. Recensement national des hérons coloniaux de France en 2007: Héron cendré, Héron pourpré, Héron bihoreau, Héron crabier, Héron garde-bœufs, Aigrette garzette, Grande Aigrette. Alauda 77: 243-268.

Marion, L & Le Gentil, J 2006. Ecological segregation and population structuring of the cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo in Europe, in relation to the recent introgression of continental and marine subspecies. Evolutionary Ecology 20: 193-216.

Marova, I M, Fedorov, V V, Shipilina, D A & Alekseev, V N 2009. Genetic and vocal differentiation in hybrid zones of passerine birds: Siberian and European Chiffchaffs (Phylloscopus [collybita] tristis and Ph. [c.] abietinus) in the southern Urals. Doklady Biological Sciences 427: 384-386.

Matsuda, H, Uno, H, Tamada, K, Kaji, K, Saitoh, T, Hirakawa, H, Kurumada, T & Fujimoto, T 2002. Harvest-based estimation of population size for Sika deer on Hokkaido Island, Japan. Wildlife Society Bulletin 30: 1160-1171.

May, V J & Humphreys, J (editors) 2005. The Ecology of Poole Harbour. Proceedings in Marine Science 7: 175-188.

McCarthy, M 2009. Think about it. Birds 22: 36-40.

Moore, P (editor) 2003. For nature, not humans: recollections of Brownsea Island under the ownership of Mrs. Bonham Christie. Poole.

Mullarney, K, Svensson, L & Zetterström, D 2009. Collins bird guide. Second edition. London.

Newson, S E, Rexstad, E A, Baillie, S R, Buckland, S T & Aebischer, N J 2010. Population change of avian predators and grey squirrels in England: is there evidence for an impact on avian prey populations? Journal of Applied Ecology 47: 244-252.

Norman, A 2005. Enid Blyton and her enchantment with Dorset. Wellington.

Olburs, C 2008. The chinese cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis Blumenbach 1798, an alien bird. Internet: www.matchfishing.it

Oppenheimer, S 2006. The origins of the British: a genetic detective story. London.

Pickess, B P & Underhill-Day, J C 2002. Important birds of Poole Harbour. Poole Harbour Study Group, report 2. Wareham.

Pond, B 2009. Longshoreman. London.

Poot, M & Flamant, R 2006. Numbers, behaviour and origin of Mediterranean gulls Larus melanocephalus wintering along the west coast of southern Portugal. Airo 16: 13-22.

Prendergast, E D V & Boys, J V (editors) 1983. The birds of Dorset. London.

van Raalte, C 1906. Brownsea Island. London. (Reprinted by the Poole Historical Trust 2011.)

Rogers, M & the Rarities Committee 1994. Report on rare birds in Great Britain in 1983. British Birds 77: 506-562.

Shirihai, H, Gargallo, G & Helbig, A J 2001. Sylvia warblers. London.

Sloane, J 2010. Bournemouth 1810-2010. From smugglers to surfers. Wimborne Minster.

Smithe, F B 1975. Naturalist’s color guide. The American Museum of Natural History. New York.

Taylor, T 2004. Green Island. Time team series 11, broadcast on Channel 4 on 8 February 2004.

van Tets, G F 1965. A Comparative Study of Some Social Communication Patterns in the Pelecaniformes. Ornithological monographs 2.

Thomas, N S, Caldow, R W G, McGrorty, S, Durell, S E A le V dit, West, A D & Stillman, R A 2004. Bird invertebrate prey availability in Poole Harbour.
Poole Harbour Study Group, report 5. Wareham.

UK government 2010. Planning policy statement 25: Development and flood risk. www.communities.gov.uk/documents/planningandbuilding/pdf/planningpolicystatement25.pdf

Voelker, G & Light, J E 2011. Paleoclimactic events, dispersal and migratory losses along the Afro-European axis as drivers of biogeographic distribution in Sylvia warblers. BMC Evolutionary Biology 11: 163.

Watts, A 1968. Instant weather forecasting. London.

Weninger, B, Schulting, R, Bradtmöller, M, Clare, L, Collard, M, Edinborough, K, Hilpert, J, Jöris, O, Niekus, M, Rohling, E J & Wagner, B 2008.
The catastrophic final flooding of Doggerland by the Storegga Slide tsunami. Documenta Praehistorica XXXV: 1-24.

Wernham, C, Toms, M, Marchant, J, Clark, J, Siriwardena, G & Baillie, S 2002. The migration atlas. London.

White, G 1789. The natural history and antiquities of Selborne. London.

Winney, B J, Litton, C D, Parkin, D T & Feare, C J 2001. The subspecific origin of the inland breeding colonies of the cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo in Britain. Heredity 86: 45-53.

Wise, A J 1981. Birds of Brownsea. Third edition. Dorset Naturalists’ Trust.

Witherby, H F, Jourdain, C F R, Ticehurst, N F & Tucker, B W 19381941. A handbook of British birds. London.

Yalden, D W & Albarella, U 2009. The History of British Birds. Oxford.