Action 12 – Common Scoters – rare breeding ducks on Lough Corrib

Please join us for our fourth ‘Connemara Conservation Conversation’ and help us by spreading the word. 

In conversation with Jackie Hunt MCIEEM MSc – Common Scoters – rare breeding ducks on Lough Corrib.  7 April  at 7.30pm 

A resident and winter visitor from the Continent to all Irish coasts between October and April. A medium-sized, plump duck usually seen in large flocks offshore. At closer range, males with yellow knob at base of bill. All dark plumage, with no white on the wing. Males black, females sooty brown with paler cheeks.

During the summer the diet is varied and includes water plants, insect larvae and freshwater crustaceans. During the winter, they forage mostly in waters less than 20 m deep and with coarse sandy substrates. They feed predominantly on benthic bivalve molluscs.

First recorded breeding in Ireland in the beginning of the 20th century at Lower Lough Erne. Numbers increased steadily – up to 150 pairs were estimated during the late 1960s. They nest on islands with dense covering of scrub and tree cover. The breeding population has declined since due to the increase in Mink, which predate the nests and young.

Common Scoter are almost entirely marine during the winter, and tend to congregate in large flocks on shallow seas with sandy bottoms supporting their preferred prey.

7 April  at 7.30pm  Free Event  

Link to book:  ttps://www.eventbrite.ie/e/common-scoters-rare-breeding-ducks-on-lough-corrib-jackie-hunt-mcieem-msc-tickets-146471067907

Each talk will be approximately 35 minutes with time for Q & A’s after. A recording of each conversation will be posted to the Connemara Green website after each session for replay.

Our aim is to increase the awareness of the conservation actions in our area. Topics will focus on conservation with inspiring speakers and conservations on bringing talk into action.

Posted in Blog.