Sunday, October 4, 2020

The Tree Swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) on Middleton Island in 2020



Tree Swallow perched above box 7 (facing the FAA weather camera). June 18, 2020. Photo by S. England (Ebird.org).


2020 was the 12th year of the Tree Swallow (TRES) nest box project on Middleton. This year again no data could be obtained during the breeding season, but thankfully Martha Hatch (part of the ISRC crew present in September) checked, photographed and cleaned out all nest boxes still present on the island:











Notes on the 2020 breeding season:
- 16 nest boxes were available to the swallows. 4 were either gone or had become unuseable to the birds. 7 boxes currently are in such bad shape that these might not survive the coming winter. This would leave 9 boxes for the next breeding season. This is also the maximum number of occupied nest boxes (9, in 2013). Therefore, for proper continuation of the project, some replacement boxes will have to be installed.
- Instead of wood, nest boxes 18-20 were constructed from PVC planks. These have similar dimensions to the wooden ones, but are white on the inside. Thus far, these have never been used by the swallows. 
- As far as potential predators go: a Peregrine Falcon got recorded on June 22, July 21 and July 22 (Ebird.org).
 
Again, I thank Martha and Scott Hatch for their effort!  


















Sunday, April 26, 2020

The Tree Swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) on Middleton Island in 2019

2019 was the 11th year for the Tree Swallow (TRES) research project out on the remote Middleton Island. Again, this summer the TRES-population did not get monitored during the breeding season, but thankfully Scott Hatch of the Institute for Seabird Research and Conservation (ISRC) provided me with an overview of the nest boxes’ contents, as found on their annual inspection round after the breeding season:

Field map containing 2019's TRES results (ISRC). Middleton is approximately 7x2 km.


Based on this information I suspect that this year about 6 nesting pairs roamed the island, four of which laid eggs and produced one or more young.




I took the time to organize box occupancy between 2009 - 2019...: