Jem's Birding & Ringing Exploits in the Eastern Province and elsewhere in Saudi Arabia
30 June 2014
Little Grebe chicks – Dhahran Hills
Little Grebe chicks can now be seen in
reasonable numbers on the percolation pond with parents in attendance although
a number of Little Grebes are still sitting on eggs. The number of breeding pairs
this year must be over 20 which is a good breeding season for them. Other signs
of breeding birds on the pond include both, Eurasian Coot with four pairs and
Common Moorhen with a minimum of ten pairs but probably many more. With all
these birds and young as well the pond has plenty of activity now although I
cannot find anything out of the ordinary with them. The trees surrounding the
pond are also very quiet with a few White-eared Bulbuls and plenty of House
Sparrows about all that I can find.
Labels:
Little Grebe
29 June 2014
Adult Black-crowned Night Heron – Dhahran Hills
I went out birding on the ‘patch’ at
first light 04:00 hrs on 28 June in the hope of seeing the Crested Honey
Buzzards that have been around for the last three weeks. Unfortunately they did
not show and so I went to my normal area of the spray fields and the ponds.
When I got to the percolation pond I found an adult Black-crowned Night Heron
fishing at the pond edge very close to the track. Unfortunately the bird was
directly into the sun making photography very difficult and it flew before I
was able to get into a better position. I have seen Black-crowned Night Heron
on a couple of occasions in Dhahran but only in September and October
previously, with both adults and juveniles seen. The last ones I saw were two
years ago so this was a very pleasant surprise showing that birding in the
summer when nothing appears o be about still turns up surprises. As far as I am
aware there has only been one summer record of the species in the Eastern
Province. The Black-crowned Night heron is an uncommon migrant in the eastern
province noted more often in autumn than spring. Juveniles occur from September
through November and sometimes into February. Spring occurrences are irregular
from April to May and there has been one June record and an immature present at
Abqaiq from 22 July to 22 August 1983.
28 June 2014
Locust Swarm and Digger Wasps at Khamis Mushait - Report by Farah Imran Shams
On 26 June 2014 Farah Imran Shams had the chance to witness
a locust swarm and sent me the following details “This is the first time I have
seen one in the 8 years that I have been living here. It was not a very large
swarm, but it stayed in my compound for half an hour, more than enough time for
me to photograph some of this phenomenon. This incident happened at around 11
am in the city of Khamis Mushait. The pictures were taken in a housing compound
called ISKAN II, which is a compound for military hospital doctors. The locust
swarm was followed by an army of large digger wasps, a kind that I have not
seen before. They were hunting the locusts by the hundreds and burying them in
quickly dug nests in the sand. Three hours later, all the wasps had left as
well, leaving dozens of holes in the kids play area. It was a very interesting
and unique phenomenon, and my boys loved it”. Farah sent me a number of
photographs of the event that I have reproduced below with kind permission. I
have not seen anything like this in the time I have lived in Saudi Arabia and
it certainly looks like an even to behold if I ever do get the chance.
Labels:
Digger Wasp,
Locust
27 June 2014
A few birds on the ponds – Dhahran Hills
The land
areas and almost devoid of birds now with the exception of the local resident
breeders. As a result most of the action during birding takes place on the
percolation and settling ponds. Here there are lots of Little Grebes with young
and Common Moorhen and Eurasian Coot with chicks as well. Waders are beginning
to increase with plenty of Black-winged Stilts, Kentish Plovers and a few
Little Ringed Plovers all of which have probably bred nearby. The best birds
seen on the percolation pond have been a pair of Little Bitterns and fortunately
their favoured fishing spot is close to the main track and allows good and
close observation. There is a chance the Little Bitterns have bred this year
but I have seen no sign of any juveniles yet.
Little Bittern |
Little Grebes |
Kentish Plover |
26 June 2014
A Wildlfie Experience at Sabkhat Al Fasl – Post by Clément Crozet
My name is
Clément Crozet and I’m from France. I’m in Saudi Arabia to work about
Sustainable Development and Corporate Social Responsibility for a company
called MaSa. It’s a company providing Potable Water, Sea Water Cooling
and Reclaimed water for Jubail and Yanbu Industrial cities. One part of
the water in Sabkhat Al-Fasl comes from our Waste Water plants.
We would like
to set up a campaign of cleaning around Sabkhat Al-Fasl with the participation
of our employees and also to set up an awareness campaign of our employees and
public about wetland, water treatment and biodiversity. We will invite school
children, our employees and families to discover our activities (Reclaim Water,
Sea Water Cooling and Potable Water) and to discover the biodiversity (visit to
Sabkhat Al-Fasl).
We are
planning to have this event in October, 2014. It will be a three day event:
•
One day for cleanup Sabkhat;
•
One day for school children;
•
One day for the community of Jubail.
We would
really appreciate to benefit from your expertise. Indeed, we are looking for
some ornithologists able to make discover the world of birds to our employees,
school children and the inhabitants of Jubail. We are not expecting keen
birders but just people that can show their passion to other people and
increase their awareness of the wildlife surrounding the Jubail area.
We already
did some wildlife visits with our employees (pictures attached). The success of
these visits went beyond our expectations and we are about to plan additional
ones. It demonstrates that people want to learn more about wildlife in Saudi
Arabia. All the employees were really impressed to see that this former desert
is becoming a nice place for biodiversity thanks to reclaimed water.
You will find
below some pictures of birds and animals that we saw during our wildlife visits
.
If you are
interested to step in this event of raising awareness with us and other
specialists of the water treatment, please let us know at the following mail
address: clement DOT crozet AT wanadoo.fr
Thank you.
Clément
Crozet
25 June 2014
Dhahran – bird records by Mats Ris
Mats was out birding the camp whilst I was away
ringing terns in Bahrain and reports a rather good morning better the last
week-ends. Two Crested Honey Buzzards lifted at 04 55 from the trees where I
have seen these before, one came back at 05 25 (see photograph). Mats walked
around on the golf course for about one hour but did not find any signs of a
nest. Mats also saw two Rufous-tailed
Scrub Robin at the Golf course, and uncommon summer breeder in the Eastern
Province. Mats also found a Red-vented Bulbul and nest another uncommon
resident of the camp, with very few records each year. Around the percolation
and settling ponds were 20 Black-winged Stilts, two Kentish Plovers, four Eurasian
Hoopoes, three Namaqua Doves, three Pallid Swift and a Green Sandpiper. Mats sent me the two photos below of a couple of the good birds he saw and has kindly allowed me to use them on my website.
Crested Honey Buzzard |
Red-vented bulbul |
24 June 2014
Ringing terns - Al Jarrim Island south (Bahrain)
On Friday 20 June I set off
at 02:30 hrs to go to Bahrain to ring terns. I met up with Jason, Nicole, Ali,
Mahmood, Ahmed and a couple of others to go out to the island at 04:00 to ring
tern chicks. This is one of the best days ringing of the year for me and it is
amazing to be on an island full of breeding terns. Ali has a new more powerful
boat now that he also uses to take people diving in Bahrain and it has two 250
HP engines and a covered roof, so is very fast.
We arrived at the island at 06:00 hrs and set about first ringing
Bridled Tern chicks. They nest under cover of the vegetation and are incredibly
well camouflaged and sit tight so good eyesight and a lot of help are required.
We do these first as it is extremely hard work and want to do it in the coolest
part of the day before temperatures rise into the 40’s Celsius. There were
three ringers and we ringed a total of 143 Bridled Tern chicks that is slightly
less than normal. After this we set up our corral to catch
Lesser Crested Tern Chicks that are all gathered together in large crèches of
baby terns with hundreds of adults looking after them. As they are all in large
groups we walk the birds down into our corral and transfer them to large baskets
for processing. Since this capture technique was devised we have become much
more proficient and we catch lots of birds in a short time and process them as
quickly as possible so they can return to their parents for shade. We keep the
birds in covered baskets with a wet towel on top to keep them cool and we have
not lost a single bird doing this. We ringed 997 Lesser Crested Tern chicks and
ran out of rings, this being the biggest number of birds we have singed in a
single day since we started going to the islands. We also ringed three
White-cheeked Tern chicks a species that has not bred on this island in the
previous three breeding seasons I have visited. They do breed on the middle
island but we have only been here once and it was a nice surprise to see the
adults feeding young on the south island. Another nice surprise was to see an
adult Bridled Tern I photographed with a ring on, indicating it is one of our
birds. We have ringed hundreds of young birds and a single adult that Nicole
rescued from a fishing net so it is impossible to tell if this is a young bird
returning to breed or not. We also found at least ten Indian Reef Heron nests
with large young in them. Normally there are only one of two nests but this
year the numbers are much higher so some reason. An interesting fact was that
under every Indian Reef Heron nest a Bridled Tern chick was hiding. I would
like to thank Ali and all the helpers for this excellent days ringing.
23 June 2014
Summering Greater Spotted Eagle and more – Sabkhat Al Fasl
Whilst
birding Sabkhat Al Fasl on 13 June we saw the summering second calendar year
Greater Spotted Eagle again. It was in the same place where we have seen in the
two previous weekends and looks set to spend the summer here. I have now seen
Greater Spotted Eagles in every month of the year at this site, but they are
mainly a winter visitor between September and April. Phil Roberts took a photo of it just as it was taking off from a post that shows the underwing nicely. Also still present was the
Red-wattled Lapwing in the same place as the weekend before and a summer
Western Cattle Egret. Apart from these tree very good records there was nothing
else out of the ordinary although birding was still very enjoyable. Waders were
about in good numbers with young Black-winged Stilts, Kentish Plovers and Little
Ringed Plovers all seen in good numbers. Other birds seen with young included
Purple Swamphens with young of various ages, with this being the only breeding
site in Saudi Arabia for this species. The only migrants seen were two Barn
Swallows and two Sand Martins. Common birds seen in good numbers included
Eurasian Collared Doves, Graceful Prinias, Caspian Reed Warblers and Indian
(Clamorous) Reed Warblers. The sabkha still had thousands of Greater Flamingos
and plenty of Indian Reef Herons of various colours. The majority were white
phase, with a few juvenile birds amongst the adults and a number of dark phase
birds of various shades of grey from light grey to almost black. The only other
obvious birds were plenty of White-cheeked Terns, Little Terns and two Eurasian
Spoonbills.
Greater Spotted Eagle - 2nd calendar year (courtesy Phil Roberts) |
Black-winged Stilt - juvenile |
Kentish Plover |
Kentish Plover - feigning injury |
Little Ringed Plover |
Eurasian Collared Dove |
Purple Swamphen |
Indian Reef Heron - juvenile pale phase |
Indian Reef Heron - dark phase |
22 June 2014
Big arrival of Kentish Plovers – Dhahran Hills
There have been relatively few birds
about on the camp in the last few weeks but on 17 June there was a large
arrival of Kentish Plovers and Black-winged Stilts. Normally there are a few
Kentish Plovers as birds breed on the camp in small numbers but this number
increased from less than ten to 38 birds with almost all of them on the
settling pond and the flat areas surrounding it. Numbers of Black-winged Stilts
are building up as well with many more juveniles seen now. The best places for
seeing these are the settling pond and percolation pond with over 50 birds
present now. The great thing about doing a local patch is that you immediately recognize
anything unusual and although Kentish Plover is common on the coast with
hundreds seen each day they are less common on the patch and this high number
for my ‘patch’ made my day. Things like this keep birding interesting even in
the quietest part of the year.
21 June 2014
Red-wattled Lapwing again – Sabkhat Al Fasl
Whilst birding Sabkhat Al Fasl on 13 June we found the
juvenile Red-wattled Lapwing again in the same place as we originally found it.
The bird was feeding actively and allowed quite close approach in the car. It
was feeding along the edge of the main flooded sabkha and as cars and busses
regularly drive up here it has presumably become used to the traffic. Last
weekend if flew off when a bus came along but this time one passed right by and
it stayed put. This gave us confidence we may be able to approach with the car
and not disturb it, which is what happed. Initially we were again photographing
into the sun but after passing the bird we came back about a hour later and got
the sun behind us allowing me to take the best photos yet of the species in
Saudi Arabia. The Red-wattled Lapwing is a scarce species in the Eastern
Province of Saudi Arabia and rare elsewhere in the country.
20 June 2014
Female Little Bittern – Dhahran Hills
There is now just the regular
breeding birds to see on my local ‘patch’ where I go birding almost every day.
Even though things are very quiet it is still worth going out as any unusual
occurrence is worth note if you have a local birdwatching area. The last month
or so I have been seeing an adult male little Bittern at various times and
places. Firstly I saw it in the unusual place of the spray fields but then it
made its home on the percolaton pond where it could occasionally be seen along
the pond edges. This is a place where birds bred in 2011 but there have been no
further signs of this happening. On 15 June I found an adult female on the edge
of the pond in the same place where the male usually fishes. This may mean that
they are a pair so I will be keeping an eye out for any juveniles in the next
couple of weeks. Apart from the Little Bittern the only interesting thing to
not is the number of Black-winged Stilts are building up with plenty of
juveniles amongst the adults. Numbers now are 37 and they should continue
building up over the next month.
19 June 2014
Afro-Asian Sand Snake – Dhahran
This snake is an Afro-Asian Sand Snake Psammophis schokari. I originally thought this was a Rat Snake or possibly a Wadi Racer but Mansur Al Fahad kindly supplied the correct identification. It was seen in
Dhahran and it was about one metre in length. This is one of the fastest snakes in Arabia and has variable coloration and patterning and an elongated head. The variable colour matches the habitat where they are found. In Arabic it is known as Zaroq which means speedy. Thanks to Mansur for identifying the snake and supplying details of its Arabic name and translation.
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