British Birds

September 1999

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This Month's Contents
September 1999
442 - Panic ye not Dr J. T. R. Sharrock
444 - Looking back
445 - History of the Common Rosefinch in Britain and Ireland, 1869–1996 D. I. M. Wallace
472 - Non-native birds breeding in the United Kingdom in 1997 Malcolm Ogilvie and the Rare Breeding Birds Panel
History of the Common Rosefinch in Britain and Ireland, 1869–1996 D. I. M. Wallace
Forty-five years ago, the Scarlet Grosbeak Carpodacus erythrinus was one of those birds that (supposedly) you had to go to Fair Isle to see. It was there, on 13th September 1951, that I visually devoured my first dumpy, oddly amorphous but beady-eyed example, as it clumped about in the same crop as an immature Black-headed Bunting Emberiza melanocephala.
Both were presented to me by the late Professor Maury Meiklejohn, with the nerve-wracking enjoinder ‘I can see the rosefinch’s bill and wingbars, Ian, but you will have to help with the bunting. I need to know its rump and vent colours. I’m colour blind.’ That night, the late Ken Williamson commented ‘Grosbeaks are classic drift migrants’ and I remember, too, some discussion between him and the other senior observers concerning the (then still unusual) cross-Baltic movements to Sweden in spring. Not for a moment, however, did they consider that the species would one day breed in Britain.
In 1992, when the Common Rosefinch, as it is now called, bred successfully at Flamborough Head, East Yorkshire and on the Suffolk coast, its addition to the regular breeding birds of Britain seemed imminent. No such event has ensued.
Since the late 1970s, the number of British and Irish records has grown so noticeably in spring that this trend, and particularly the 1992 influx, are likely to be associated with the much-increased breeding population of southern Fenno-Scandia. The most recent expansion of range from the Low Countries to northern France may, however, be a better platform for permanent colonisation than periodic mass crossings of the North Sea.
In the meantime, the bird still shows the rather enigmatic behaviour that has for 127 years characterised its British history, which is here re-examined in the light of its westward spread across Europe.