Less windy conditions meant we could do a rabbit survey this evening. This is to understand the effects the removal of rats will have on other species of wildlife in the ecosystem.
Today the school children learnt how they can be the 'spies' of the project and report any rat-sign to an adult on St Agnes. They watched trail camera footage which is monitoring for any last rat sign, and played a quiz to guess was the footage of a shrew, rabbit, bird, or someone’s pet!
The team visited St Mary's to complete work on the 'rat motels' and on the way back they beat the storm - Seabird Task Force Volunteer, Alastair Wilson took this glorious picture of a Rainbow over St Mary's.
The team spent the day on St Mary's this week assisting the Isles of Scilly Wildife Trust in making wooden boxes to house monitoring tools and rodenticide.
Today the team swapped their day off as it will be very tricky to work in this weather. Quick bait station checks have been done and tomorrow will we be out checking the damage. We are all staying safe indoors now!
Today we visited St Mary’s Five Island School to work with Year 9 Music class. They have been set the project of editing footage of seabirds against music, on the schools music software programme.
Despite disruptions on the railway and flights due to the recent storms, our next two volunteers made it to St Agnes.
The ink monitoring tunnels are proving a big hit for shrews - they seem to like the peanut butter, which is strange for insectivores!
AONB Assistant Rebecca Steggles spent the day assisting the team on St Agnes today, learning about the work of the delivery phase.
Seabird Task Force Volunteers assisted a community beach clean on St Agnes today. It was organised by resident Johann Hicks, with bags donated by project partners - Isles of Scilly Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.