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Further signs of spring near Troms=?iso-8859-1?Q?=F8?=SPRING IS ON ITS WAY ALSO AROUND THE BALSFJORD, S. OF TROMSØ This is the third mail I send out in a week---retirement gives somewhat better time. But three mails in a week about the rather scarce bird fauna in the far north of Norway is maybe overkill, I fear! Please let me know if you feel you now get a surfeit of Tromsø-birds and seasons, and I'll keep silent for a while!! Today was again a grey day, but once more with very little rain, only the occasional drizzle. As the weather forecast is for rain and wind tomorrow, and snow and wind the days after that, and I am alone in the home this Easter (the family upstairs is, as more than half of the Norwegians, somewhere in a cabin and on skiing trips this holidays), I decided to drive inland along the long (c 100km) Balsfjord. This is a classical Norwegian fjord, with a sill and quite deep basins, and it is special in that is houses a local, isolated population of the Arctic small fish Capelin Mallotus villosus (also a very important part of Artcic ecosystems); these capelin spawn around this time a year, their eggs are often spawned intertidally or in very shallow water, and these eggs are a favourite food of many sea ducks, one reason why there are so many ducks and other waterbirds in Balsfjord in Spring (The other reason is that they wait here until the freshwater wetlands where they breed, get icefree.) The capelin may well also be the main reason why the Balsfjord also has a small endemic population of harbour porpoises Phocaena. While eating my breakfast before driving out this morning, I noted for the first time this year that pairs of Common Gulls flew around and inspected the area around my garden---they did not land as yet; the garden is 100% snow-covered still---, and I noted similar flights all day all around the Balsfjord. Common Gulls are really well-named here in Tromsø, and they nest everywhere in town, keeping the tourists awake with their incessant calling. Also the Oystercatchers had in some cases ventured inland a little bit, and some even were to be found on the roofs of small buildings, areas they often use for nesting. The drive along the Balsfjord is a long one, but the first 40km is along a main road and is fast. Afterwards I take the secondary road along the north shore of the cold Ramfjord (which always freezes over in winter, and where I noted the temperature today was 4*C, against 8*C along the Balsfjord). This is a narrow road, still full of ice and sludge (One bit was so dangerous, that they have made a 500m tunnel to avoid it), and this area also seems to get more snow. My first stop, as always, was at the river mouth in Andersdalen, and also here there was that feeling of a new season having started . Lots of active Oystercatchers and Mallards, several Lapwings and a Curlew, and also here Starlings on the shore. My second traditional stop is where the road traverses a forest on a steep slope, and where I always walk a bit to listen and look for songbirds. But when I swang out to park along the road, I was careless, and the car got stuck in the rotten snow. Fortunately, after 10 minutes or so, another car passed (not too much traffic here on a day like this), and they succeeded in getting me back on the road (You won't know, but I can assure you; it is hard to be stupid!). In the commotion, I forgot to listen for songbirds here, but a few km further on, I stopped (very carefully this time!) for some activity in the treetops, and this turned out to be a small group of Bohemian Waxwings, that for all the worlds seemed to be flycatching from treetop to treetop----only problem, I do not think there were all that many flies to catch here now. Still, they were very busy at it all the time I watched them. The next stop and walk is in an area with some small woodlands (i.a. much planted spruce) and several farms where the people feed the birds and hang nestboxes. At the farm where I parked there were House Sparrows and Starlings, and along the way I found the usual suspects: Great and Blue Tits, Greenfinches, and finally also Bullfinches. No Ringed Plovers here as yet; somebody had seen one last Thursday on the coast. Then onwards---another 40 km--to 'the bottom of the fjord, the area where the capelin spawns, and where all the ducks hang out, in beautiful light in the middle of the day. There were many more ducks---predominantly Velvet Scoters and Long-tailed Ducks---now than last time I was here, and I also soon spotted three Horned Grebes and a Red-necked Grebe. The Horned Grebes nest nearby in shallow lakes, but we do not know where the Red-necked Grebes (a few are here every spring) go to nest---the nearest nesting localities we know of are in northern Sweden, quite a bit south of here. Still more astonishing was the presence of a single Great Crested Grebe in almost full summer plumage; that southern bird does not belong here at all, and I have never seen it here before. The porpoises were also active in this area, which is where the capelin spawns This area is a bit warmer in microclimate, and a lot of snow had melted the last week. A local couple whom I talked to here, told me that they had had up to 14 Yellowhammers all winter around their cabin---and I saw four of them; this is also here a decreasing species. I drove on along the south coast of the Balsfjord, to Storsteinnes and Tennes, but saw only much more of the same, plus a dense flock of Common Scoters, four Shelducks, a flock of displaying Red-breasted Mergansers, and a single male Teal in a meltwater puddle in a field. But no Snow Buntings all day, and the locals told me they had not yet seen any here. Clearly the strong southerly air current that brought all the mild air to our region these last few days, also has brought quite a number of migrant birds, and additionally spurred the residents into feelings of spring. Wim Vader, Tromsø Museum 9037 Tromsø, Norway wim.vader@... BirdChat Guidelines: http://www.ksu.edu/audubon/chatguidelines.html Archives: http://listserv.arizona.edu/archives/birdchat.html |
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