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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Environment
Mark Brown North of England correspondent

‘They will often give you a wee nip’: rangers count puffins on Farne Islands

close-up of two puffins on rocks, Farne Islands
‘The one species everyone can identify is a puffin,’ says zoologist Dr Richard Bevan. ‘They are iconic, I think.’ Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

It may well be one of the least hi-tech nature counts in the UK, and involves rangers sticking their arms blindly down a hole knowing there will be one of five outcomes: they will feel either a puffin egg, a puffling, excrement, nothing at all – or the annoyed reaction of a puffin as a giant hand suddenly enters its home.

“They will quite often give you a wee nip,” said Harriet Reid, an area ranger at the National Trust, smiling. “I can show you a couple of scars … it does hurt. But I’m used to it.”

National Trust rangers conducting their annual puffin count on the Farne Islands.
National Trust rangers conducting their annual puffin count on the Farne Islands. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

Reid is this year leading a particularly important puffin count on the Farne Islands, off the coast of Northumberland. The coronavirus pandemic meant full surveys were impossible in 2020 and 2021. The rangers have an idea of how healthy the puffin population is, but really need the comprehensive data that they will get once again now the 14-strong team can return to live on Inner Farne.

The biggest threat to puffin populations around the world is climate change. Icelandic populations are struggling, say experts, because of more frequent winter storms and greater stresses on food chains. In the UK the puffin is a red-listed bird, meaning it is of the highest conservation concern.

In 2018, 42,474 breeding pairs of Atlantic puffins were counted. In 2019 it was 42,378. Last year it was 36,211 – but that was a reduced survey area. It is too early to be alarmed, and the feeling is that the breeding colonies on the islands are in good shape, Reid said.

The pandemic has meant no live-on rangers and fewer visitors, so gulls, one of the puffin’s main predators, “have not been deterred as they usually would [be], causing more havoc than usual”, said Reid.

For the count, rangers put their arms down puffin burrows if they cannot see signs of occupation. The burrows can be 3ft (90cm) deep and are Y-shaped. At one end might be an egg; at the other, puffin poo. “It really is 50-50,” said Reid.

Puffins have colourful beaks that glow under UV light. “They are iconic, I think,” said Dr Richard Bevan, a zoologist at Newcastle University who helps verify the count. “A lot of people these days are distanced from wildlife and there is a lack of knowledge, but the one species everyone can identify is a puffin.

Puffins on rocks on farne islands
The puffin breeding colonies on the Farne Islands are thought to be in good shape. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

“Some people will see the thousands of guillemots on the cliffs here and go: ‘Are they penguins?’ When they see a puffin, they know it instantly.”

Puffins are monogamous and keep the same partner for life, returning to the same burrow year after year for the breeding season. Their Latin name is Fratercula arctica, meaning “little brother of the north”. Their local name is tommy noddy – and they do nod a lot.

Visitors come on boat trips to the Farne Islands in their thousands each year to see the abundance of birdlife – shags, guillemots, eiders, fulmars, kittiwakes or the true Olympians of the islands, the arctic terns, which from Northumberland will migrate to Antarctica.

But the stars of the Farnes are surely the puffins. Their walk is less a walk and more a scuttle, as though they’ve left the ironing out but can’t quite remember where it is. Their takeoff and landing is often comical, and their flight might best be described as frantic.

“They are a species that people find really endearing,” said Bevan. “They are always squabbling. Two will start having a scrap and all the other ones come along to have a look. Even as a scientist you do go … ‘ahh, they are so cute’.”

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