Filter by Cuckoo

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.

  • If you enjoy these updates, please consider sponsoring a Cuckoo. Sponsors receive special updates about their chosen Cuckoo in the Cuckoo e-newsletter. 

Attempt to set eyes on Clement

14 Oct 2011

On Wednesday Clement remained close to the Yankari Game Reserve. Ulf Ottosson and colleagues from the AP Leventis Ornithological Institute in Jos, 130km to the south west, looked for Clement in the field on Wednesday. They managed to get to within 8km of his current location but then had to give up as access became very difficult due to the tall, dense, wet grass that grows under the trees in the savannah habitat at this time of year. 

The ornithological institute at Jos is funded by the Tasso Leventis Conservation Foundation, which also supports the BTO’s capacity building work in West Africa.

Kasper's tag struggling to charge

12 Oct 2011

Transmissions received early on Tuesday 11 October placed Kasper still in the Bayan Dutsin Forest Reserve but the tag on his charge was very low.

Martin poised to follow Chris?

12 Oct 2011

As of Monday 10 October, Martin was still in southern Central African Republic. His tag is charging less well now that he is in more densely forested habitat with more cloudy weather but we should hear from him tonight. It will be interesting to see if he has followed Chris into the Congo to the south....

Clement staying put

12 Oct 2011

Clement remains at the Lame Burra Game Reserve. 

Chris in the heart of the Congo

12 Oct 2011

Chris has continued his recent movement from Chad and by the evening of Monday 10 October he had moved a further 320km further south to a position on the border between Congo and Democratic Republic of Congo. He is in an area of apparently continuous, closed, wet forest in the heart of the Congo rainforest, the second largest rainforest on earth after the Amazon. He is a few km’s from the Ubangi River, a major tributary of the Congo River which runs almost parallel to the Ubangi, about 55km to its east at this point.

Chris has taken a more easterly route than the Eurasian Hobbies that were recently satellite tracked from Sweden and does not appeared to have minimised his rainforest crossing to the same extent although if he continues due south he will soon reach the savannas to its south. Having stopped in rather than over-flying the rainforest, it will be very interesting to see whether Chris has moved straight through the area next time his tag transmits...

Lyster heading east

11 Oct 2011

Lyster is currently in the south-eastern corner of Burkina Faso. He is now only 800km to the west of Kasper and is heading his way. The landscape he is in is one of open woodland. Given the recent rainfall in the area, he should be finding plenty of food. The temperature today is a warm 30°C with sunshine and cloud, with the possibility of thunderstorms in the evening.

No transmission from Kasper

06 Oct 2011

On 3 October Kasper remained around the Bayan Dutsin Forest Reserve. We didn’t receive any good locations from him during the last transmission cycle earlier today – the charge on his tag was very low. It has not been charging well for a while, possibly because Kasper has been spending his time under the canopy of the forest reserve.

Martin is joined by Chris

06 Oct 2011
Martin remains in southern Central African Republic but has now been joined by Chris, who is just 135km to the ESE. The similarity in their journeys and their recent convergence has been quite striking.

Will Clement follow?

06 Oct 2011

Clement is still in the Lame Burra Game Reserve, north-west of the Yankari Game Reserve, about 130km NE of Jos in central Nigeria, where he has been since the end of August. With the two Cuckoos, that were to the east of here, having now moved south into southern Central African Republic, we are waiting to see when he will move on. The area has slightly higher rainfall than where Martin and Chris were in Chad but it is possible Clement will move on now the wet season is at an end. On the other hand, having taken the western route to get here, perhaps he will do something totally different...

Chris moves south

06 Oct 2011
On 1st October Chris was still at his long-held position in southern Chad. However, when transmissions started again on the evening of Monday 3 October he had moved 790km almost due south, almost all the way over Central African Republic and stopped 8km from the border with Congo, at the Basse-Lobaye Forest. 
 
He is about 135km ESE of Martin and is now our most southerly cuckoo. He is poised on the northern edge of the Congo basin, to the north of the rainforest. To his south lies the area where many Common Swifts that breed in Britain spend the winter, alongside those from elsewhere in Europe. Although not well explored, the Central African Republic that he has just passed over is likely to hold numerous migrants at this time of year and the Guinea savannah woodlands should be full of Wood Warblers and European Golden Orioles as well as Cuckoos.
 
 

Pages



Related content