The chicks, two females and one male, were banded with blue bands as follows:
JX = female
JY = female
JZ = male
All three fledged successfully. The first to fledge was actually one of the females, JX.
I was surprised to learn that in Britain the same size bands are used for male and female peregrines.
Although for some species different sizes of rings are recommended for male and female, both male and female peregrines are ringed using size ‘G’ BTO metal rings, which are numbered individually, and sequentially. There is no difference in the code sequence, but when the ringer records the fitting of a particular ring to a particular bird, the biometric data for that bird and its sex are submitted to the BTO against the ring number. Colour rings are sized in a similar way to metal rings, and their dimensions are closely controlled by the BTO. As with metal rings, there is no difference in size or sequence for male and female peregrines. Since 2007 Ed Drewitt has been colour-ringing Peregrine chicks with the help of the British Mountaineering Council and the Hawk and Owl Trust. This is to help discover more about peregrines’ movements, survival and interactions in the Bristol and Somerset region. The breeding tiercel at Bath was the first bird to be colour ringed (AA) under this project.