Monday 25 May 2009

The brightest yellow


In his spring finery, a male Yellow Wagtail positively leaps out at you, so vibrant is his plumage. The canary yellow is intense, as if taken straight from a paint tube – an undiluted primary colour that is bold and bright. It is easy to see why our race of this delightful bird goes by the scientific name of Motacilla flava flavissima – the most yellow of yellows. Once seen, there should be no confusing this bird with its less showy relative, the Grey Wagtail, which sports a pale, more lemon yellow across its underparts and grey and black on its upperparts. The two species utilise different habitats, the grey favouring fast flowing rivers and the yellow damp grassland.

Yellow Wagtails arrive here from their West African wintering grounds from late March through into early June. In some springs, as appears to be the case this year, good numbers can be seen at favoured sites, though perhaps not reaching the dizzy counts of 400 seen together at Cley in April 1986 or the 450 seen at Holme in May 1995. These Yellow Wagtails have arrived to breed in damp meadows along river valley bottoms or, increasingly, in arable crops on the dark fenland soils where they favour peas, potatoes and winter cereals. This association with damp grassland can be explained by a diet of small insects and spiders, which do well under the damp conditions, but it does bring with it certain risks. Nests, placed in or up against a tussock, may be lost to flooding or to the trampling of livestock that graze these damp pastures. The impact of localised flooding can be seen from changes in the Yellow Wagtail population using the Ouse Washes, which ebbs and flows depending upon the occurrence of late spring floods. Nests lost to flooding early in the season may be replaced, the birds squeezing in a new breeding attempt in July, alongside a few genuine second broods from successful pairs.

The yellow-headed British race of the Yellow Wagtail is one of a bewildering number of such races which, collectively, make up a species complex that shows extensive variation in head pattern. Birds from our race are not just restricted to Britain, but now breed in The Netherlands, along the French coast, in Denmark and into the extreme south of Norway. Birds from the ‘blue-headed’ race, which breeds over much of continental Europe, may sometimes turn up here in spring and this year there seems to have been a good number in Norfolk, particularly along the grazing marshes of the north coast. Although the Yellow Wagtail population has declined because of changes in land management, it is still a bird you can readily see within the county.

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