KenM
Well-known member
From memory, the late Clive Hutchinson's Birds of Ireland refers to tree-nesting carbo here, in the west of the country I think, but I'd have to take another look. Plus, at many freshwater colonies in Britain pioneered by sinensis, carbo are now dominant. So perhaps not as 'major' a difference in breeding requirements as you imply.
I believe that at Abberton and Walthamstow, Sinensis is the dominant ssp? I think the last article/report (BTO?) I read, suggested 80/20% split in favour of sinensis at Abberton, and how certain can we be that the 20% were not dark sub-adults (5 years to mature..I believe?) surely they weren't ID'D on the gular angle, or the larger size (overall and bill?). When as stated the gular pouch has to be relaxed, all that precise information gleaned from a ''bobbing'' boat in the face of a stiff Northerly wind through bins or imaged, I couldn't reconcile the veracity of that data. If Steve Lister's comment regarding the Cormorants at Rutland are to be accepted, that no size difference was observed between Carbo and Sinensis? The whole situation regarding this taxa is beginning to emerge as a ''Can of Cormorants''.