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Knots, oystercatcher, Jeroen Reneerkens (jeroenreneerkens@hetnet.nl

The birds of the tidal areas

Throughout the world, many birds are found in the transition areas between land and sea. That is not so unusual, since coastal areas are often rich in food. The Wadden Sea is a good example. Ten million birds have been estimated in this area every year. Some of the bird species remain throughout the year, others come only to breed or to stay for the winter. Others stop over during migration.

  • Protection of (tidal flat) birds

    International agreements have been made to protect such bird species during the conference of Ramsar. These agreements mean that when at least 1% of the world population of a specific bird species is found in a region, special regulations must be taken in those regions to protect these birds. There are many bird species in the wadden region that qualifiy for protection.
    The Wadden Sea is particularly important for waders, such as the bar-tailed godwit. Nesting birds from the North Pole region migrate to Africa and return again in the summer. Some species fly distances of more than 5000 kilometers twice a year! The Wadden Sea lies halfway along the migration route. It is one of the few regions where the birds can find a sufficient amount of food to grow strong enough for the continuation of their voyage. Therefore, protecting the Wadden Sea has worldwide significance.
    From a study performed by the NIOZ, it appears that a large number of species are not doing well. Particularly birds that eat shellfish, such as the oystercatcher, the eider and the knot. Worm-eating bird species are increasing. The most plausible cause for these changes are the excessive shellfish fisheries in combination with a natural poor spat fall. It seems that the fished areas have become much more suitable for worms, and thereby more suitable for worm-eating birds.
    There are five major groups of 'tidal-flat' birds: waders, geese, ducks, gulls and terns.

  • Shorebirds

    The shorebirds, also called waders, are the most numerous. Many thousands of oystercatchers, redshanks, curlews, bar-tailed godwits and various species of sandpipers and plovers populate the Wadden Sea and the delta region for a shorter or longer period of time every year. They eat all sorts of benthic animals during low tide.

  • Geese

    Geese such as Brent geese and barnacle geese are primarily winter guests in the coastal region of the North Sea, where they graze on the salt marshes. Together with the Dutch delta region, the Wadden Sea forms the most important overwintering area for the barnacle goose. In the second half of March, these geese migrate via the German tidal flats and the Baltic Sea to their breeding grounds near Nova Zembla.

  • Ducks

    Duck species such as wigeons, common teal, shelducks and eiders also feel at home in the wadden region. Most ducks are carnivores and eat primarily benthic animals. The only vegetarian is the wigeon, which feeds on marsh plants and seaweed.

  • Gulls

    The herring gull and the black-headed gull are the most obvious coastal birds along the North Sea shores. Gulls eat everything; they know how to profit from all kinds of human garbage sources to supplement their natural diet (fish, shellfish, crabs, starfish). However, their natural food must still make up an important part of their diet in order to stay strong.

  • Terns

    Terns are typical summer guests in the North Sea region. They come to the North Sea to breed in April and May and they migrate again in the months of August and September to the south. The common tern and the Arctic tern breed in colonies spread out along the whole North Sea coast, while the sandwich tern is only found in the southern, sandy area.

  • Life in the coastal region

    The environmental conditions for birds are different in the tidal zone than on land. Every bite of food for the birds contains salt. For eiders, it adds up to 50 grams a day. Kidneys cannot process so much salt. These birds excrete it in a different manner. They have glands above their eyes which remove the excess salt from the blood. Naturally, tidal zones are also wet areas. In order to stay warm and dry, these birds have a water-repellent plumage: the feathers fit perfectly around one another and are covered with a water-resistant oil, called tallow.

  • Eating during low tide

    Benthic animals arre found in large numbers both in and on the tidal flats: sometimes more than a kilo 'meat' per square meter. This food is only available for most birds of the flats during low tide. The daily rhythm for most of the birds is therefore not determined by night and day, but by ebb and flood. During high tide, they fly in large swarms to places which do not flood, the so-called high-tide refuges. Only terns, diving duck species and cormorants can continue to look for food during high tide.

  • Competition

    In the Dutch section of the Wadden Sea, an average of around 700,000 tidal flat birds are present throughout the year. All of these birds need to eat. One would think that the one bird is taking away food from another one. However, the various species of birds living on the tidal flats have different means for finding food and therefore encounter little direct competition from one another.

  • People and shorebirds

    The birds living in the coastal environment experience all kinds of human activities. Waders are very popular with people and the impressive swarms of birds are admired very much. Geese are sometimes combatted because they cause problems in agrarian crops.
    Polluting their living area with oil and toxic materials, impoldering, fishery activities, mineral exploration and the growing recreation ('wad' hiking, aquatic sports) produce problems for them.

  • Shellfish fisheries

    Many 'tidal-flat' birds eat shellfish; they cannot survive otherwise. However, man also likes to fish large amounts of shellfish. The mussel fisheries in the Netherlands is centuries old. The fishermen haul young mussels from the natural mussel banks in order to cultivate them on special parcels in the Oosterschelde and the Wadden Sea. Cockle fisheries is also an old traditional trade in the Netherlands, although it is only allowed to be caught by hand since 2005.

  • Disturbances

    It is continually growing busier in the forage and rest areas for the birds of the tidal flats. All sorts of tourism create disturbances, especially in the summertime when many birds are molting and the number of tourists in the area is at a maximum. The birds are constantly taking flight which costs them a lot of energy, energy that is indispensable for renewing their plumage and for migration. The tendency for more and more ships to beach on the mud flats where birds are foraging is becoming a serious problem, especially when the crew decides to wander around. It is precisely during low tide that the birds need to eat, so that these disturbances have harsh consequences. Since 2003, an explicit code of honour has been established for boaters in the Wadden Sea, whereby one attempts to avoid this kind of disturbance. Migrating birds are also sensitive to disturbances from military training, which disrupt part of the Wadden Sea.

  • Consequences of severe winters
    Massive amounts of razor shells and spisulas, Foto Fitis, www.fotofitis.nl

    In the winter, there is not as much activity in the Wadden Sea compared to the period of massive migration in the autumn. Larger species in particular remain behind in the Wadden Sea. Almost half of the waders found in the winter are oystercatchers. They only migrate further when there is a severe freeze, but even then many still stay put.

    Massive amounts of razor shells and spisulas washed ashore after a period of severe cold
    The severe winter of 1995-1996 gives a good idea how waders and coastal birds react to these kinds of conditions. Counts made by the Dutch institute RIKZ in February 1996 showed that eiders survived relatively well in the practically totally frozen Wadden Sea. Thanks to the heavy easterly winds, there was a large opening in the ice, in which significant numbers of birds were found. In early February, the number of eiders was the same as during a normal winter (120,000). In addition, there were around 30,000 greater scaups, which usually swim in the IJsselmeer. Furthermore, there were 24,000 eiders, 30,000 common scoters, 3500 common mergansers, 2000 red-breasted mergansers, 4000 common goldeneyes and thousands of grebes found in the other coastal waters.

  • Dead birds found after a severe winter:
    Species 1997 1996 1991 1987
    oystercatcher 7300 2500 2200 3200
    dunlin 1550 53 640 291
    redshank 710 177 329 110
    grey plover 735 23 101 16
    red knot 310 23 152 137
    turnstone 150 16 76 70
    curlew 185 249 295 35
    shelduck 162 523 749 119
    bar-tailed godwit 29 9 5 16
    sanderling 19 2 66 2
    source: Baptist and Meininger in Zoutkrant 11-1
  • Shorebirds: changes since 1975

    The international Wadden Sea attracts around 10 to 12 million water fowl yearly. A large number of these birds are dependent upon the benthic fauna of the mud flats and channels for food. Since 1975, the number of specimen of a large amount of bird species have been counted in scientific studies. The results show that since 1990-1991, shellfish-consuming birds such as eiders, oystercatchers, knot and herring gulls, have been declining while worm-eating birds such as great ringed and grey plovers, sanderlings, dunlins and bar-tailed godwits are increasing.
    The decline in oystercatchers is related to the disappearance of the natural mussel banks in the early 1990s. The mussel banks disappeared due to overfishing, a reduction in mussel spatfall and possibly through storms. The oystercatchers switched to cockles, which were also being harvested by the cockle fisheries. Eiders and herring gulls probably also suffered from a decline in the food supply. Why the worm-consumers have increased is not yet completely clear. It is possible that there is more room for worms in the mud since shellfish have been fished up. Another assumption is that the composition of the sediment has become more favorable for worms than for shellfish.