Weather affecting Blue Tit brood size and timing in 2012
Bue Tit Cyanistes caeruleus
Average weight 11 grams
Average Lifespan 3 years
- 9 Blue Tit eggs - 3 hatched so far in this photo from 2012
We
have certainly noticed at birdboxesonline that last year that the
weather affecting Blue Tits was a huge contributing factor to the timing
of our Blue Tits nesting. We had eleven Blue Tits in one of our camera
boxes last year and all fledged on 17th May 2011, this year they laid 9
eggs of which only six hatched and survived and fledged 2 weeks later
than the previous year . On average talking to others it seems they are 2
weeks behind last year - certainly in Surrey and Sussex. Were yours
later?
Weather affecting Blue Tits
- 11 eggs from the blue tit 2011 nest
The
birds time their nesting so there are plentiful supplies of green
caterpillars about. The yellowness of the males chest bib is an
indication of the amount of caterpillars he has eaten - this is due to
the carotene pigments in them - the females are more attracted to
yellower bib. The caterpillars can be found on many Trees plants and
bushes and it is a very common site to see a bird hanging upside down
from a twig to forage for them they need them to be plentiful! Each
chick can eat over 100 per day - no wonder the female looks tatty and
tired after they have fledged!
- Blue Tit feeding chicks
The
average clutch of Blue Tit eggs tend to be about 10 - 12 although I
have heard from others as well as my own studies, this year's eggs seem
to be lower in numbers. The UK generally had above average weather in
March 2012 but went on to have the wettest April in over a century.
How
this will effect the population generally is a bit more guess work - 70
- 80% of blue tits die each year, a huge mortality rate and most of
that figure is made up of young birds - it's a brutal Darwinian
process..
- Fledgeling Blue Tit
However
Blue Tits can live a long time 15 - 20 years in extreme rare cases. So
will the population dip slightly or will the amount of breeding pairs
remain roughly constant? If they can survive through the first year they
have a knack for survival and are more likely to survive to breed
again? This paper has noted a higher chance of breeding females being
predated and the males possible countering that with feeding rituals. I
suspect that this year will make little difference on the population as a
whole. However if spring in 2013 has more weather affecting Blue Tits
it may be another story.
Rob
www.birdboxesonline.co.uk
0 comments:
Post a Comment