I moved to Norway in February 2001. I had a long list of scandi birds I wanted and expected to see but soon found out that most of them did not occur around Oslo and would require some travel. Pine Grosbeak was at the top of my list alongside Hawk Owl but it took me ten years to see my first birds and that required a trip to Pasvik in Finnmark with Per Christian. My first bird in Oslo was not until 29 October 2012 which was the first of many I saw that winter when there was a quite sizeable invasion of the species into southern Scandinavia. Locals talk about invasion occurring every 20 years and me having to wait nearly 12 years to see one close to home fitted in well with this. Since then though I have seen the species much more often in Oslo. There was a small arrival in November 2016, I had a single sighting in November 2017 and then there was a huge invasion in 2019 with the first record on 21 October. Now it looks like we will also have an invasion this winter so the 20 year rule definitely no longer applies and it is easy to speculate that climate change may be affecting food availablity in their usual northerly range causing them to have to move south to find food.
One thing that I have always wondered about though
is why they travel such huge differences when they could clearly find food much
closer to home. In 2019 and again this year there are huge crops of rowan berries
around Oslo but there are also huge crops much further north so they have not
needed to fly so far so early. Grosbeaks do not even need berries as shoots on
spruce trees are their staple diet and when they came in 2012 and 2016 there
were no berries and it was spruce shoots that they ate. In the 2012 invasion
the first records were of birds migrating north along the southern coast of
Norway so here they had clearly just been flying and flying before hitting the
coast and turning around. There must be a PhD in understanding what drives
eruptions of birds (unless it has been done already).
I wrote yesterday morning that the first reports of
Grosbeaks were coming in and I therefore planned the dog walk to an area of
forest which has proved popular with Grozzas in years with and without rowan
berries. We didn’t have to walk far before a flock of 8 appeared and they then
showed exceptionally well feeding low down on berries before flying up into the
tops of spruces and eating shoots. When they are in the spruce trees they are
incredibly difficult to find especially as they call so infrequently and it is
very easy to walk past them. All 8 birds looked to be youngsters.
Today I got up early with the mission of finding
them in the Dale and at my first stop at some berry laden trees I found 5 birds
which were again all youngsters. I couldn’t find them anywhere else in the Dale
and on returning to the original birds a flock of 12 flew into join them which
included 2 adult males. 25 birds in total over 2 days with just 2 adult males
is a skewed age/sex ratio especially when compared to the invasion in 2019 when
there was a much higher ration of adult males. This could suggest that there are
slightly different factors driving the invasions. This year there may have been
a bumper breeding season combined with little food in the north but in 2019 it
looked to be just food that was the driver. The origin of the birds also seems
to vary between invasions. Invasions before my time could through other
sightings be traced to east in Russia whereas the 2019 invasion looked to have
originated in fenno Scandinavia.
look how small the Brambling (bjørkefink) looks |
Whooper Swans (sangsvane) |
and a Long-tailed Tit (stjertmeis) |
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