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South Africa's Blue Swallows in trouble - Percy FitzPatrick Institute of ...

South Africa's Blue Swallows in trouble - Percy FitzPatrick Institute of ...

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Solv<strong>in</strong>g the riddle <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Blue</strong> Swallow’s <strong>trouble</strong>sis made more difficult by the lack <strong>of</strong> <strong>in</strong>formationsurround<strong>in</strong>g many fundamental aspects <strong>of</strong> itsnatural historyBelow <strong>Blue</strong> Swallow nestl<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>in</strong> KwaZulu-Natal are currently be<strong>in</strong>g microchipped <strong>in</strong>an effort to identify the <strong>in</strong>dividuals us<strong>in</strong>g aparticular nest <strong>in</strong> successive years.Below, right Ian Little from the EndangeredWildlife Trust checks a nest site for breed<strong>in</strong>gactivity.Opposite Go<strong>in</strong>g, go<strong>in</strong>g, gone? Unlessthe current decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> the <strong>South</strong> Africanpopulation is halted, we will soon needto travel to the Eastern Highlands <strong>of</strong>Zimbabwe to see active <strong>Blue</strong> Swallow nests.Even seem<strong>in</strong>gly small reductions <strong>in</strong> habitatquality along migration routes, forex ample, may prove to be an <strong>in</strong>surmountablechallenge for young birds at a time <strong>in</strong>their life that is energet ically stressful. Thedecreased survival <strong>of</strong> juvenile birds <strong>in</strong> aspecies that has a generation length <strong>of</strong> onlythree years could easily be the reason forthe loss <strong>of</strong> small, fragmented populationsfrom the breed<strong>in</strong>g grounds, as has been occurr<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong> <strong>South</strong> Africa and Swaziland <strong>in</strong>recent years.Solv<strong>in</strong>g the riddle <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Blue</strong> Swallow’s<strong>trouble</strong>s is made more difficult by the lack<strong>of</strong> <strong>in</strong>formation surround<strong>in</strong>g many fundamentalaspects <strong>of</strong> its natural history. Eventhe ‘fact’ that <strong>in</strong>dividual birds return tothe same nest site <strong>in</strong> successive seasonshas not yet been verified; with one possibleexception, there have been no recoveries<strong>of</strong> r<strong>in</strong>ged <strong>in</strong>dividuals. In this regardat least, there is light at the end <strong>of</strong> the tunnel.It is now feasible to remotely identify<strong>in</strong>dividuals fly<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to particular nest sitesus<strong>in</strong>g passive <strong>in</strong>tegrated transponder (PIT)tags, the same rice-gra<strong>in</strong>-sized devicesused to microchip domestic pets.Dur<strong>in</strong>g the summer <strong>of</strong> 2011–12, a teamfrom the Endangered Wildlife Trust (EWT)started PIT-tagg<strong>in</strong>g <strong>Blue</strong> Swallow nestl<strong>in</strong>gs<strong>in</strong> KwaZulu-Natal. From late 2012, nestsites will be monitored for return<strong>in</strong>g birdsby position<strong>in</strong>g a PIT-tag reader near theburrow entrance to record the iden tities <strong>of</strong>any tagged <strong>in</strong>dividuals fly<strong>in</strong>g to the nest.The value <strong>of</strong> this long-term project extendsfar beyond simply establish<strong>in</strong>g whether<strong>in</strong>dividuals return to the same nest site<strong>in</strong> successive seasons. It will, for <strong>in</strong>stance,also yield vital <strong>in</strong>formation on cooperativebreed<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the swallows by identify<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>dividualsother than the parents that maybe <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> rais<strong>in</strong>g young.Another problem fac<strong>in</strong>g conservationistsis that very little is known about the<strong>Blue</strong> Swallow’s migration routes. As faras we know, birds that breed <strong>in</strong> <strong>South</strong> Africa,Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Malawi andsouthern Tanzania all spend the w<strong>in</strong>ter<strong>in</strong> seasonally flooded grasslands aroundLake Victoria, at sites such as Sango Bay <strong>in</strong>Uganda. However it rema<strong>in</strong>s unclear, forexample, whether birds from the <strong>South</strong>African breed<strong>in</strong>g grounds use the samew<strong>in</strong>ter<strong>in</strong>g sites as Zimbabwean birds.A stable-isotope project led by the lateJames Wakel<strong>in</strong> (see Africa – Birds & Bird<strong>in</strong>g14(5): 36–40) has shed some light onthis question, reveal<strong>in</strong>g that birds fromdifferent breed<strong>in</strong>g grounds are dist<strong>in</strong>guishableon the basis <strong>of</strong> the biochemicalian littletanya smith30 blue swallows

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