Saturday 13 November
produced a large northerly movement of Little Auks off the Whitburn coast.
The first Little Auk for the day appeared at 08.45, and by 13.30, over
2800 had been logged.At 11.20, MN picked up a
group of 10 Little Auks at at range of about 1 mile. Along with this group
was an all brown bird which immediately puzzled MN. It appeared identical
in size to Little Auk and flew with a typical Little Auk flight, and
definitely wasn't another species such as a Starling tagging onto the
flock. MN alerted the other observers and eventually PH, WM and TIM got
onto the bird. But typically, it almost immediately dropped with the
Little Auks onto the sea. After a frustrating 30 seconds, the flock took
off again, still containing the mystery bird. It continued to fly north
with the Little Auks until disappearing from view to the north.
Size and shape: appeared to be identical to Little
Auk.
Flight: the same characteristic low whirring flight as Little Auk.
Plumage: it appeared wholly brown, similar to a Sooty Shearwater brown.
The upperwings were not black, but a dark chocolate. The light was good,
so all Little Auks were appearing as they should - glossy black above and
gleaming white below. The underwings were as the upperwings, very dark.
The underparts were wholly brown, but to MN (who had the bird for longer
and at up to 60 times magnification), the belly looked very slightly
paler. The overall effect was much as a Sooty Shearwater seen in good
light. There was no lightening of the underparts either towards the head
or to the vent.
Due to the distance, no details could be seen of the head or bill
structure.
Immediate discussion talked about the possibility of
an oiled Little Auk or an aberrant plumage. An oiled bird was discounted
as the plumage was so uniform, the upperparts were brown and there were no
paler areas visible on the bird at all. The observers present had
extensive seawatching experience of Little Auks, having seen tens of
thousands between them, and no-one had ever seen an aberrantly plumaged
bird. Whether melanistic birds have ever been recorded is still to be
researched.
But what was it? As always with seawatch records,
the bird is gone and cannot be checked again. MN considers Crested Auklet
to be a possible contender, and in fact, this species has already been
recorded in Europe (in Iceland). It is a common North Pacific auklet with
a similar distribution to Ancient Murrelet, totally dark plumage at all
ages, but is very slightly larger than Little Auk. Other species in
contention based on plumage similarities are Whiskered Auklet and Marbled
Murrelet, but there are plumage discrepancies with both these species
(although PH considered Whiskered Auklet to be a possibility based
on size).
Whatever it was, we will never know 100%, but it
certainly added a bit of interest to the seawatch.
Observers: M Newsome, P Hogg, TI Mills, W Moss.
Additional notes:
After discussion with several birders with experience of Pacific auklets
in Japan, and with other birders with very extensive Little Auk
experience, the following further observations on the above record have
been made:
hno-one consulted
has ever noted Little Auks with anything other than black-and-white
plumage.
hCrested
Auklet looks noticably chunkier than Little Auk in seawatch conditions and
doesn't appear chocolaty brown, but more of a grey/brown.
hWhiskered
Auklet always has an obviously visible pale vent area.
hMarbled
Murrelet moults into black-and-white winter plumage in August/September.
So we are really no nearer any explanation of what the bird was. Another
one to be kept on file under 'unidentified birds on seawatches'...until
someone else sees another one.
Crested Auklet, Pedder Bay, Canada