Nature Notes: January 2015
What is the difference
between a weasel and a stoat?
A weasel is 'weasely'
identified but a stoat is 'staoatly' different.
I found a rather large
but unfortunately dead stoat (Mustela erminea) on the old Bilbrough
road which had no signs of injury. I watched another hunt in the
garden. It would disappear down summer rodent burrows that were
hidden by the falling leaves and then pop up in a different place.
However, once I looked
at some photographs that I took I could see that it had no dark tip
to the tail and was therefore a weasel (Mustela nivalis).
On the subject of
carnivores I saw a fox twice in the same field on two different days.
Although he was quite a distance off he wasn't taking any chances and
took of at quite a rate.
A very distant fox puts a bit more distance between him and me |
Roe Deer (Capreolus
capreolus) can still be spotted in the fields and on the 17th
I saw five.
Birds
I found a dead barn owl
(Tyto alba) on the road near the Street Cottages bus stop. It had a
ring on a leg which I took to report to the BTO.
We are attracting some
long tailed tits (Aegithalos caudatus) which love to peck at the
suet.
I also saw a grey
wagtail (Motacilla cinereaon) the roof but he hopped off before I could get my camera.
Here is what the RSPB
have to say about the grey wagtail;
The grey wagtail is
more colourful than its name suggests with slate grey upper parts and
distinctive lemon yellow under-tail. Its tail is noticeably longer
than those of pied and yellow wagtails. They have gradually increased
their range in the past 150 years and in the UK have expanded into
the English lowlands from the northern and western uplands. They are
badly affected by harsh winters, and because of recent moderate
declines it is an Amber List species.1
Another rare sight was
a red kite (Milvus milvus) flying over the fields of Bilbrough on
January 1st at 11:10. The Kite is described by the RSPB
as;
This magnificently
graceful bird of prey is unmistakable with its reddish-brown body,
angled wings and deeply forked tail. It was saved from national
extinction by one of the world's longest running protection
programmes, and has now been successfully re-introduced to England
and Scotland. It is an Amber List species because of its historical
decline.2
Other sightings
The first snowdrops
(Galanthus nivalis) were seen in the garden on the 11th
and green shoots could be seen poking up through the leaf litter of B
woods.
1 http://www.rspb.org.uk/discoverandenjoynature/discoverandlearn/birdguide/name/g/greywagtail/index.aspx
2 http://www.rspb.org.uk/discoverandenjoynature/discoverandlearn/birdguide/name/r/redkite/index.aspx
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