‘It was desolation’: why did 700 shags disappear from an island overnight?

For many years, as nightfall drew in each night, as much as 700 shags would fly from their foraging grounds close to Fife to the Isle of Might to roost for the evening. A few of the birds had been doing this journey twice a day for 20 years, returning to the identical cliff ledge, squabbling over who sat the place.

On 31 October, Mark Newell sat on the rock, ready for his or her noisy return. He noticed nothing. Ultimately, 25 exhausted-looking birds straggled again. They didn’t fly off when he approached. The soundtrack of honking and bickering had stopped.

“It was desolation,” says Newell, who works for the UK Centre for Hydrology & Ecology (UKCEH) because the Isle of Might subject supervisor. After engaged on the island for 20 years, he says: “Seeing the cliffs devoid of birds was a stark, alarming view.”

Newell stayed for 4 nights, and returned weeks later, however the flocks had disappeared. These birds survived two years of avian flu – which has swept by means of the UK’s seabird colonies – solely to vanish en masse.

Specialists say a collection of storms in October, culminating in Storm Babet, had induced the disappearance – and sure dying – of those birds. However their disappearance could possibly be a microcosm of what’s taking place on different islands – and a warning of what occurs to seabirds as excessive climate occasions grow to be extra frequent.

“There are some birds on the market that I’ve ringed as chicks 20 years in the past,” says Newell. “Per week or two of unhealthy climate and that’s the tip of them.”

The seafront at North Berwick, as Storm Babet rages. {Photograph}: Murdo MacLeod/Guardian

Information for the island have been saved because the mid-Seventies, and there has by no means been such a heavy loss. “We’ve not seen something on that scale at any level up to now,” says Newell.

Seabirds can dwell with occasional stormy climate however successive storms can lead to “wrecks”, with lots of of emaciated seabirds washing ashore. In December 2013 and February 2014, a collection of notably unhealthy storms across the coast of Europe resulted within the dying of greater than 50,000 seabirds.

The local weather disaster is prone to make these occasions extra frequent, and extra damaging. Newell says: “It’s often simpler to make use of shags as the instance as a result of we are able to see the fast affect, whereas any excessive climate goes to have detrimental impacts on an entire vary of seabirds.”

The Isle of May, in the Firth of Forth, off eastern Scotland. Photograph: Porridge Picture Library/Alamy
The Isle of Might, within the Firth of Forth, off japanese Scotland. {Photograph}: Porridge Image Library/Alamy

Newell estimates that 10% of the UK inhabitants of shags might have been affected by the current storms as a result of they nest on the UK’s east coast, which took a very fierce battering.

Shags feed inside a mile of the coast however robust easterly winds stirred up the ocean, which meant they may not hunt for days on finish. They carry little fats as a result of it reduces their capability to dive, and so die if they don’t feed usually.

“In lots of instances these birds have been of prime breeding age as effectively, so they need to have a number of years of manufacturing chicks. The very fact they don’t seem to be going to be is fairly heartbreaking,” says Newell.

The Isle of Might was additionally hit by storms in 1993, 2004 and 2012-13. On these events roughly half of the isle’s breeding inhabitants was misplaced.

Shags have been found in coastal towns in Aberdeenshire in the aftermath of Storm Babet. Photograph: Courtesy of New Arc Wildlife Rescue
Shags have been present in coastal cities in Aberdeenshire within the aftermath of Storm Babet. {Photograph}: Courtesy of New Arc Wildlife Rescue

A report printed final week discovered that greater than half of the seabird species breeding on British and Irish coasts have declined over the previous 20 years. The shag inhabitants has fallen by 20% over that interval and is now at 20,000 breeding pairs.

Within the meantime, conservationists need to discover their lacking shags. There’s a lack of knowledge from different islands, so whole losses is not going to be clear till subsequent breeding season, however anecdotal proof recommend many have died. Massive numbers have been discovered lifeless or dying of hunger throughout the UK.

There have been stories of weak or lifeless shags across the Scottish east coast, and as far down as Suffolk and Dover in England, with one younger fowl seen within the Netherlands. UKCEH is looking on folks to report and ship images of any lifeless shags with colored rings on to [email protected].

Lots of of exhausted shags have been discovered at Fraserburgh harbour in Aberdeenshire; some have been rescued, others euthanised.

“It’s fairly soul-destroying,” says Newell. “They’re absent, or in a lot decrease numbers, than they need to be for this time of 12 months, so it does appear to be pretty widespread.”

One carcass, discovered on the Moray coast, was recognized by Newell resulting from its plastic ring. “I knew precisely who it was and the place it used to nest,” he says.


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This text by Phoebe Weston was first printed by The Guardian on 23 November 2023. Lead Picture: A European or frequent shag (Phalacrocorax aristotelis) nesting on the Isle of Might. The colony survived two years of avian flu solely to vanish en masse. {Photograph}: Sally Anderson/Alamy.