Wednesday, 10 August 1983

Respite in the Northern Isles

The Romans knew them as the Ultima Thule – The Edge of the World. They lie at the same latitude as the southern part of Greenland, straddling 60oN. Although the climate is officially described ass equitable, due in large part to the ameliorating effect of the warm North Atlantic Drift, they are one of the coldest (mean July temperature some 10oF lower than London), wettest and windiest places in the United Kingdom. They are the northernmost and remotest part of the British Isles. They are the Shetland Isles. Not it would seem the ideal destination for a summer break.
However, it was to Shetland I headed for my summer holiday in 1983, as I had done for the previous six years. The lure of the islands is their natural history, particularly for me, the bird life. On my previous visits I had been a member of the Leicester Polytechnic Shetland Expeditions monitoring the wildlife in the approaches to the Shetland Oil Terminal at Sullom Voe, that is the east and west coasts of Yell Sound and the Yell Sound islands. I have carried out breeding bird surveys and helped with the extensive bird ringing programme. Other work of the expedition includes monitoring permanently marked seashore transects, the continuation of some of these transects underwater by a team of divers, plus botanical and entomological studies on land. The aim of the expedition is to produce a base line against which the effect of any environmental accident, e.g. an oil spill, can be measured.
Most of my studies have been concentrated on one species, the Red-throated Diver. It is almost exclusively marine in its habits and only comes to the freshwater lochs and lochans to breed. Even then most of its feeding is done at sea. It is well adapted for the marine environment being very streamlined and having its legs set well back along the body for better movement through the water. This makes it clumsy on land and its nest is usually placed within a few feet of the water’s edge. Censusing is relatively straightforward as adults with eggs can usully be observed on the nest and adults with young can be seen on the water. These observations can be made from some distance so reducing disturbance to a minimum. This ease of censusing makes it a good monitor species for the state of the marine environment.
This year (1983) the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) was conducting a complete census of this species in Shetland. This meant visiting every water body on the islands twice, to ensure no breeding attempts were missed, during the main part of the breeding season. A look at the Ordnance Survey 1:50000, or better still the 1:25000. Maps shows what a mammoth task this was. I was asked by the RSPB to be a member of the team, but work commitments meant I was only able to join for three weeks in July.
Inspecting every loch and lochan involves a lot of walking over the desolate interior of the islands. The terrain is mostly gently rolling peat moorland where walking is made difficult by the erosion of the peat into deep gullies amid the sphagnum bogs. It is impossible to walk in a straight line. Despite the hard slog, it had its compensations, I saw a lot of Shetland from the northernmost point of Hermaness on the island of Unst to the highest, Ronas Hill on the mainland. The inland scenery is not particularly inspiring but as nowhere in Shetland is more than three miles from sea, almost any hill top will give wide views over the archipelago showing many islets in the sounds between the main islands and the long thin inlets known as voes or firths, scaled down versions of the Norwegian fjords. The coastal scenery is some of the most impressive in the British Isles with cliffs soaring to over 300m in places plus many caves, stacks and natural arches.
And, of course, there are the birds. The moorlands of Shetland are the breeding grounds for a variety of species including Curlew, Dunlin, Common Sandpiper, Greenshank, Merlin and Twite. Shetland is also the British stronghold for breeding Whimbrel, Arctic Skua and Great Skua, 25% of the world population of the latter breeds in Shetland. The Great Skua, or Bonxie as it is known in Shetland, is one of the more obvious birds of the moorland. They nest in loose colonies where the adults can be seen standing guard on small hummocks over-looking their territories. On the approach of any intruder, man or beast, they take flight and mob the trespasser. This takes the form of a dive-bombing run: starting high, they power dive almost vertically, slowly lessening the steepness of the descent until they are travelling parallel to the ground at high speed and at about eye-level. The intensity of the attacks increases as the nest or chicks are approached. It is quite an experience to have a large gull-sized bird bearing down on you at great speed and a test of nerve to stand there without flinching.
Not all of my time in Shetland was spent stomping across the moors censusing Red-throated Divers, although most of my time was spent bird-watching. I visited the huge seabird colonies at Noss and Hermaness where millions of cliff-nesting seabirds breed. Most impressive of these is the Gannet. The adult is a large white bird with black wing tips and a cream-coloured head which glides effortlessly about the cliffs, using the wind to great effect. It feeds with spectacular plunge-dives, dropping from a great height on half-closed wings. Probably everyone’s favourite is the Puffin which nests in burrows near the cliff top. Although wary, they often fly away at first, but they are also inquisitive and may approach within a couple of feet of the patient observer. The overall sensation of the seabird city is one of constant movement with birds coming and going wherever you look. While at Hermaness I also visited Albert Ross, a well known but somewhat lonely summer resident of the cliffs.
On several occasions I went out bird-ringing (banding) with the Leicester Polytechnic Shetland Expedition. One of the main target species is Storm Petrel. These are small, black seabirds with a white rump which nest in hollows among rocks. Their natural nest site is scree on the cliffs but they have taken to using dry stone walls and the remains of Pictish brochs. They only come ashore at night as they a quite weak on land and would be easy prey for the marauding gulls and skuas. The expedition ringing teams are out every night, weather permitting, using mist nets to catch the Storm Petrels. It is not necessary to go to the colonies as the birds can be attracted by playing an amplified recording of their calls. It has been shown that only young, non-breeding birds are attracted in this way and even when close to a known colony few, if any, breeding birds are caught. The mist nets are set up at a suitable site where there is some protection from the elements and the wind is blowing offshore, to carry the amplified calls. The first Storm Petrels are usually seen just before midnight and catching continues through the darkest part of the night until about 02:00 by which time there is usually enough light for the birds to see the net. It is possible to catch more than 100 birds per night, depending on the weather conditions, and occasionally there is the added bonus of trapping the rarer Leach’s Petrel. All birds caught are weighed, measured and have a uniquely numbered metal band put around one leg which enables them to be identified should they be re-caught.
Shetland has a lot to offer naturalist, including many more bird species than I have mentioned above. There is also much to interest the archaeologist, botanist and geologist, but little to offer the sun seeker, although this year, for the first time, I spent two whole days in shorts and t-shirt. Usually the regulation wear os thick jumpers and cagoules! I hope to return to Shetland next year and continue my studies of Red-throated Divers.
By the way Albert Ross is a lone Black-browed Albatross which has take to nesting among the Gannets at Hermaness – although with no mate this must be a frustrating experience.
Recommended Reading: The Natural History of Shetland. New Naturalist Series.