Watch Out For Hoopoes!

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

Guest Post by Ian Magness

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13101877/An-exotic-bird-emits-smell-rotting-meat-soon-Britain-climate-change.html

Now, as anyone who has ever seen one (and they are pretty common around the Mediterranean) can attest, the hoopoe is a most striking bird, unique in colour and shape. Furthermore, they feed on open ground and are happy in parks, gardens and golf courses, so they are easy to find. This is not, therefore, one of those birds that is likely to sneak into and roam around Britain unseen, especially in modern times when so many more people watch birds. Records can thus be viewed as pretty reliable. So, what do the facts tell us?

Points are as follows:

– Hoopoes have been seen visiting Britain for hundreds of years. They are scarce vagrants, generally appearing pre- (spring, especially) or post- nesting periods (autumn) as the birds either seek breeding opportunities or disperse away from their nesting areas. Southern and eastern Britain sightings predominate but they have been spotted all over the British Isles. Very occasional birds have attempted to nest and some have done so successfully. Never in recorded history, however, has there ever been a viable British breeding population. As Coward put it in 1925: “To our knowledge, it has been striving to establish itself for two and a half centuries”.

– Birds of Wiltshire goes into some detail about the growth and decline of hoopoe sightings and nesting. Essentially, it reports that hoopoes had a pretty comprehensive European breeding range – south to north – historically. The range contracted more toward its southern heartland, however, between the mid-19th and mid-20th centuries and appears to have been pretty stable since. The reasons are not known but habitat (and thus food) loss is implicated. This is the opposite of what you would expect from global warming.

– In line with the decline noted above, the number of successful British hoopoe nests (never more than a great rarity) all but disappeared by the mid-1970s. To my knowledge (I could of course be wrong), there have been no successful British nests in the 21st century.

– Britishbirds.co.uk reports total annual sightings since the late 1960s to 2021 as being between around 100 and 150 (albeit that some of these would likely be the same birds moving around). Importantly, when looking at “Trend” in the sightings, the site states “None”.

Conclusions

The Daily Mail article contains the following statement:

“Due to global warming, scientists believe the hoopoe may set up home on British shores, with scores of sightings being reported every year.”

1) Yes, there are scores of sightings in Britain each year but twas always thus and there is no trend whatsoever. No doubt there were more birds around in Victorian and Georgian times when the hoopoe range allowed more northerly birds to come across the seas to visit Britain more easily. That would have facilitated some breeding but there has been little or none over the last 50 years or so.

2) As for “Due to global warming, scientists believe the hoopoe may set up home on British shores” – frankly, it is hard to be polite because this is demonstrable rubbish. What “scientists”? What data? Where? Are we expecting a Mediterranean climate any time soon?

This just looks like yet another example of a journalist being fed some puerile climate story that would have taken five minutes of research to rebuff. Whatever drives UK and European populations of the magnificent hoopoe, there is no evidence that anthropogenic climate change (even if such exists) has played the slightest part.

References

Coward’s “The Birds of the British Isles and their Eggs” 1925

Wiltshire Ornithological Society’s “Birds of Wiltshire” 2007

https://britishbirds.co.uk
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strativarius
February 24, 2024 2:33 am

“”Hoopoes have been seen visiting Britain for hundreds of years.””

This may well be true, however, nobody I have ever encountered knows of them. 

““Due to global warming, scientists believe”” – and the scientists are the new clerisy

Climate Change Survey: Scientists Believe in Global Warming – Time magazine
Consensus confirmed: over 90% of climate scientists believe – The Conversation
The ‘97% climate consensus’ is over. Now it’s well above 99% – The Conversation

2023 May Be The Hottest Year On Record: On Thursday, June 15, 2023, global average temperatures for June were measured to be around one degree Celsius higher than averages for the same month dating back to 1979. Climate scientists believe… 
https://www.infoplease.com/current-events/2023/june-current-events-this-week

Climate scientists believe what their models tell them – much as previous believers would roll the bones, pick at the intestines etc.

Scissor
Reply to  strativarius
February 24, 2024 4:03 am

I find it interesting that these pieces don’t identify the odiferous compound or compounds. The article below says that it’s dimethyl sulfide but as a chemist I wonder.

https://www.audubon.org/news/the-hoopoe-emissary-kings-secreter-stink

strativarius
Reply to  Scissor
February 24, 2024 4:23 am

They’re usually careful enough to remain vague – “scientists or experts say” but they rarely name them. Now, that’s what I call an appeal to authority – peasant.

Scissor
Reply to  strativarius
February 24, 2024 6:02 am

It sounds like some serious work is being done by Dr. Burger in South Africa.

https://scholar.sun.ac.za/server/api/core/bitstreams/36d5a8c2-2f19-43b0-9a5f-5b936079f19c/content

Dave Andrews
Reply to  Scissor
February 24, 2024 8:40 am

A number of people who have experience of hoopoes commented on Paul’s blog that they did not notice any smell.

Rick C
Reply to  strativarius
February 24, 2024 8:59 am

Hoopoes were featured in a 2012 episode of Midsomer Murders titled “A Rare Bird” which involved a rivalry between ornithologists. I looked it up to see if it was real or fictional as it looked preposterous.

kwinterkorn
Reply to  Rick C
February 24, 2024 10:46 am

In the first part of Master and Commander (novel, not the movie) physician and naturalist Stephen Maturin is in ecstasy over having seen his first hoopoe. Captain Aubrey uses the lure of natural discoveries to convince Maturin to join his voyages as ships surgeon.

Maturin is from Ireland, not England——perhaps hoopoes had not quite made it the Emerald Isle by 1800…..

February 24, 2024 2:50 am

I see hoopoes all the time in Madrid. I’ve never been close enough to one to notice their odor. They eat mainly bugs, which is why they have their characteristic beak. They are very beautiful birds with characteristic flight. As with most birds in Spain, their number appears to have grown over the past decades and sightings in Madrid’s parks have become more frequent.

As the Northern Hemisphere warms, winters become less extreme in many regions leading to better survival of plants and animals, increased primary productivity in ecosystems, and increased wildlife populations. It is a great help to wildlife conservation, with the plus from increased CO2.

Only people with an agenda can interpret these changes as negative. They are only negative to their cause.

Scarecrow Repair
Reply to  Javier Vinós
February 24, 2024 6:40 am

Actually, their cause is more government funding for more redundant “research” and more control of the peasants. Last thing any of the “leaders” want is to solve anything.

Reply to  Scarecrow Repair
February 25, 2024 6:39 pm

The rich who own the media are planning on making trillions off of the $US200 trillion it is estimated to stop warming by 2050 and stay at this near Little Ice Age temperature where about 10 times as many die from the cold as from the heat.

Cold is far more deadly to humans than heat, we have great air conditioning systems. Humans that are in shape can run down most other animals to exhaustion.

February 24, 2024 2:52 am

wiki gives a fairly coherent story of these creatures.
But first, see the attached.

Reading the wiki, between the lines, hoopoe in Britain disappeared because of intensive agriculture.
Their chosen food was what they could find on relatively bare ground and esp, just under the surface. Hence the beaks they have.

They seemingly loved to nest in haystacks, as did many small UK native birds so the arrival of combine harvesters didn’t do them any favours any more than widespread ploughing to grow crops of sugar

The hoopoe thus went the same way as most all British ground-nesting/feeding birds are now going, nearly all gone.
e.g. Lapwing, Oyster Catcher, Curlew and Thrushes

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoopoe

Hoopoe-Bird
Reply to  Peta of Newark
February 24, 2024 3:46 am

Where I grew up 70 years ago in rural Perthshire there were a lot of ground nesting birds Curlew, Peewit, Grouse Red and Black and smaller like Meadow Pipits and raptors of course.
Changes to farming practices are very limited there were oats and hay for animal feed but that ended in the 1970s at higher elevations where I lived.
Two things I can think of will affect the population is increasing raptor population and replanting of the Caledonian Forest. There were stands of Scots Pines that had been there for as long as people remembered and were left alone.
The Black Grouse Lek in spring was an impressive sight and always in the same place. One theory is that these were where clearings in trees were located.

We haven’t many colourful exotic birds in Britain. Jays, Black Grouse and Capercaillie are about it none are particularly common so another one would be welcome as far as I’m concerned

strativarius
Reply to  Ben_Vorlich
February 24, 2024 4:27 am

“”We haven’t many colourful exotic birds in Britain””

Can you imagine being irritated by the squawking of parakeets? In the last 15 years they have radiated out from pockets in South East London – bigtime.

Beautiful plumage (h/t J Cleese) but a song like fingernails over a blackboard.

Rich Davis
Reply to  strativarius
February 24, 2024 7:01 am

Pinin’ for the fjords I reckon.

Reply to  strativarius
February 24, 2024 10:01 am

I think that there was a colony of of budgerigars somewhere too.
I was thinking more of native or arrivals from Europe. Thinking about it there are a few colourful male ducks.

Bil
Reply to  Peta of Newark
February 24, 2024 11:24 am

Tosh, mate. I have lapwings, curlews, and thrushes aplenty in my part of Shropshire. We’ve even had huge flocks of fieldfare this winter. Go to the beach and it’s snooing with oyster catchers. I actually thought I saw a Hoopoe this morning. Looked like a big jay.

February 24, 2024 3:25 am

Audubon website has a page on ‘smelly’ birds (KaKaPo, Hoopoe, Crested Auklet etc):

Do not threaten a Hoopoe nestling. When in danger, they’ll squirt a stream of feces at an invader in self-defense. 

That’s not the only source of stink from these distinctive birds of Africa and Eurasia. The preen gland is where birds produce the oil they rub on themselves to keep their feathers clean and waterproof. But come breeding season, something weird happens to the preen glands of female Hoopoes and their nestlings: They swell up and produce what one book describes as “an evil-smelling fluid, with a stench like that of rotting meat.” 

https://www.audubon.org/news/cookies-honey-tangerines-manure-these-birds-have-some-strange-scents

Rick C
Reply to  Johanus
February 24, 2024 12:04 pm

Well, the odor would certainly discourage trying to keep them in captivity. Cockatiels probably wish they’d thought of this.

Reply to  Johanus
February 24, 2024 12:29 pm

So the Hoopoe only stinks after making whoopie?

Ed Zuiderwijk
February 24, 2024 5:29 am

The DM always was in the alarmist camp but drifted further in over the past few years. A change of ownership may have something to do with it. We are regularly being entertained by stories about warming oceans, rising sea level, increasing rain, increasing drought, hence the usual climate scaremongering. No one bats an eye anymore.

February 24, 2024 5:57 am

London is home to green Ring-Necked Parakeets. It has thrived even though London is nothing like it’s native tropical forests of Brazil. It hasn’t come to London because of climate change but much like any invasive species it has no predator other than domestic cats and there is plenty of food all year round.

Scissor
Reply to  sskinner
February 24, 2024 6:48 am

I saw people feeding those birds in Hyde Park. They appeared to travel as a flock. I’d like to see where they nest.

Reply to  Scissor
February 24, 2024 7:36 am

In trees so they compete with native birds like Woodpeckers.

dk_
February 24, 2024 9:29 am

First it was the Bobolinks, then it was the Unladen Coconut Swallow, now this!

kwinterkorn
February 24, 2024 10:35 am

Speaking of birds,
I was in Rochester, NY this week on a cold, snowy day (ie., normal). A friend, whom I know buys into the climate hysteria.just told me about his wonderful week in Antigua in the Caribbean. “So warm! So nice to be away from the cold!”

I said to him that this explains why a few degrees of global warming would make the Earth a nicer place, especially Rochester in the winter. He looked at me in horror, and being nice, just told me I was crazy.

Knowing he’s an Anglophile, if only I had told him that hoopoes would soon find the British Isles a pleasant climate, perhaps he would have understood.

Ed Zuiderwijk
Reply to  kwinterkorn
February 24, 2024 10:47 am

Your friend suffers from Cognitive Dissonance.

Gums
Reply to  kwinterkorn
February 24, 2024 11:05 am

I sure hope those things are not from the family of the notorious foo bird.

Bil
February 24, 2024 11:18 am

I was walking along the Montgomery canal this very morning between Oswestry and Welshpool and I could’ve sworn I saw a Hoopoe. Looked like a big Jay.

February 24, 2024 2:32 pm

Is the Hoopoe any relation to the Foo bird?

Back in the day, we kids thought we were pretty clever telling our friends a joke about this elusive and incontinent creature, the punch line being a slight modification of the old saw that ‘if the shoe fits, wear it’.

Gums
Reply to  Frank from NoVA
February 24, 2024 3:39 pm

Yeah Frank, that was one of the first lessons in our global survival school……not that we guys wanted to have a hot shower every day/night.

ntesdorf
February 24, 2024 3:58 pm

In the Torah, Leviticus 11:13–19 the hoopoe is listed among the animals that are detestable and should not be eaten.

In the Qur’an Surah 27, the hoopoe appears with King Solomon as a pet that can talk.
It said, “ I have just come to you from Sheba with sure news. Indeed I found a woman ruling over them, who has been given everything she needs, and who has a magnificent throne.”

People can shortly watch for a detestable, brightly coloured bird, talking incessantly about the Queen of Sheba and infesting their local parks. Reports of a smell accompanying the hoopoe bird are less secure. However, it should not be eaten.