The colony has been studied scientifically since the 19th century, with detailed population counts maintained by the Scottish Seabird Centre and long-running ecological monitoring. Jamie's observational record is adjacent to rather than part of this scientific literature, but the two converge in their methodology: return, count, record, compare over time.
The 2022 HPAI H5N1 outbreak killed tens of thousands of gannets at Bass Rock and other North Atlantic colonies. The scale of loss was unprecedented in documented history and made the colony a site of grief as much as observation. Jamie's writing about the post-outbreak colony (in work still being published) carries the weight of someone who had watched the previous state long enough to register what has gone.
The colony illustrates the tending argument with particular force. The baseline against which HPAI impact could be measured existed because observers — Jamie, scientists, birders — had been tending the record across decades. Without that tending, the loss would have been less legible, more easily absorbed into vague impressions of abundance.
The rock itself is a dramatic volcanic plug, whitened by guano, visible from Edinburgh's coastline. Its accessibility to tourist boats and its scientific infrastructure (including a webcam) have made it a paradigm of how a specific place can anchor both public imagination and long-term research.
The colony has existed since at least the Middle Ages; breeding records extend back several centuries. Jamie's first major engagement with it appears in Findings (2005), developed further in Sightlines (2012), and revisited in subsequent work.
A site of baseline knowledge. Decades of observation constitute the reference against which change becomes measurable.
Disturbance reveals the observer. What HPAI took was legible only because long watching preserved what had been there.
Individual within aggregate. The colony as mass yields, to sustained attention, individual birds and specific behaviors.
Convergence of attention types. Scientific monitoring, ornithological practice, and Jamie's literary observation align structurally even when they operate in different idioms.