This impressive tome from the Welsh Ornithological Society is the third full avifauna for Wales, following 1994’s original Birds in Wales (Lovegrove, Williams & Williams) and a subsequent update volume, Birds in Wales 1992-2000 (Green). The new volume is...
Read the full book review here.
Closing date: 10:00 am Monday 27/09/2021
Salary: £24,982 - £27,041
Location(s): Caernarfon
22.5 hours per week, fixed term contract 1st November 2021 until 28th February 2023
Closing date: 12th September
Interviews will be held on 20th and 21st September 2021.
Another Glas with something for everyone
The Aberystwyth thorn-apple. A once in a decade event?
The wonders of the marmalade fly… who’d have thought?
Today in history. Summer stories
Covid sea shells. See them as if for the first time
The serious side of bullsh*t… Was beating cow pats a full time job?
Birds in poetry. Can you identify them?
Closing date: Friday 10 September 2021
Salary: £23,553 per annum (pro rata part-time)
Contract type: Permanent / Working hours: Part time
Location: NWWT East office, Aberduna, Ffordd Maeshafn, Maeshafn, Denbigshire, CH7 5LD
The Wildlife Trust is looking to appoint this permanent part-time (28 hours/week) post. The purpose of the role is to oversee and co-ordinate the management of a number our nature reserves across North-east Wales, working closely with our existing Reserves Officer in the north-east, other reserves staff, contractors and volunteers, and promoting the value of our sites and the Trust’s work to the public.
Hear about the work of Skills for Bees Cymru in their online newsletter and take a look at these two useful videos:
Identifying the Common 8 Bumblebee species.
An introduction to Beewalk
Together with the Bumblebee Conservation Trust we are identifying under-recorded 10 km squares where we have very few records of bumblebees. Please view attached 10 km square which you might have the opportunity to visit and record bees in.
Please continue to submit your bumblebee records via the Cofnod ORS or LERC Wales app, to help us build a better understanding of the distribution of these species in North Wales.
Ecoscope Ltd. are looking to recruit an exceptional and experienced Senior Ecologist to join our team. Your role will include the management of projects across a range of developments including a number of exciting new rewilding projects. You must have a pragmatic approach to habitat and protected species surveys and be proficient in writing technical reports efficiently to tight deadlines.
For more information follow the link or contact Stuart on 07714 820 140 or by email.
Please e-mail your C.V. with a covering e-mail to Stuart to apply.
We’re pleased to announce that our database has recently reached 5 million records. This is a significant milestone and an opportunity to thank the thousands of people who have contributed to this over the past 15 years.
Our new total of 5,089,874 has come around much quicker than was expected, taking less than 12 months to accumulate the last million records. When you compare this to the first million, which took nearly 4 years, the pace of change has definitely increased. This is partly because we are better connected to where the data are stored and the army of experts and recorders who collect or manage the data. It is also because an increasing amount of data are held digitally, with more and more being submitted online. Our Data Management Team, (Aisling, Catharine and Jen), should also take some credit, as they have adapted to the pace of change by developing efficient methods for receiving, processing and managing the data. This dramatic accumulation of records wouldn’t have been possible without those who love wildlife continuing to submit their records. Over the past year this has not always been easy, and it will be interesting to see in years to come if we detect a COVID trend in the data, as we did in 2001 with Foot and Mouth Disease.
It was difficult to pick a few stories to illustrate the change in our database, but three immediately sprung to mind.
Around 5 years ago we distinctly remember looking at the numbers and wondering why bird data featured so little, less than 10%, in the database. Thanks to online submission through BTO’s Birdtrack, massive recording effort to create the North Wales Breeding Bird Atlas and the ongoing collation work carried out by County Bird Recorders, today bird data accounts for over 40% of the database, which is probably about where it should be considering the effort made to record these species.
It wasn’t many years ago that the submission of a Pine Marten record was met with some suspicion. At the time many recorders were going to great efforts to prove they existed in North Wales. Following reintroduction in other parts of Wales, we soon detected increased sightings and were delighted in March 2016 to have our first reliable sighting from trail cam footage. Since then the number of records, especially with photographic or video evidence has increased. Even though the number of records in the database still only stands at less than 150, the most recent one submitted in June, showed fantastic video footage of a Pine Marten in one of its strongholds, demonstrating how the species is starting to take hold in North Wales.
We’ve known for some time that invertebrates have been poorly represented in our database, with much of the data heavily skewed by moth records. In 2020 we began work to source more invertebrate data, so that it could be used to identify invertebrate assemblages on protected sites. With focused effort we successfully gained access to large quantities of invertebrate data, meaning that by the end of 2020 invertebrates had overtaken birds in the number of records in the database. This demonstrated to us that there was still much data that we were not accessing, but with a concerted effort people were happy to share new data with us.
Cofnod needs to respond to the large volumes of data being generated and stored digitally, or new ways of making records such as trail cams or eDNA. We also need to seek out more obscure data to ensure that we continue to build the most comprehensive species database in North Wales. Thank you, to all of you who continue to contribute records and we wonder whether 10 million records is too ambitious a target for our next significant milestone.
Species Focus Purple Hairstreak butterfly (Favonius quercus)
Following the recent spell of fine weather, we thought it would be a good idea to promote butterfly recording this month. However, with so many charismatic species to choose from we decided to ask Andrew Graham (Vice-County butterfly recorder for Merionethshire, Caernarvonshire and Anglesey) for a species suggestion.
Andrew suggested Purple Hairstreak, since it is an abundant species which is rarely recorded because of its highly arboreal nature. It lives high up in the canopy of oak trees and rarely descends to the ground. Fortunately, Andrew mentioned a few useful field tips to help observe this species.
He recommends observing from a hillside where you can look down on an oak tree canopy, and that the species is often more active at dusk. Binoculars are also useful to record this species by scanning the oak canopy for small greyish butterflies making short flights between perches.
Andrew notes that this species is scarce in Anglesey due to the infrequency of oak trees but can be very common in parts of Snowdonia. So, here’s your August challenge – to find and record Purple Hairstreak butterflies in North Wales. Please submit your records via the Cofnod ORS or by using the LERC Wales App.