Saturday, 21 September 2024

All the carp you can eat

We needn't worry about the young Great Crested Grebe stranded in the Dell not having enough to eat. Yesterday Julia filmed it with a large carp it had caught, which it was just able to swallow after several minutes of exertion. She filmed the beginning and end of the long process and took some stills in the middle, which are included here.


Since it's the weekend, no further rescue attempts have been made. Today it was resting under the small waterfall with a Moorhen poking about in the background ...


... and one of the young Grey Herons also fishing.


One of the grebe chicks on the Long Water chased its father across the lake.


The Moorhen at the Vista had climbed to the top of a bush and was preening.


The Coot chicks in the nest on the post at Peter Pan are now active and demanding. So far their parents have managed to keep them in the nest where they are reasonably safe, but as soon as they come out on the water they are exposed to hungry gulls, and there is usually a Lesser Black-Backed Gull hanging around waiting for its chance.


A third chick appeared for a moment, but went down into the nest before I could film it.


Some of the Mallard drakes are now fully back in breeding plumage. One was resting on the collapsed willow near the bridge.


An Egyptian Goose splashed and preened on the Serpentine.


The Grey Wagtail whizzed down the lake and could later be seen at the top of the Dell waterfall.


The Little Owl at the Round Pond was on the horse chestnut branch where she has been for several days, but by ranging around I managed to find a place from which you could get a slightly better view of her.


There wasn't much to see in the way of small birds, but a Great Tit came out on the railings at Mount Gate ...


... the inevitable Chaffinch intercepted me at the back of the Albert Memorial ...


... and one of the many Robins in the Flower Walk was singing in a yew tree.


Julia got a good shot of one of the foxes in the Dell.


The planters around the edge of the Italian Garden contain a variety of small flowers, and a Honeybee was browsing on some white flowers that I thought were AlyssumLater: Conehead 54 identifies these as Chaenostoma cordatum.


A very small bee appeared on a daisy. I thought it might be a Common Miniature Mining Bee, Andrena minutula, but was far from sure. Later: Conehead 54 thinks it's a Lasioglossum species, but also not sure. What a wealth of tiny bees out there.

8 comments:

  1. Have they considered setting up a long ramp that the grebe can walk up? Jim

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    1. It's a long way, grebes can barely walk, and they wouldn't understand the idea of a ramp -- attempts to rescue Coot chicks with a ramp have failed at least twice to my knowledge.

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  2. That's one heck of a meal. Looks like it's been getting lessons from the Cormorants.

    The flower the honeybee on isn't Alyssum but what I knew as Bacopa (also Sutera) but now correctly Chaenostoma cordatum.

    I think the bee below is a Lasioglossum sp, but not 100% sure.

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    1. Many thanks for the identifications. So many little narrow bees around, even in the modest confines of the park. Duncan Campbell is trying to make a list, but he has an awful lot of pictures that are simply unsolvable. Oh well, at least it isn't the endless catalogue of beetles.

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    2. Yes far fewer bees ( I think c270 UK species) compared to c4,000 beetle species!

      Does Duncan use the UK Bees, Wasps & Ants FB site to try & help with any queries? I look at the site every day to learn more, but it's true many can't be done from photos as microscopic features are sometimes needed to tell closely related species apart.

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    3. Thanks, I'll ask him this. He doesn't comment on the blog and always writes to me privately.

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  3. Wow, he's really good at catching things, much better than anticipated. Is it normal for such a young bird to be able to catch carp that size?
    If he were to see the moorhen coming up and down a ramp, would he be able to imitate it?
    Tinúviel

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    1. The medium-sized carp at least presents a larger target for grabbing. The tiny ones in shoals, which can move like lightning, must be seriously elusive.

      Not a hope of building a ramp, I'm afraid. That stream is 30 metres from the edge of the lake and 10 metres lower.

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