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Updates from our Cuckoos

Read the latest updates from our Cuckoos on their epic migration between the UK and tropical Africa, or track their movements in real-time on our Cuckoo migration map.

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Lyster lies low

08 Sep 2011
Lyster is still in the great Senegal river plain, close the border with Mauritania. He has been settled in this area since 30 August and has presumably found a better feeding area than in his initial Senegalese location further south. Once he has rested and fed he might well follow in Clement’s footsteps. If this is the case, it will be interesting to see how closely his route follows that of Clement.
 

Lyster moves northwards

31 Aug 2011

After successfully crossing the desert and appearing in Senegal on the 24th, we again picked up Lyster in the same location on the 27th but at c. 9pm on the evening of the 29th, he transmitted at a location just to the north. Over the course of that evening and into the morning of the 30th, he had moved northwards over the great Senegal river plain and by 3am was in what looks like a temporary watercourse some 75km away in Mauritania. Quite why he moved northwards, we don’t know but maybe he is looking for better foraging conditions.

Lyster crosses the desert

24 Aug 2011

We were a little worried as Lysters tag failed to transmit on the 22nd August but today it burst into life. His new location showed that he had crossed the desert and was in northern Senegal. Now that he has become the fifth of our tracked Cuckoos to successfully cross the Sahara, we will be following his next moves closely, in particular to see whether he follows Clement back east towards the other Cuckoos or spends a longer period in West Africa.

Awaiting transmission from Lyster shortly

22 Aug 2011
On Saturday morning (20 August) Lyster was still at his Moroccan stop-over. His tag is due to come on very shortly (Monday early evening) so we are awaiting an update with interest….
 

Lyster stops over in North Africa

18 Aug 2011

Lyster is still on the coast of Morocco 20km from Casablanca. A series of locations received between Saturday morning (13 August) and 18 August showed he has been stopping over in an area centred on some artificial pools just outside the town of Had Soualem. He has now been there for over a week and is the first of our Cuckoos to have undertaken a stop-over in North Africa.

Lyster in Morocco!

11 Aug 2011

We were expecting another update from Lyster’s tag first thing this morning. In fact, however, his tag has deviated from its designated transmission cycle for some reason (it could have been re-set by a magnetic field such as that from overhead power-lines), and we received updates for him yesterday afternoon (10 August). He was close to the Atlantic Coast of Morocco, about 20km (12 miles) SW of Casablanca. His route appears to have taken him directly across the Straits of Gibraltar, although of course we do not know precisely what route he took between his current and previous locations whilst his tag was not transmitting. The last message we received was at 2240hrs when he was still in the same place, so he does not appear to have started his desert crossing last night.

Lyster is the second Cuckoo, following Clement, to have taken the unexpected south-western route into Africa. Fascinatingly, he has taken an even more westerly route than his predecessor, having gone around the northern side of the Atlas Mountains and along the Atlantic Coast. There are many oases along the coast to the south of here and if he continues to take the coastal route, like we know many of our small migrants heading into West Africa, such as the Nightingale we tracked from Norfolk with a geolocator do, he will be minimising his desert crossing and the amount of inhospitable land he has to cross. This seems to make sense – what was more surprising to us was that the likes of Kasper, Clement and Chris crossed the desert at or close to its widest point. Mike Beer, who has driven through many of these areas, reports that the Hoggar and Tibesti areas, that were included in the parts of the Sahara these birds traversed, are in fact not as inhospitable as the sand deserts around them, and in places there may even be small pools and dew points with tiny bushes.
 

Lyster on the move

09 Aug 2011

Although his tag is not charging well and we are receiving very few good quality locations (as was the case with the other Cuckoos whilst they were at their stop-overs in southern Europe), on Saturday (6 August) Lyster was still in the Parque Naturel del Alto Tajo area. He had been there for just over a week at that time – his tag is due to transmit again this evening when we may get an update if it is charged sufficiently. He is experiencing a pleasant 22°C and bright sunshine.

Stop press! Three signals recieved last night, before his tags charge was depleted, showed Lyster on the move. He has headed off from the Madrid area in a SSW direction, apparently heading towards Gibraltar, by Thursday morning, when his tag is due to transmit again, he could be in Africa. Watch this space!

Lyster lingers and recovers from crossing

05 Aug 2011
Lyster’s tag is not charging well so we received only a few low-accuracy locations when his tag came on early on Thursday morning (4 August). These were, however, enough to tell us that he had not moved from his Spanish staging post. This means he has spent a week there so far so was clearly in need of significant refuelling before attempting the Saharan crossing.
 
Judging from the other birds, we expect him to move rapidly south with no further stop-overs once he leaves this spot but we don’t know when that will be. The other Cuckoos spent 2-4 weeks at their final stopovers but given his late departure from the breeding area, we might expect Lyster to spend less than or towards the bottom of this range. His tag is next due to come on around the middle of the day on Saturday.
 

Lyster refuels

01 Aug 2011
On Saturday (30 July) Lyster was still in the Parque Naturel del Alto Tajo area. He is clearly carrying out some re-fuelling in this landscape of pine forest-clad mountains in preparation for the Saharan crossing – how long until he makes a break to the south...? We are expecting transmissions to resume this afternoon (Monday 1 August).
 
1700hrs update: Positions just received show that Lyster is still in the same area. His tag will keep transmitting until the early hours of tomorrow morning so we would know very soon if he left the stop-over tonight.  

Lyster leaping through Europe

28 Jul 2011
Lyster has continued to make up for apparently lost time and has forged ahead over the past two days. Having moved into France on a slightly but significantly more westerly route than Clement and Martin did, we were interested to see whether he would move towards Spain or Italy. Now we have the answer – Spain! With only two previous ringing recoveries in north-east Spain at all suggestive of a passage of British Cuckoos through Iberia, it is quite a surprise that a second of the Cuckoos is taking a south-westerly route. Today (Thursday 28 July) Lyster is in Castilla-La Mancha region, about 150km (95 miles) E of Madrid, having flown in from the east through Aragon region overnight. This is a heavily wooded landscape close to the Parque Naturel del Alto Tajo, a park with spectacular geology including mountains, ravines and canyons that provide a wide variety of habitats.
 
Lyster has taken a much more direct and faster route into Spain than Clement did – we suspect he did a lot more fattening on his breeding territory than the other Cuckoos so we might expect him to continue his southward passage with only a little re-fuelling. So far, he has omitted the lengthy stop-over in southern Europe that the other four Cuckoos made. His tag is due to start transmitting early on Saturday morning so we may be able to find out then whether he has continued with minimal re-fuelling, or opted for a lengthier stop-over in Spain.

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