Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2001, Side 133

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2001, Side 133
ÚTBREIÐSLA OG TAL AV MÚSABRÓÐUR (TROGLODYTES) í FØROYUM 137 even further back in time, are possibly of some relevance in this context. In the sum- mer of 1828, the German ornithologist Gra- ba travelled all over the Faroes and made careful observations, published in great de- tail bul with only one reference to wren; several singing birds at Vidoy on 1 July (Graba, 1830:208). Five year later, during the first week of June 1833, George Clay- ton Atkinson, accompanied by an ornithol- ogist of reputation, William Proctor of Durharn, visited the Faroes en route to Ice- land. Atkinson's diary, recently published for the first time by Seaton (1989), includes an, according to the author, imperfect list of about 35 species of birds which does not include the wren; though cats were report- ed to be particularly common. This might simply be an omission, but, like Graba, the two Englishmen surely must have been most familiar with the wren frorn their re- spective home countries. However difficult it is to interpret these two anecdotal obser- vations they could indicate that the wren had some poor years around 1830, or that the wren has not always been as numerous as it is today. For Orkney it is claimed that the wren has not changed significantly over the past two hundred years (Booth et al., 1984). No such claim can be made with regard to the Faroes. However, it seems quite possible that some recent changes in the distribution of breeding wrens have taken place. Many settlements have, as described above, un- dergone changes and rather than erecting new stone walls around the infields and building new bams of stones the old ones are being pulled down and replaced by more modern arrangements. Several local people claim in interviews that wrens were more abundant around settlements before World War II than they are today. A shift in breeding distribution from infields to out- field inland areas and sea cliffs is perfectly possible as several colour-banded wrens have been found to disperse even between island (pers.obs.; though cf. Cramp, 1988:528). So far no change in wren num- bers on the sea cliffs and in the outfield breeding grounds have been documented. Conclusions The wren is widely distributed all over the Faroes being particularly abundant on small islands in association with seabird colonies. The total breeding population is estimated to be between about 600 and 850 pairs but, considering annual fluctuations in the order of at least 15-25% and a prob- able underestimate of numbers on sea cliffs and in some inland districts, it is suggested in some years to be just short of a thousand pairs. No periodic or long-term trends are discemible, though years with exceptional- ly low numbers may have occurred from time to time. Furthermore, a decrease in the proportion of pairs breeding in built-up ar- eas may have taken place. Acknowledgements The field-work was supported by grants from the Swedish Natural Science Research Council, Letterstedt- ska foreningen, Stockholm, Dansk-svensk samfunds fond for kultur och vetenskap, Copenhagen, and Kungl. Fysiografiska Sallskapet i Lund. I sincerely thank Dr. Dorete Bloch, Professor Ame Nørrevang, Dr. Pehr H. Enckeil, Mr Søren Sørensen, Dr. Lars Lundqvist, and Ms Herdis Joensen of Mykines for assistance in various
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