There is no arguing that
Purple Swamphens in Britain have a very chequered history – the records are
littered with unscrupulous escapees and the possibility of a genuine vagrant
reaching our shores always seemed a very remote possibility indeed. Fast
forward 6 years from the last twitched individual (an escapee that took a
liking to a muddy ditch in Saltney) and Sunday afternoon saw phones bleeping
and twitter coming alive in the birding community as reports surfaced of a
Purple Swamphen at Minsmere spotted lurking amongst the reeds surrounding the pool
near South Hide.
Purple Swamphen - Minsmere |
Unringed, with full wings and
most importantly being of the Western race of Purple Swamphen (‘Purple Swamphen’
as a species was split last year in to 6 full species, with Western Swamphen occupying
Iberia and the Western Mediterranean), the chances were high that this could
indeed be the real deal.
Digiscoped shot showing the full wings |
The view over the pool at South Hide - the very same pool that held a Black-browed Albatross last year! |
With over 40 records of Purple
Swamphen in Britain in the past and with all considered to be escapees, what's
to stop the Minsmere bird joining them in the realms of escaped Swamphen
purgatory? One huge point to consider is that the majority of records in Britain
refer to the Grey-headed form of Purple Swamphen - found throughout Asia and the
most commonly kept type in captivity. The Minsmere bird being of the Western
type therefore immediately elevates it to the top of the list of likely wild
candidates, with vagrancy potential from the Mediterranean and Iberia much
higher than from across Asia and the probability of it being an escapee being
significantly less.
Grey-headed Swamphen - more often to be found in captivity than Westerns |
Map showing the Northerly Purple Swamphen records during 2016. |
Whilst at first glance the
English Channel may pose as a stumbling block in the path of a Wild Purple
Swamphen, it actually transpires that this species has made open water
crossings before, with records from islands such as Malta, Menorca and Sardinia.
The closely related American Purple Gallinule also has various records of long
distance vagrancy (across the Atlantic Ocean no less) under it's belt, while other species of
crake and rail have similarly shown instances of extreme distance flights, dispelling any myths that this family of birds are poor flyers.
American Coot and American Purple Gallinule - two species that have made the epic crossing across the Atlantic and dispelling the myth that rails are poor flyers |
However, one question to
consider surrounding the Western Swamphen’s ability to travel long distances revolves
around the large die off of Western Swamphens in France during the harsh winter
of 2012, when several hundred birds were killed due to lack of food and
starvation as their ponds froze over solid. If the conditions were so tough to
the point of death, then why didn’t the Swamphens simply move elsewhere in
order to survive?
Whilst most records of Purple
Swamphens can quickly be attributed to being an escape, often traced back to a
specific collection, two other great candidates for being Britain’s first
genuinely wild Purple Swamphen have occurred in the past, yet have both been rejected; a bird found in
Cumbria in 1997 that was rejected on the basis of being thought to be a hybrid
between two races and therefore deemed to be of captive origin, and a promising
individual at Sandbach in Cheshire back in 1971. Thought by many to be of the
Western form, the record was rejected presumably on the basis that it couldn’t be
proven that it wasn’t an escapee, especially with no pattern of previous
natural occurrence in Britain. If the Minsmere bird does eventually get
accepted, then surely this record must also be reviewed.
All in all, the chances of the Minsmere Western Swamphen getting accepted as the first wild bird for Britain look very good - rumours of a recent escapee in the area were put to bed after the bird in question was found to be of the common captive Grey-headed race, and with the unprecedented numbers of Western Swamphens dispersing in Northern France, realistically it was only a matter of time before one made the leap over the channel and ended up on British shores.
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