Graham Catley wrote:
My thoughts too Alex. The Hungarian birds are clearly great wanderers and you would image that more eastern birds might move further but there seems to be a mind set amongst British committees that precludes acceptance of this species onto the Brit list; seem to recall a juv photographed on Fair Isle in October many years back that did not make it and cannot remember if there was actually a reason other than the general lots in captivity caveat.
Indeed, with the benefit of the doubt afforded to Bald Eagle, American Kestrel and now various ducks (e.g. Hooded Merg). Now that a pattern of long-distance vagrancy is established the door maybe open to acceptance, but you've got to prove its not a hybrid (or even a Gyr), before arguing why is not an escape. Worth seeing if it doesn't a shed a feather; DNA bar-coding would be a straightforward way to establish ID and if it
is a 1w Saker and arrived in the UK this winter then there should be a strong isotopic signature between any feathers that it grew in eastern Europe and any new ones grown on the Atlantic fringe...
_________________
Dr Alexander C. Lees
Lecturer in tropical ecologyManchester Metropolitan University
Lab Associate
Cornell Lab of Ornithology,
Cornell University
http://www.freewebs.com/alexlees/index.htm@Alexander_Lees