Showing posts with label nest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nest. Show all posts

Saturday, 3 May 2014

Nesting





 Edgeley Road nesting vole



 Droppings from the ditch by Grocontinental

 Hedgehog poo 

Green Veined White

Just spent an hour watching a female water vole taking nesting materials to her nest. Water voles build football-sized woven grass nests usually in underground chambers, though they have been occasionally found above ground in clumps of vegetation, too. http://www.foxglovecovert.org.uk/images/blog/IMG_3754a.jpg

Tuesday, 8 May 2012

Meanwhile, across the County Border


After a bit of willow.


Swimming off with a willow leaf


Adult seeing off a juvenile



Above-ground water vole nest (we think)


Latrine underneath a bridge


Ducklings are a good sign that mink aren't about


Brilliant morning surveying the canal near Acton Marina, Nantwich, with the team from Cheshire Wildlife Trust. This survey was unusual in that we couldn't access the bank we were investigating at all, so it had to be done remotely, through binoculars. However we did make out burrows, floating bits of feeding, a lawn and at least six actual voles so there was no doubt about positive presence! We're also pretty sure we could see a water vole nest, which is something special (normally nests, woven from lengths of folded grass, are underground in chambers leading off burrows). Lastly, under one of the bridges we saw otter spraint. I've found spraint on the Weaver, which isn't too far away, so I wasn't surprised.

There are a few issues with habitat here: a lot of the canal sides are stone or concrete or metal piling, unusable for a burrowing animal. However, there are enough stretches where the bank is held secure with a kind of mesh, and that seems to suit the voles just fine. They go under it and over it and push it down and gnaw holes in the material. They also use the cracks in between the bigger stones. And fortunately the fields behind are fenced off with a good margin of untouched cover, so their bank is virtually undisturbed. Though there is a lot of boat-traffic, that doesn't bother the voles at all and we were able to watch them without any difficulty.