birding-aus

Tern migration peak has passed on the Sunshine Coast, Qld

To: "'Jill Dening'" <>
Subject: Tern migration peak has passed on the Sunshine Coast, Qld
From: "Carl Weber" <>
Date: Tue, 15 Mar 2011 18:42:59 +1100
Thanks, Jill, for taking the time to provide a most fascinating explanation.

Best wishes,

Carl 
(The same Carl that asked the big question - not the other Carl who had the
little tern at providing an answer.)  

-----Original Message-----
From: Jill Dening  
Sent: Tuesday, 15 March 2011 2:10 PM
To: Carl Weber
Cc: 'birding-aus'
Subject: Tern migration peak has passed on the Sunshine
Coast, Qld

Carl,

You have asked a bigger question than you realise. In short, they are 
northern hemisphere breeders and they spend the austral summer in the 
southern hemisphere. Flying through the East Asian-Australasian Flyway, 
they arrive around November and most are gone by sometime in April.

The Sunshine Coast is a hotspot for migratory terns, but as you can see 
from the numbers supplied, they have a peak in late summer. We don't 
know the answer to the question, "where do they spend the height of the 
Australian summer" because I have asked many times, and never received a 
satisfactory answer. If they do spend the summer in Australia, there are 
no reported concentrations, and the only possibility is that they spread 
out into very small, unnoticeable groups in southern Australia. Or, it's 
possible that they go to Pacific Islands (but where?). However, they 
pass through the Sunshine Coast region on their way north in late summer 
early autumn in larger numbers than is the stable summer population.

Because there has been little banding of migratory terns (some Commons 
flagged orange in Victoria over the years, but no individual marking) we 
don't know exactly where our migratory terns breed. They breed in places 
like eastern China, Japan, the Philippines, and I think Mongolia. 
However, I'd love to know exactly where they go. We need satellite 
trackers and in certain cases, perhaps geolocators.

I think there are possibly numerous breeding locations and timetables 
for the East Asian subspecies of Common Tern (Sterna hirundo 
longipennis). I have no proof, only questions and hints which lead me to 
think so.

Nor do we know where the Australian-breeding Little Terns (Sternula 
albifrons sinensis) go during the austral winter. We know they don't 
join the breeders in Japan, which breed during the northern summer. We 
know this because there has never been a record of an Australian breeder 
in Japan amongst their Little Terns. The northmost Australian records of 
this group are my own in Maroochydore, Sunshine Coast in early autumn, 
and a single record by Clive Minton of a bird seen on Swain Reefs off 
Qld (or was it the Cap Bunker?) in July, 2000. So we definitely need 
geolocators for Australian-breeding Little Terns. I think geolocators 
would be suitable because they tend to return to the same breeding sites.

I should explain for clarity. The subspecies of Little Tern which breeds 
in Australia during our summer is the same subspecies of Little Tern 
which breeds in the northern hemisphere during the northern summer. They 
are different populations, and whilst the two populations mix here in 
Australia, their breeding habits are out of kilter with each other.

I haven't gone into it too far, but if anyone wants to ask more 
questions, that's OK. It's rather complicated.

Cheers,

Jill

Jill Dening
Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia

26° 51' 41"S    152° 56' 00"E

On 15/03/2011 12:38 PM, Carl Weber wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Where have the terns migrated from and where are they going to?
>
> Carl Weber
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: 
>  On Behalf Of Jill Dening
> Sent: Tuesday, 15 March 2011 8:59 AM
> To: birding-aus
> Subject: [Birding-Aus] Tern migration peak has passed on the Sunshine
Coast,
> Qld
>
> Hi Everyone,
>
> Last night we did a count of migratory terns arriving to roost in Noosa,
> Qld. The vast majority of these birds are Common Terns, but also
> included are Little Terns and White-winged Black Terns. This confirmed
> that the migration peak has passed in our area. Unfortunately we only
> conduct one count each month, limiting our knowledge of the actual peak,
> but below are some figures going back to Nov, 05, with dates. Note that
> there was a gap in data collection between January and December 2007,
> and that we missed a count in March, 2010.
>
> Birds are normally counted on the wing in blocks of 10, so the figures
> are never exact. Occasionally at peak periods they are counted in blocks
> of 50s, or even 100s rarely.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Jill
>
> Survey_Date   Sum Of Number_Seen
> 28-Nov-05     2380
> 14-Jan-06     12560
> 08-Feb-06     38340
> 08-Mar-06     14910
> 12-Mar-06     6020
> 15-Dec-06     573
> 15-Jan-07     2050
> 19-Dec-07     2740
> 17-Jan-08     2930
> 21-Feb-08     6650
> 15-Mar-08     1900
> 22-Apr-08     765
> 15-Dec-08     60
> 12-Jan-09     15030
> 11-Feb-09     1280
> 05-Mar-09     7400
> 09-Apr-09     5150
> 23-Jul-09     6
> 21-Aug-09     1
> 10-Dec-09     1170
> 18-Jan-10     2454
> 16-Feb-10     6330
> 15-Apr-10     3379
> 20-May-10     369
> 15-Jun-10     264
> 12-Jul-10     268
> 13-Aug-10     385
> 23-Nov-10     7280
> 07-Dec-10     11000
> 27-Jan-11     12830
> 24-Feb-11     21110
> 16-Mar-11     7170
>

===============================

To unsubscribe from this mailing list,
send the message:
unsubscribe
(in the body of the message, with no Subject line)
to: 

http://birding-aus.org
===============================

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Admin

The University of NSW School of Computer and Engineering takes no responsibility for the contents of this archive. It is purely a compilation of material sent by many people to the birding-aus mailing list. It has not been checked for accuracy nor its content verified in any way. If you wish to get material removed from the archive or have other queries about the archive e-mail Andrew Taylor at this address: andrewt@cse.unsw.EDU.AU