Jem's Birding & Ringing Exploits in the Eastern Province and elsewhere in Saudi Arabia
31 December 2012
Clamorous Reed Warblers & Water Pipits – Alba Marsh (Bahrain)
Our last ringing trip took us back to Alba Marsh. It was a few weeks since we last went and whilst putting up the nets it appeared the number of birds was lower than previously. We set all five nets we have and managed to catch ten birds including one Graceful Prinia, two Water Pipits, three Bluethroats and four Clamorous Reed Warblers. This site is excellent for Clamorous Reed Warblers and only one of the four birds caught was a re-trap, ringed at the same site in the spring of 2012. I have personally ringed almost 50 birds at this site in just over one year. We met the manager of the nearby Water Desalination plant who informed us that the site may be built on in the near future which would be a real shame as it an excellent little wetland area. Let’s hope it takes many years for them to decide.
30 December 2012
Bluethroats – Alba Marsh (Bahrain)
Ringing at
Alba Marsh has produced the normal birds with a few Bluethroats still being
caught. We caught an adult male on 6th December, with a ring that
had been put on it on 12th December 2011. This shows this bird is
site faithful for its wintering area and has travelled from Bahrain to its
breeding grounds and back since we last caught it. It would be very interesting
to know where the bird travelled to, to breed. We also caught two first calendar year females where you can see the difference in the amount
of colour on the throat area of all three birds. Bluethroats winter in good
numbers in the region and Alba Marsh is a good site to see and catch them.
Labels:
Bluethroat
29 December 2012
African Lime Butterfly - Raydah Village (Abha)
The African Lime Butterfly is a common and widespread Swallowtail Butterfly that gets its common name from its favoured host plant but unlike most swallowtail butterflies, it does not have a prominent tail. It is also known as the Common Lime Swallowtail, Lemon Butterfly, Lime Swallowtail or Citrus Swallowtail. Apart from being tailless it has a wingspan 80–100 mm and above, the background colour is black. A broad, irregular yellow band is found on the wings above, which is broken in the case of the forewing and also has a large number of irregular spots on the wing. The upper hindwing has a red tornal spot with blue edging around it that can be seen on the second photograph below. The Common Lime Swallowtail is perhaps the most widely distributed swallowtail in the world and can be found in Oman, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar eastwards to Austarlia and some Pacific Ocean Islands. The widespread range indicates the butterfly's tolerance and adaptation to diverse habitats where it is found in savannahs, fallow land, gardens, evergreen and semi-evergreen forests and shows a preference for stream and riverbeds.
28 December 2012
Wadi Racer – Raghadan Forest (Baha)
I found this Wadi Racer at the
top of Raghadan Forest Reserve whilst walking through the trees looking for
birds. The snake was actively hunting and I saw it moving swiftly across the
ground. It was about one metre in length and moved very fast but when it
noticed me it hid under a rock. I carefully moved the rock and was able to take
a couple of photographs of it before it moved off and was lost to sight down
the rocky slopes of the forest. Although quite a long snake they are not very
thick being only about 5 centimetres across. They are a highly active snake and one of the
most common in the region with a highly variable external morphology, particularly ventral scales, possibly
depending on habitat. They are often found in wadis with permanent
running water, although they can also live in dry desert regions and on
mountain sides where it usually occurs in rocky areas. They are active by day
or at dawn and dusk and actively hunt by tracking prey by sight, and chasing it
with great speed and agility. Their diet includes fish, tadpoles, toads,
reptiles, small mammals and birds and although lacking venomous fangs, the
saliva of the Wadi Racer may have a mildly toxic effect.
Labels:
Wadi Racer
27 December 2012
House Crow – Al Khobar
The House Crow (Corvus splendens), as it name suggests is a member of the crow family and is approximately 42–44 cm long (body and tail) and weighs 250–350 grams. Their plumage is glossy black, except for the nape, sides of the head, upper back and breast, which are grey and not glossy. Their bills, legs and feet are black, with males and females being similar, only males being slightly larger and they live for about 6 years in the wild. The species is a recent colonizer of Saudi Arabia, and has a native range extending through the Indian sub-continent from Sri Lanka north to Nepal, west to southern Iran and east to Yunnan in China. On the east coast of Saudi Arabia birds are most often seen at Dammam Port where at least forty birds are present although they first occurred in Ras Tanura, approximately 50 kilometres further North in the 1980’s. They became plentiful by the end of the decade but an eradication scheme in the 1990’s decimated their numbers but did not eradicate them completely. A couple of pairs are present in the Dhahran area which is ten kilometres inland from the Arabian Gulf but there are no large numbers present at the moment. A program is in place to try to prevent the species becoming established in Dhahran, where there continued existence may hinder the breeding and success of native bird species. In most places House Crow numbers are linked to human population size, due simply to the expanding amount of rubbish generated. Nayari et al. (2006) suggest that House crow populations are totally dependent on people and that non-dependent populations may no longer exist. This is certainly the case in Dammam where birds have spread from Dammam Port into Al Khobar along the heavily populated coastal strip and birds are almost invariably seen feeding on human rubbish and waste material. The photo of the bird with the red plastic bag is not aesthetically pleasing but captures the environment where most of the birds are seen.
References
Nyari, A., Ryall, C & Peterson, A.T . (2006). Global invasive potential of the house crow Corvus splendens based on ecological niche modelling. Journal of Avian Biology 37: 306–311.
Labels:
House Crow
26 December 2012
Roughtail Rock Agama (Tabuk) - Record by Viv Wilson
Viv Wilson saw and photographed some Roughtail Rock Agamas in the desert near Tabuk. The Roughtail Rock Agama Laudakia stellio is also known as a Hardim or Star Lizard and is a species of agamid lizard found in Greece, Central Macedonia, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Iraq, northern Saudi Arabia, Cyprus, Jordan and Israel. Like many agamas it can change colour to express its moods. The name ‘stellion’ comes from Latin stellio, stēlio (stelliōn-, stēliōn-), which referred to any spotted lizard, from stella star. It has a flat triangular head and a flat short body with long legs. It hibernates during winter. Its diet consists of mainly insects and plants. They are a rock-dwelling species of lizards inhabiting dry areas and even though it is very cautious and hides as soon as it perceives danger, during the mating season the males defend their territory by putting themselves in prominent positions, displaying their intentions by a characteristic nodding movement of the head. It is a large (up to 30 centimetres), robust lizard with a flattened, spiny body, a wide, triangular head, long legs and a long tail. The neck is particularly spiny, and rows of spines run across the body, flanks and tail and is capable of quite rapid colour changes, typically becoming lighter when warm and darker when cold. Dominant male starred agamas are particularly brightly coloured, often showing reddish-brown, turquoise and tan markings. They are generally light or dark brown to grey or charcoal-coloured, with a series of yellowish, diamond-shaped markings along the back. The throat may be flecked with dark spots, and the tail often has conspicuous bars. However, it is quite variable in appearance across its range, with individuals from some areas having pale yellow or red heads and unspotted throats. They have sharp claws that help it to climb on rocks, walls, buildings and trees.
25 December 2012
Pipits – Dhahran Hills
Whilst birding the ‘patch’ a couple of early mornings the last week I have come across a number of pipits. A large number gather at first light to feed along the raised bank by the settling pond and reasonable views can be had of the birds. This is a good place to try to look for one or other of the scarce pipits that may occur in the area, but unfortunately I have not located anything yet. I have, however, seen 30+ Water Pipits regularly here as well as a single Red-throated Pipit, which I have seen on a number of occasions. Tawny Pipit is also regular here, but more so at the edge of the spray fields with the bird photographed below giving a quite unusual call for a Tawny Pipit but looking just like one.
Red-throated Pipit |
Red-throated Pipit |
Water Pipit |
Tawny Pipit |
24 December 2012
Arabian Red Fox – Dhahran Hills
The last couple of weeks I have been seeing the resident Arabian Red Fox near to the percolation pond on most evenings and morning trips. On a couple of occasions whilst walking I have been within a few metres of the animal, which seemed completely unafraid of my presence. The photographs of the Fox below were taken in the very early morning when I came across one when driving the car around the perimeter of the pond. The Fox did not allow very close approach but was quite content to sit and watch me before running off. A second fox then came along the same route as the first but this one saw the car and turned around and ran off. The Arabian Red Fox is a subspecies of the Common Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) and is native to Arabia. It is highly adaptable and more adapted to desert life than its parent species and is a sandy red colour, with large ears and a much smaller body. The large ears help the fox maintain its body temperature and the fur between its toes, help it prevent burning its feet. They are most active at night and are mainly solitary with well-defined home ranges. They eat rodents, birds and fish which they actively hunt during the night, as well as some desert vegetation and even carrion. Arabian Red Fox can live in various environments including cities, towns, desert, mountains and coastal areas. The animals are so small that they are often confused for Desert Foxes, but the black flash down the chest is an obvious sign the animal is an Arabian Red Fox and not a Ruppell’s Fox.
23 December 2012
Eurasian Sparrowhawk – Dhahran Hills
Whilst out birding I found two Eurasian Sparrowhawks chasing each other around the percolation pond, occasionally alighting in the surrounding trees. This is the first time I have seen two birds together in Saudi Arabia and although the species is not uncommon in the winter months they are always good birds to see. Eurasian Sparrowhawk is an uncommon passage migrant and winter visitor from October to April, in small numbers to the Eastern province of Saudi Arabia. Most birds have departed in March and individuals seen in late April and May away from areas where they normally overwinter, are probably passage migrants.
22 December 2012
Arabian Spiny-tailed Lizard - Qaryat Al Ulya Pivot Fields
This Arabian Spiny-tailed Lizard was found in Qaryat Al Ulya Pivot Field and had made its burrow in the soft ground where the plants were being planted. This is an unusual place to find them as they are normally associated with burrows in rough sandy gravel areas. The Lizard was a blue colour as it had not warmed up properly when they reach a bright yellow colour like the bottom photograph here taken in the summer of 2012 at Abqaiq on a tarmac road. Spiny-tailed Lizard (Uromastyx spp.) is a medium to large sized, heavily built lizard with a spiny club like tail, which has been likened to a small living dinosaur. They are ground dwelling and live in some of the most arid regions of the planet including northern Africa, the Middle East, Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and north-western India. The generic name (Uromastyx) is derived from the Ancient Greek words ourá (οὐρά) meaning "tail" and mastigo (Μαστίχα) meaning "whip" or "scourge", after the thick-spiked tail characteristic of the species. The Arabian Spiny-tailed Lizard (Uromastyx aegyptia microlepis) is most common in Saudi Arabia and is the one that occurs in the Eastern Province and is generally regarded as a subspecies of the Egyptian Spiny-tailed Lizard (Uromastyx aegyptia). It is locally known to the Arabs as 'Dhub' (Arabic:'ضب'). The main diagnostic character of the genus is the highly specialised tooth-like bony structure replacing the incisor teeth in the upper jaw in adults. The Arabian Spiny-tailed Lizard can be distinguished from Egyptian Spiny-tailed Lizard (Uromastyx aegyptia aegyptia) by lacking enlarged tubercular scales scattered over the scalation of the flanks, having 149‑193 (mean 171.8) ventral scales rather than 126 – 158 (mean 142). Other features include a smaller scale size and more colourful yellow or greenish colour when warmed-up in adult specimens of Arabian Spiny-tailed Lizard. It is distinguished from Uromastyx leptieni by a different juvenile colour pattern and a higher number of ventrals.
21 December 2012
Common Kestrel - Alba Marsh (Bahrain)
Whilst ringing at Alba Marsh Nicole and I heard some gunshots and saw a couple of Bahraini men in a four wheel drive car. We said hello as they passed by and let them know we were ringing in the marsh to prevent any possible accidents happening. They were very friendly and showed us a bird they had just caught elsewhere in Bahrain. It turned out to be a really beautiful adult male Common Kestrel in a large box. I asked if I could photograph the bird and they agreed. They said they were going to train the bird in some way to help attract larger falcons, that they were also hoping to catch, and then use the larger falcons as hunting birds.
20 December 2012
Clouded Yellow (Colias croceus) - Qaryat Al Ulya Pivot Fields
At Qaryat Al Ulya Pivot Irrigation fields there were a large number of Clouded Yellow butterflies flying a rung the Alfafa crops. The range of the Clouded Yellow Colias croceus is across Southern and Central Europe to North Africa, Iran and the Arabian Peninsula. In Saudi Arabia it is common at Tuwayq Hills and is abundant in all major cultivated eastern oases such as Al Hassa, Quatif, Taraut Island and Safway, favouring Medicago sativa fields. Pivot irrigation fields are also good areas to find the species. Small isolated populations also exist around Manifa, north of Jubail, on beds of annual winter legumes growing in the hollows between coastal sand dunes with the populations supplemented by migrants. They are 45-54 mm in size and most have an orange-yellow ground with broad black borders to wings. They occurs mainly from December to early May but at Manifa during February and March. It has a characteristic to and fro flight over low vegetation where it frequently settles on sweet basil Ocimum basilicum flowers in oases.
19 December 2012
Great Crested Grebe – Dhahran Hills
Whilst birding recently a regular interesting sight has been seeing a Great Crested Grebe on the percolation pond. The Great Crested Grebe is a regular but scarce visitor mainly in the winter between October and March. During November birds are regularly seen away from the coast and I have seen them at various locations around the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia including Taraut Bay, Khafji Marsh, Abu Ali Island and Dhahran Hills percolation pond. The first breeding attempt for the species in Saudi Arabia was on the percolation pond in April to May 1999 when a pair built several nests all of which were unsuccessful due to fluctuating water levels and casual recreational disturbance. Birds have been seen on the pond every year since and some stay well into the summer but no breeding has been noted whilst I have been in Dhahran. This year a pair of birds was present from January to March and a single from August until present whereas in 2011 a pair was seen in March only.
18 December 2012
Wing Tagged Griffon Vulture between Tabuk & Sharma - Bird records by Viv Wilson
Viv Wilson from Tabuk in Western Saudi Arabia sent me the following very interesting information and great photographs of Griffon vultures, a species I have not seen in the Eastern Province of KSA or anywhere else in the country for that matter. His report is here along with some of his excellent photos that he has kindly allowed me to use on my website.
"I enjoyed an overnight stay in the desert on the 17th October with Paul ( Indiana) Hancock, his wife Anji Hancock, and Paul Chapman. A very enjoyable night sitiing around the campfire. A cloudy night, mostly, so my astronomical viewing was limited. The next day on our desert travel's we came upon a Rock outcrop, which we have named, Vulture Rock. As Paul H tell's me, it is the first time he has seen that many Griffon Vultures, normally the birdlife is fairly scarce when they trip around the place. Anyway this Vulture, H59, was born sometime during 2010 and was originally caught in Gamla NR (Northern Israel) on 4th August 2012. It was seen again in the Judea Desert, near Masada, and trapped again in Negev Mt near Sde Boker on 10th September 2012 and now sighted by our group and photographed about midway between Tabuk and Sharma on 18th October 2012. I have been informed of other Griffon's in the area, but unfortunately, none were sighted on our last trip on 1st November 2012. Previously, we have sighted a lonely Egyptian Vulture in a similar area".
Photographs of birds taken by Viv look like there is another bird wing tagged with H58 which was tagged at the same time as H59 at Negev Mt near Sde Boker on 10th September 2012. This bird was born in 2011. I thank Ohad Hatzofe for the ringing/taging information on these birds.
The Griffon Vulture was a widespread resident visitor in western and south-west regions of Saudi Arabia but recently numbers have declined significantly and it now no longer breeds in many areas that it once did. It is also an occasional migrant and winter visitor to northern areas of the country with a few birds ringed in Israel occurring in Saudi Arabia. One is the bird mentioned above and a second was a bird fitted with a transmitter at Carmel Hills, north-west Israel in August 2002 that was subsequently tracked between Jeddah and Al Madinah. Yoav Perlman also informed me of two additional birds from Israel fitted with transmitters that are currently in northern Saudi Arabia.
17 December 2012
European Nightjar in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia & Bahrain (Part 3)
European Nightjar Caprimulgus europaeus unwini (1st year female) Badan, Bahrain – 28th October 2008 used with kind permission of Brendan Kavanagh |
European Nightjar Caprimulgus europaeus unwini (1st year female) Badan, Bahrain – 28th October 2008 used with kind permission of Brendan Kavanagh |
European Nightjar Caprimulgus europaeus unwini (1st year female) Badan, Bahrain – 28th October 2008 used with kind permission of Brendan Kavanagh |
European Nightjar Caprimulgus europaeus unwini (1st year female) Badan, Bahrain – 28th October 2008 used with kind permission of Brendan Kavanagh |
European Nightjar Caprimulgus europaeus unwini (1st year female) Badan, Bahrain – 28th October 2008 used with kind permission of Brendan Kavanagh |
This note was spurred by the above photographs of a bird caught and ringed in Bahrain in 2008 originally thought to be an Egyptian Nightjar. The plumage details and measurements of the bird do not fit Egyptian Nightjar (wing 193 - 216) although it does fit a European Nightjar of the grey type C. e. unwini & C. e. sarudnyi as well as juvenile C. e. meridionalis. Juvenile birds are the smallest of all the races with C. e. meridionalis adults from Italy measuring 188.5 - 191.5 & juveniles 174.5 and C. e. europaeus from Britain (the smallest population of this subspecies) measuring adult 196.1 +/-5.3 & juvenile 188.9 +/- 8.6 (BTO ringing data). No birds have been assigned to subspecies in Saudi Arabia to my knowledge, although World Bird Info says C. e. europaeus, C. e. meridionalis & C. e. sarudnyi occur. All the records and photographs of Saudi Arabian birds I have seen refer to nominate C. e. europaeus, with the exception of an ‘unwini’ type winter record mentioned earlier. I would assign the above bird to the subspecies C. e. unwini showing that the race passes through Eastern Arabia at least. I saw one European Nightjar on 5th May 2011 in Dhahran, Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia that appeared to be a greyish form but it was late in the evening and the light was poor (see photo below) and it was not possible to get detailed plumage characteristics in the field. If anyone has any thoughts on this one please leave a comment below.
European Nightjar Caprimulgus europaeus ssp? Dhahran, Eastern Province, Saudi Arabia – 5th May 2011 |
European Nightjar measurements |
Some interesting data from Chokpak Pass ringing station, Kazakhstan (420 31'N 700 38'E) which is situated in Kazakhstan in the Western Tien Shan, between Zabaglytau (Talassky Alatau) and Boroldai (Karatau) ridges. Maximum altitudes of Zabaglytau are 2700-2900 m a.s.l., and Boroldai - 1500-1700 m a.s.l. The pass, where the ringing station is located, is the narrowest place between the Talassky Alatau and Karatau, being no more than 7-9 km wide & is the highest point of the inter-mountain valley at 1200 . a.s.l. The countryside is made up of relatively plain steppe plots used as arable land (90%) for cereals, vegetables etc. Original bunch grass steppe covers much of the slopes of the smaller peaks. Forest plantations occur as lines along the borders of fields and roads.
European Nightjar subspecies that pass through Chokpak Pass, Kazakhstan in spring and autumn |
The above information shows the subspecies that pass through Kazakhstan in spring and autumn and should give at least an indication of what birds might be passing through Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.
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