The Lord Howe Island woodhen which was once restricted to breeding on the summits of the high hills can now be met foraging around the picnic spots on the headlands - a measure of the successful breeding programme.



The Lord Howe Island woodhen which was once restricted to breeding on the summits of the high hills can now be met foraging around the picnic spots on the headlands - a measure of the successful breeding programme.
A young merlin grips tightly to a piece of prey - the remains of a meadow pipit
The first paper describes what merlin in the Isle of Lewis eat in the breeding season. This is mostly meadow pipits, the most abundant bird of the moorland where the merlin live. The Lewis peatlands, are one of the best breeding habitats for moorland waders in Britain, with high numbers of dunlin, golden plover and greenshank, and although the merlin do eat dunlin in particular - the smallest of these waders; the smaller pipits, skylarks and wheatears are their main prey.
A brood of four merlin chicks huddle quietly in their nest set on the ground.
The second paper discusses the high density of merlin on the island, which is one of the highest in the world. This is likely because there is abundant food, as described in the first paper, and possibly because there are no indigenous terrestrial predators such as foxes, which are the main causes of nest failure on the mainland. The main predator of merlin in Lewis is the golden eagle. Merlin nest on the ground in the moors where eagles hunt and the white merlin nestlings must be easily seen and killed. Yet despite this predation, the merlin rear young from most nests, and these are ample for maintaining the high numbers of breeding pairs each year.
Among the other birds we caught were rufous whistlers, a male and female shown here together side by side showing the very different plumages of the two sexes. Most birds we caught were in fine plumage with new sets of primaries and body feathers freshly coloured. By the end of the next breeding season they will be a various stages of moult as they replace their worn and sun-bleached feathers.
There were numerous red-wattle birds, white-plumed honeyeaters, blue-faced honeyeaters and spiny-cheeked honeyeaters feeding on the flowers of the red-ironbark trees. Here is a close-up portrait of a spiny-cheeked honeyeater which shows the spiny feathers on its cheek. It is an adult as it has reddish throat feathers and a bright pink bill and gape. Young birds have yellow throats and duller bills. Note how like all honeyeaters the birds tongue is often pushed out beyond the bill exposing the brush-like tip which helps these birds draw nectar from flowers.
Wherever they fit, they resemble owls with their large almost forward-facing eyes and their habit of nesting and roosting in tree hollows. Their bodies are similar to the slender true nightjars, but their feet and legs are stronger, enabling them to sit across branches and climb in and out of holes. And their wide bills with side-bristles also resemble nightjars, or perhaps swifts and some claim these are their closest relatives.
My interest in them comes from their main habitat - woodland, which they share with frogmouths. Both species live in the same woods and seem to forage in similar styles by pouncing on prey from a lookout perch, or rummaging around in the leaf litter. Do they successfully co-habit because they eat different prey, differentiated mainly by size? I would like to know. One advantage the owlet nightjars have over the frogmouths is that they can expand their range beyond woodland and live in man-made hollows or in rock crevices. As frogmouths rely on their camouflage for safety when roosting during the day, they need trees (see earlier postings).