UK's oldest guillemot found on Scottish island

The UK's oldest recorded guillemot has been identified at the age of 34 on a Scottish island.
The guillemot was found on the Isle of May in the Firth of Forth. Picture: ContributedThe guillemot was found on the Isle of May in the Firth of Forth. Picture: Contributed
The guillemot was found on the Isle of May in the Firth of Forth. Picture: Contributed

The seabird was already adult when it was ringed in 1982, so it could be even older.

It has beaten by at least two years the previous record of the 32-year-old guillemot found dead in Sweden in 2011, which was ringed on Fair Isle in 1979.

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The bird was found on the Isle of May, five miles offshore at the Firth of Forth.

Professor Mike Harris, who is one of a team of scientists who study the 250,000 seabirds which nest there each year, discovered the aged bird.

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It has prompted discussion about the lifespan of seabirds, as the average guillemot is expected to live to 23.

David Steel, manager of the Scottish Natural Heritage national nature reserve, said: “It’s staggering to believe, as this bird is now at least 34 years old and eclipses the longevity record for the UK of a guillemot ringed on Fair Isle in 1979 which was found freshly dead in Sweden in 2011, making that bird 32 years of age.

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“Seabirds are incredibly long lived and even now we are still discovering so many new fascinating facts about the lives of these birds – all part of the science and another reason why the Isle of May is so important.”

Guillemots are medium-sized auks which breed in tightly-packed colonies on cliff tops and rocky outcrops, laying eggs in May and June.

Studies of seabirds including the iconic puffin have been undertaken on the May Isle for decades and scores of volunteers go to the island each year to help scientists based there.

It is a monitoring site for the Centre of Ecology and Hydrology.

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Mr Harris began a detailed study of the population biology of puffins there in 1972. Each year he records how many puffins have returned, how many eggs they lay and how many chicks are reared, giving a valuable insight into the state of the species in the north-west Atlantic Ocean.

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