A very rare nesting on the Isle of Wight :
Wildlife Extra News - Rare bee-eaters nest on the Isle of Wight for first time on record
Wildlife Extra News - Rare bee-eaters nest on the Isle of Wight for first time on record
Love bee-eaters. I've had the pleasure of working with them and they are fascinating little birds.
“It has been an amazing year for exotic species breeding on the island.
I'm wondering if the comment was meant to refer to the island of Britain* as a whole, and not the Isle of Wight. In which case I would say it was a reference to the black-winged stilts and glossy ibis.Does anyone know what else bred?
unexpected drum-roll:
It turns out that the bee-eaters breeding on the Isle of Wight weren't a pair plus two "helpers" -- they were actually two pairs nesting in the same burrow! Eight chicks have now successfully fledged,
oh sorry, I actually earlier read there were two pairs on a Birdforum thread and my mind added it to what I'd read on the National Trust Facebook site. I found it again and the "two pairs" report was a repeat of what someone had said on a Twitter post but I can't see it anywhere else either. I think it must have been, as you say, an assumption based on the large number of chicks and the staggered fledging.I can't find anything that actually states it was two pairs nesting, though the total number of chicks(8) and the staggered fledging period would indicate that.
I would normally expect two pairs to tunnel adjacent holes and nest that way, not sharing one burrow...![]()
Except if there's only one nest tunnel, it still indicates to me there was only one pair actually breeding. Two pairs would breed side by side, not all crammed into one tunnel... No doubt will be resolved/explained eventually.I think it must have been, as you say, an assumption based on the large number of chicks and the staggered fledging.
Except if there's only one nest tunnel, it still indicates to me there was only one pair actually breeding. Two pairs would breed side by side, not all crammed into one tunnel... No doubt will be resolved/explained eventually.
Perhaps a Y-shaped tunnel with two nest chambers?
Alan
You may have seen this issued by NT press office:
1 island, 2 nests, 4 adults, 8 chicks: Bee-eaters on the Isle of Wight, a record for the UK
It was definitely two pairs, in two holes, rearing broods of 5 & 3.