View Full Version : Bittern at Low Barns
DaveB
Sunday 26th January 2003, 22:07
;) Bittern showing well in the reedbed infront of the North Hide.
peter hayes
Sunday 26th January 2003, 22:21
Where is that exactly Dave?
DaveB
Sunday 26th January 2003, 22:31
Low Barns is a nature reserve ran by the Wildlife Trust in County Durham.
View the details on their website........
http://www.wildlifetrust.org.uk/durham/
Nice place!
peter hayes
Sunday 26th January 2003, 22:40
Thanks Dave, I'll take a look.
IanF
Monday 27th January 2003, 08:52
**** ! I went to South Gare instead yesterday.
I don't usually bother with the North Hide as you are looking into the sun most of the time. I love the site though :t:
Thanks for the sighting Dave, I will have to pop across this week sometime if I can fit it in.
columbidae
Monday 3rd February 2003, 18:50
I'm just curious, is the bittern in England the same as the American bittern? The Am. bittern is at the top of my wish list, and I am very envious.
IanF
Monday 3rd February 2003, 19:02
Hi Dan,
They are very similar species.
Ours is the Great Bittern - Botaurus stellaris
Yours is the American Bittern - Botaurus lentiginosus
Here's a photo of the Low Barns Bittern
IanF
Monday 3rd February 2003, 19:07
Another shot, this time stood up.
Osprey
Monday 3rd February 2003, 19:08
No completely different but similar3:-)
Bittern
Botaurus stellaris
Distribution
Decrease in breeding range noted in 19th and early part of 20th century has continued more recently, with declines reported from many countries in western, central, and southern Europe (Spain east to Balkans). Elsewhere, stable or (in Sweden and Finland) even increasing.
LUXEMBOURG
Bred 19th century; now only irregular migrant.
SWITZERLAND
Still no proof of breeding, but increased tendency to winter.
PORTUGAL
Sporadic breeder; e.g. pair near Setúbal 1987.
BALEARIC ISLANDS
Confined to S‘Albufera de Mallorca, where temporarily extinct 1980s, but recolonized 1991.
GREECE
Present at 2 localities 1985–6; no confirmed nesting.
TUNISIA
Irregular breeder.
ALGERIA
Probably also breeds El Kala in north-east.
Accidental. Iceland, Faeroes, Norway, Azores, Madeira, Canary Islands.
Beyond west Palearctic, extends east to Japan, south to northern China; also breeds eastern half of southern Africa.
American Bittern
Botaurus lentiginosus
Distribution
Breeding widespread in North America, north to c. 55–60°N, south locally to Texas and Florida.
Accidental. Iceland, Faeroes, Britain and Ireland (most records, majority before 1914; September–March, mainly October–November), Channel Islands, Denmark, Norway, Spain, Azores, Canary Islands.
Taken from the BWP on CD-ROM: copyright Oxford University Press.
Osprey
bcurrie
Monday 3rd February 2003, 22:14
Thanks for those photos. Ian. The two Bitterns look a lot alike.
columbidae
Monday 3rd February 2003, 23:55
Thanks Ian for the photos and Osprey for the additional info. I can see that they are very similar species.
DaveB
Saturday 22nd February 2003, 09:06
Checked out Low Barns last night. The Bittern is still showing vey well. If anyone has the chance to see this bird, you should go and see it!
IanF
Saturday 22nd February 2003, 16:04
Thanks for that Dave.
We went again on Thursday but it must have wandered off. We wondered whether it had left. I still haven't got a good look at it through the scope yet.
DaveB
Saturday 22nd February 2003, 18:01
Checked the site agian this afternoon (1245-1445), with no sign of the bird. :-C Talked to the staff at the visitor centre and apparently it went for a walk around the main lake early this morning, so the bird was still there then. :t:
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