3. ∗ WE, THE STUDENTS OF SIXTH OF PRIMARY OF THE
SCHOOL LES ACÀCIES, WENT TO “EL DELTA DEL
LLOBREGAT” TO LEARN ABOUT IT.
∗ THEY ARE SOME OF THE MOST IMPORTANT
WETLANDS IN THE SOUTH OF EUROPE BECAUSE OF
THE MIGRATORY BIRDS.
THE BIRDS OF DELTA del
LLOBREGAT
4. WE WERE ABLE TO OBSERVE DIFFERENT
SPECIES OF BIRDS AND PLANTS FROM VARIOUS
SIDEVIEWS
5. ∗ WE TOOK LOTS OF PHOTOS AND WE USED
BINOCULARS TO LOOK AT THE BIRDS
Students have a mission
6. ∗ LOTS OF BIRDS HAVE THEIR CHICKS HERE
MIGRATORY BIRDS
7. MALLARD
Males have blue green head, dun or brown chest, white neck, grey body and black tail. As
distinctive treats have dark orange beak and blue and white spectacles in their wings. Females
have duller colors in dark dun. Mallard inhabits in all kind of wetlands (natural or man-made)
regardless of their area, depth or humanization scale. It nests away from farm lands. It can breed
on trees too. It occupies riverbeds perfectly.
Mallards are herbivorous. At breeding, females lay from 3 to 12 eggs that are going to hatch out
in a period of 15 to 27 days. Females take care of their chicks alone. Chicks are yellow with
brown patches. Their almost independents from the very first day, they feed themselves and in 2
or 3 months they are completely ready to fly.
8. GEESE
They belong to the family of Anserini, where geese, ducks and swans are classified. These animals
are aquatic birds and, depending on the species, are divers or swimmers and, generally, migratory.
They possess a flatten beak covered by thin skin with a hornic blotch in the spot.
The plumage that cover their bodies is protected thanks to a grease segregation expelled by his
uropigial layer, located on the top of their tails. Geese possess a size inferior to swans and superior
to ducks. They tend to concentrate in grain or forage areas. Males and females are equal in
coloration, so we can only identify them for their size and weight.
Geese offer differences with the rest of anseriform birds, like the fact that they are more terrestrial
than swans, so their legs are adapted to walk for a longer time. They are, together with swans, the
heavier flying birds, but they can go over longer distances on high altitudes, being able of migrate
during the different stages of the year.
9.
10. A SMALL CAGE
WHERE THE
INSECTS THAT ARE
USED AS FOOD
HIDE
A BIRD WELL HIDDEN
11. AUDOUIN’S GULL
Audouin’s gull is a limited species, it breeds spread in islets of the Mediterranean and it’s similar to the European
herring gull.
Of unknown habits, because it doesn’t get close to shores. It nests in rocky islets. One of the best studied
colonies is the one discovered in Columbretes Islands (Castellón), breeding 40 couples approx. It also nests in
the Balearic Islands, the Chafarinas, etc. Is relatively sedentary, but with spread movements. Is an endangered
species.
Identification: Adults have pale grey dorsal feathers and the rest of the feathers are white. In their wings stands
out the black tips whith white ends. The beak is red with a transverse black patch and a yellow tip. The legs are
dark green.
Nesting: It nests in colonies over the ground. The nest is used to be made of dry algae and hidden in the limited
vegetation of the islets; It lay from 2 to 3 ochre eggs with some dull spots. This is between the end of April and
May; the incubation is made by both parents for about 23 days. The chicks are nidifugous.
Diet: Fish and molluscs; some scraps.
Habitat: Rocky islets and sea-cliffs.
12. RUFF (Philomachus Pugnax)
Long-legged bird, slender neck, small head and beak of medium length. Males are considerably bigger than
females. Male summer plumage is composed by plumes in ears and flashy collars of various colors. It has whitey
patches in the rump that forms a V form visible during flying.
Size: Length 31-34 cm (males), 25-26 cm (females), reach of wings 52-60 cm (males), 46-50 cm (females),
Weight 168-242g (males), 85-126 (females).
Nesting: In depressions between the vegetation, covered by dry grass. It constructs a cover over the nest, similar
to a roof, made of growing grass.
Reproduction: It lays 4 eggs from May to June, incubated by the female during 21 to 24 days. Chicks abandon
the nest just after and they learn rapidly to search food. They learn to fly in around 23 days.
Presence: They nest in marshes and swamps. The amount of reproductive birds is decreasing in the south and
in the centre of Finland. The reproductive population is estimated in 5000 to 8000 couples.
Migration: Males fly to the south in June or July, females and younger birds migrate later, from July to
September. Birds of both genders come back from April to May, after passing winter around the Mediterranean
and Africa.
15. ORCHIDS OF THE LLOBREGAT DELTA
The name orchid comes from the Greek “orchis”, that means testicle, for its big similarity that
represent its pseudo-tubercles of some genders with male atributes. Orchids are vigorous plants- its
sub-terranean part it keeps alive during years, while the aerial part renews annually. Most of the
orchids use insects as pollinator agents - entomofil pollination- although some species and flowers
not visited can liberate their pollins over the stigmatic surface consuming the auto-reproduction.
Comparing with the tropical species, most of the Mediterranean orchids are small plants, hard to
observe in their natural environment, but, once discovered, their beauty make them an object of
contemplation and admiration.
16.
17. THE TOUR WAS VERY
INTERESTING AND WE LEARNT
LOTS OF THINGS