Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Some National Geographic Sh*t aka Eider Banding

In August I had the opportunity to help out with banding male eider ducks off the coast of Nova Scotia - this is some real National Geographic Sh*t! I'm not kidding, this type of field work is why I became a biologist in the first place!

Some background: Eiders are the largest ducks in the northern hemisphere. They have several stages of plummage and moult twice a year. Females raise the young without any help from the males. For more detailed information about the common eider, check out the Hinterland Who's Who site here.

This sets the stage for catching eider ducks to band. In late summer, males create large "rafts" offshore and moult their breeding plummage. For 2-3 weeks they cannot fly as they grow back their flight feathers. This is when we target them because otherwise they would just fly away as we approached.

This is where it gets exciting. It's a big operation, including a fishing boat, two zodiacs and a helicopter. The helicopter flies to find the rafts, which can be seen from the air. Then the helicopter radios the fishing boat, which travels to the rafts (you can spot them on the water once you get in the vicinity).

Raft of ducks


Once the fishing boat finds the birds, the zodiacs deploy with two people each. They stay ~180 degrees from each other and circle the eider ducks, forcing them into a tight cluster.

Circling the ducks


Once the ducks are in a dense group, the helicopter flies over the fishing boat and zodiacs, and a gunman (harnessed to the helicopter) shots a net gun into the group, efficiently netting the birds. Each net is packed with an inflatable tube, which is triggered by water. Once the net inflates, a zodiac sweeps in and the person in front drags the net of birds into the boat. The birds are then brought to the fishing boat for processing.

Netting the ducks - they learn fast and start to dive!


On the boat the birds are untangled from the nets and packed into fish crates to await processing. Processing includes sexing (99% are male but you get a few immature females too) and banding birds, which are then released. The aim is to process as quickly as possible so the birds don't spend too much time out of water.

Picking birds from the net


We can learn a lot about eiders by banding them. Duck bands that are recovered elsewhere in the world can tell us what locations they migrate to and their flight paths. Age can also be derived from bands, some of which have been found 20+ years later!

My first banding!


Needless to say, it was an exciting two weeks, and I look forward to helping again next year :)

The states finally got something right!

And those things are USGS Webinar Courses for Natural Resource Managers. The United States Geological Survey has a "Status and Trends of Biological Resources Program" which is a great source of information for any biologist, especially those working in academia or government.

The courses are free, all you have to do is register for them. You can watch them live through an online webinar window, which is great because you can also ask questions at the end of each webinar. If the timing of the webinar is inconvenient, you can also watch the recordings at a later time - and all slides/notes/data are provided!

Upcoming courses are listed on the website (link below) - and many of them have been done before, so you can even review the notes before the course starts to see if the topic is one that will be useful to you. I've already completed the "Modelling Patterns and Dynamics of Species Occurrence" course, and am currently signed up for the "Learn R By Example" course.

You can access the website and register for courses here.