Schmidt's Fringed-toed Lizard Acanthodactylus schmidti is one of the most abundant species in the genus Acanthodactylus found in Saudi Arabia and occupies sandy plains, dunes and sabkhas (salt flats), particularly in areas of scrubby vegetation. It was named after Karl Patterson Schmidt, with a type locality of Dhahran, Saudi Arabia and it can be distinguished by the exceptionally long fourth toe found on each of its rear feet. As its name suggests it has 'fringes' of elongated scales along the sides of each toe, which are thought to provide better traction on loose sand. It has a light brown or coffee coloured back that is richly speckled with oval-shaped, pale or white spots and can grow to 18 centimetres in length. They have a cylindrical body with smooth, rectangular scales on the belly that are arranged in well-defined rows and scales on the head that are larger than those on the rest of the body. Little is known about the biology of the species but it is thought that its main prey is ants and when prey is located they instantly go rigid, suddenly quiver their tail and strike. It is a diurnal species that digs burrows in the sand among the roots of vegetation and is found throughout the Arabian Peninsula including Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman, south-east Iraq and south-west Iran.
Jem's Birding & Ringing Exploits in the Eastern Province and elsewhere in Saudi Arabia
31 July 2014
30 July 2014
Greater Spotted Eagle – Sabkhat Al Fasl
Sabkhat Al Fasl is the best place in the Eastern Province for seeing Greater Spotted Eagles. Birds generally arrive in September and stay through until the end of March with more than ten individuals wintering in most recent years. This winter has been relatively poor with a maximum count of five birds but last weekend we saw four Greater Spotted Eagles in the air together and three other birds seen elsewhere. The birds in flight showed really well circling around over our heads and allowing some close photos to be taken. The birds are generally first year birds, first calendar year until 1 January and then second calendar year, but some older birds are also present. The photos below show second calendar year birds with well marked underparts and some older birds with less marked belly. Greater Spotted Eagle is listed as Vulnerable on the Red Species list and is not easy to see in many parts of its range. Luckily for us in the east of Saudi Arabia it is almost guaranteed on a visit to Sabkhat Al Fasl in the winter.
29 July 2014
Clouded Yellow (Colias croceus) - Dhahran Hills
I found this Clouded Yellow Colias crocus in the pivot Irrigation fields at Dhahran on 2 February which was the first one I have seen at the location. At Qaryat Al Ulya Pivot Irrigation fields are the best site for finding the butterflies and I have not seen them in many
places away from here. In the Eastern Province it is abundant in all major
cultivated oases such as Al Hassa, Qatif and Taraut Island. Pivot irrigation
fields are also good areas to find the species such as those where I saw them.
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.
28 July 2014
Old record of Great Knot at Al-Khobar – Bird record by Cliff Peterson
An ex birder from Saudi Arabia, Cliff Peterson, contacted me recently and sent me his impressive list of birds seen in the country during his stay from August 1981 until January 1986. Cliff saw well over 300 species in the country birding mainly the Eastern Province, Riyadh area and a couple of overland trips to Asir province. Cliff mentioned he had a large collection of images taken on Kodacrome 64 with a Novoflex 600 and sent me a photo of two Great Knot Calidris tenuirostris on the south shore of Al-Khobar 28-30 May 1984, with one remaining until 9 June 1984. These were the first records for the country and very few have been seen since with all records I know of from the Eastern Province including One at Jubail lagoons in early April 1991, a flock of 107 in full breeding plumage at Al Awamiyah 9 April 1991, a second calendar year bird 11 May at Rahimah Ras Tanurah 1991 and one at Zur 26 November 1991. Cliff kindly allowed me to use his photo on my website and I have reproduced it below.
Labels:
Great Knot
27 July 2014
Fat Sand Rat near Tabuk – Record by Viv Wilson
The Fat Sand Rat Psammomys obesus
is a stocky, gerbil-like rodent, native to desert regions. Its upper parts are
reddish-brown, reddish, yellowish or sandy buff and the underparts are
yellowish, buffy or whitish. The subspecies that lives in Saudi Arabia is P.
o. dianae. The sturdy limbs bear blackish claws and the
short, stout tail that is fully haired and has a black terminal tuft.
The small, rounded ears are covered with dense whitish to yellowish hair. This
species communicates through high-pitched squeaks and by drumming its feet.
They have a total length of 25.1 - 35.6 cm with a tail length of 10 - 15.7 cm
and weigh 32-43 grams. They are found in North Africa and the Middle East and
have been recorded in Mauritania, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt,
Sudan, Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Syria. They inhabit deserts,
semi-desert, rocky habitats and grasslands, provided that succulent shrubs, on
which the rat feeds, are present. They live in colonies in complex burrow
systems, which have separate areas for nesting and the storage of food.
Compared to other members of the Muridae family (the mice, rats and gerbils),
the fat sand rat is rather unusual as it is diurnal and wholly herbivorous;
most other species in this family are nocturnal and feed primarily on grains. In winter their main
activity is during the day, but during the summer months they prefer the shade
and can be found inside the burrow or in the shade of the surrounding bushes. Its
diet consists of leaves and stems and, unlike high-energy seeds, these foods
are rather low in energy. As a result, it has to eat around 80 percent of its
body weight in food each day to obtain sufficient energy. The fat sand rat does
not need to drink water, a useful adaptation in arid habitats, and instead can
get all the water it needs by feeding on the leaves of the saltbush which are
up to 90 percent water and licking morning dew. However, this water has an
extremely high concentration of salt, and so the fat sand rat must produce very
salty, concentrated urine in order to expel the salt from its body.
Labels:
Fat Sand Rat
26 July 2014
Some good summer birds – Sabkaht Al Fasl
The weekend
trip to Sabkhat Al Fasl turned up a few good birds, even though it is the middle
of summer and birding is generally quiet. The best birds were three Egyptian
Nightjars, closely followed by two juvenile Eurasian Spoonbills an uncommon species.
This is a species becoming more common in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia
and these birds may even have bred here. Habitat is suitable and adults were
seen regularly in May with juveniles now in July. Other birds that are possibly
breeding here are Black-headed Yellow Wagtails and Squacco Herons, both species
not regarded as breeding species for the site. The long staying Red-wattled
Lapwing and over-summering Greater Spotted Eagle were not seen on this trip so
may have moved on? A few waders are already on the move with Common Sandpipers
and Green Sandpipers seen in small numbers along with breeding Black-winged
Stilts, Kentish Plovers and Little Ringed Plovers. A very early female Garganey
was also seen which was a bit of a surprise. Other good birds included hundreds
of Little Terns, White-cheeked Terns and Indian Reef Herons and well over 1000
Greater Flamingos still present. A few Barn Swallows and two Sand Martins were
over the reed beds, but little other signs of migration noted.
Yellow Wagtail |
Common Sandpiper |
Green Sandpiper |
Garganey - female |
25 July 2014
Deathstalker Scorpion near Tabuk – Record by Viv Wilson
The Deathstalker Leiurus quinquestriatus contains the
subspecies Leiurus quinquestriatus quinquestriatus and Leiurus
quinquestriatus hebraeus. The species has a wide range from Africa
(Algeria, Chad, Egypt, Ethiopia, Libya, Mali, Niger, Somalia, Sudan, Tunisia)
to Asia (Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi
Arabia, Sinai, Syria, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, Yemen). African populations
of this species correspond largely to the subspecies L. q.
quinquestriatus while those of Asian populations to L. q. hebraeus.
The Deathstalker is found upon a wide variety of substrates in arid &
semi-arid regions. This species is a retreat generalist and will modify and
occupy existing spaces under ground cover and debris. It may also adopt existing
burrows of other invertebrates and small vertebrates, as well as excavate
shallow burrows under rocks to 20 cm in depth. Adult specimens are 80–110 mm
total length and typically have a yellow to orange-yellow colour. The metasomal
segment V typically has a dark coloration restricted to the posterior 2/3 of
the segment with the amount and intensity of the dark coloration varying among
specimens. Older specimens may be darker in overall coloration and the dark
coloration of metasomal segment V faded, reduced or indistinct. Reported toxicity
levels indicate that this species possesses one of the most toxic venoms
described in scorpions. Despite this the majority of stings produce only localized
effects in up to 97% of victims which is probably due to the average quantity
of venom injected (0.225 mg) being small. However, the venom of this species
may be fatal in infants and children due to the effects being weight-dependent
but fatalities are uncommon in adults. This scorpion was found by Viv Wilson in
the desert near Tabuk and Viv has kindly allowed me permission to use his
excellent photos on my website which are shown below.
Labels:
Deathstalker
24 July 2014
Black-winged Stilts, Kentish Plovers and Little Grebes – Dhahran Hills
The ‘patch’
has been neglected a bit of late as I spent a weekend away in the southwest of
Saudi Arabia looking for Arabian Endemics and other different birds to those we
see in the Eastern Province, and a couple of evenings after work when I would
normally have been out catching up on sleep due to long hours in the field
looking for owls and Nightjars. It doesn’t, however, look like I may have
missed much as things are still very quiet. The only birds to see in good
numbers are Black-winged Stilts, Kentish Plovers and Little Grebes, species
that all breed on or very near the camp. I have looked for the Crested Honey
Buzzards a couple of times at 04:30 hrs but without luck and the best bird I
have seen all week in the area were two Red-vented Bulbuls in my garden. A few
Eurasian Hoopoes are still around looking for food for their young and a small
group of five Barn Swallows remain over the spray fields but little else has
been about worthy of reporting.
Black-winged Stilt - juvenile |
Little Grebe |
23 July 2014
The changing status of Egyptian Nightjar in Eastern Saudi Arabia
The Egyptian Nightjar Caprimulgus
aegyptius is an uncommon bird in Arabia, with The birds of the western
Palearctic (Cramp 1985) mentioning
they winter in north-east Africa and migrate on a broad front across Arabia
from September to early November & March to mid-May. Although
this information is borne out by the data from Arabian countries there is little published
information of summer or winter records from the region, and the recently published
Birds of the Middle East (Porter et al 2010) has no mention of summer
records and only a comment saying birds winter in southern Arabia, although the
map depicted only shows passage birds marked. The Atlas of the Breeding Birds of
Arabia by Mike Jennings (2010) mentions the Egyptian Nightjar is a scarce
migrant and winter visitor but numbers are increasing, notably in the northern
Arabian Gulf region, with birds present in summer since the beginning of the 21st
Century in areas where freshwater can be found. He mentions over-summering has
been noted in Kuwait & the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia and mentions
the species is thought likely to breed. Records of the species in
summer are now occurring in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain & Qatar with summer records occurring in the
Eastern province of Saudi Arabia since 2004 when a pair was discovered at
Khafrah Marsh 24th June 2004 where the possibility of this nightjar being
overlooked as a breeding species was briefly discussed. Since 2006 additional
birds have been located in the Eastern province of Saudi Arabia at Sabkhat Al
Fasl (Jubail) in August with the highest count being ten birds together on 22
August 2008. Birds have been seen every year in August at this site since 2006
with birds also seen in July from 2011 to date and the earliest record on the
27 June 2014.
It is clear that the
status of the species has changed in eastern Saudi Arabia in the 21st
Century, with the majority of birds no longer seen during the migration periods
of early November & March to mid-May. In Saudi Arabia it was previously
regarded as a vagrant (Bundy et al 1989) but is now known as a scarce passage migrant, summer and winter visitor,
with July & August the best period for locating them. All the above photos were taken by me at Sabkhat Al Fasl 18 July 2014 when a minimum of three birds were seen. Sabkhat Al Fasl is certainly the best place in Saudi Arabia for seeing the species and one of the best sites in Arabia as well.
22 July 2014
Sightings of Red Sea Cetaceans – Details supplied by Peter Rudolph
Peter Rudolph contacted me regarding my
records of Indo-Pacific Bottlenose Dolphins Tursiops
aduncus offshore Farasan Islands and is looking for details of any cetacean
sightings from the Red Sea as he is part of a team working on a new checklist
of the whales and dolphins of the Red Sea. If anyone has details of cetacean
sightings from this area could they please contact me via my e-mail (see
contact me tab at top of website), and your records may/will be cited in the
new checklist. Peter is now sure, that
the Indo-Pacific Bottlenose Dolphin can be found in all coastal areas of the
Red Sea. The holotype of Tursiops aduncus
was found in Belhosse Island, Dahlak Archipelago, just “opposite” the Farasan
Islands. Distinguishing the two Bottlenose Dolphin species in the Red Sea
is not easy and to be 100% certain, you should know if the dolphins have spots
on their belly. Peter says that all other information we have on my Farasan
Islands sightings (water depth, group size, shape of the dorsal fin) clearly
speaks for Tursiops aduncus and the
sighting is 99.9% certain.
Indo-pacific Bottlenose Dolphins |
Indo-pacific Bottlenose Dolphin |
21 July 2014
Blanford’s Short-toed Lark - Azezza
A trip to a stony plateaux area of Azezza
in the hope of seeing Blanford’s Short-toed Lark, formally Red-capped Lark,
provided few birds but did turn up a flock of about 40 larks. They were
incredibly flighty and very difficult to photograph and as a result I only
ended up with a single photo of one bird. We were at the location in the late
morning which was not the best time to bird there as it was very hot and we did
not want to disturb the birds too much by chasing them around. As a result I
will go back to this area again when in Abha to try to get better photographs
at a later date. The subspecies seen was Calandrella blanfordi eremica which is restricted to
southwest Saudi Arabia and Yemen with other subspecies occurring in Africa in
Eritrea and Somalia. Blanford’s Sort-toed
Lark is an uncommon breeding resident at high altitudes in the Hejaz and Asir
mountains where its preferred habitat appears to be open stony summits with
scattered juniper bushes. I would like to thank Lou Regenmorter for putting me
onto this site as he had seen birds here in summer 2013. The directions did not
have a way point for the exact site but with Phil Roberts navigation skills we
managed to work out how to get there. The only other birds we saw at the site
were several Little Swifts, one Alpine Swift, five Common Swift and a
Short-toed Snake Eagle.
Blanford's Short-toed Lark |
20 July 2014
African Paradise Flycatchers - Raydah Escarpment
On the way back to the airport in Abha from Tanoumah area we
stopped at the Raydah Escarpment for a few hours. The ranger station gate was
open so we go into the reserve easily and drove down to the disused farm. The
farm now has a new locked gate blocking access for vehicles along the small
track but as we always walked there was no issue as it was easy to get around
the outside of the gate. As we were at the location around midday it was
relatively quiet but we still saw some good birds including two Arabian
Waxbills. This was only the second time we had seen the species with the first
in the reed beds at Malaki Dam near Jizan in April 2014. These two birds were
perched in the low scrub of a large tree, very different habitat from the
previous sighting. Two African Paradise Flycatchers were also seen here
including a fantastic male with extra long tail streamers. Little Rock Thrush,
Yemen Thrush, Yemen Linnet and Abyssinian White-eye were also common here. With
a few Fan-tailed Ravens flying over.
We then slowly made our way down the incredibly steep road
to the small village at the bottom where the first bird I saw when getting out
of the car was a Grey-headed Kingfisher. An African Grey Hornbill was sitting
quietly in a large tree and a couple of Bruce’s Green Pigeons flew over. Violet-backed
Starlings and Gambaga Flycatchers were also seen. Arabian Partridge could be
heard calling from the steep cliffs but remained unseen. This was our tenth out
of twelve Saudi Arabia Arabian endemics in a two day trip – a good result for
two full days birding with virtually no sleep due to looking for owls and
nightjars in the dark. After Raydah we
had a hour left so went to the top of Mount Soudah where there were plenty of
Fan-tailed Ravens as always and two
Yemen Serins on the rocks at the top.
Gambaga Flycatcher |
Violet-backed Starlings |
Yemen Serin |
19 July 2014
Plenty of Arabian Endemics at Al Mehfar Park – Tanoumah
During
the weekend of 11-12 July, Phil Roberts and I went to the southwest of Saudi
Arabia for a birding trip. This was a very busy and long weekend with little
sleep as we were birding on foot all day and then looking for owls and
nightjars all night. We birded the Al Mehfar Park area and I have already posted details of some of the bird we saw
but we had a brilliant time at this new site. We spent the entire day there on
the first day and most of the morning the second day and saw plenty of good
birds including eight of the twelve Arabian Endemics that occur in Saudi Arabia
including: Philby’s
Partridge Alectoris philbyi, Arabian Scops Owl Otus pamelae, Arabian
Woodpecker Dendrocopos dorae, Yemen Warbler Sylvia buryi, Yemen
Thrush Turdus menachensis, Arabian Wheatear Oenanthe lugentoides, Yemen Serin Serinus
menachensis & Yemen Linnet Carduelis yemenensis. The ones we
failed to see were: Arabian Partridge Alectoris melanocephala,
Arabian Waxbill Estrilda rubibarba, Arabian Golden-winged Grosbeak Rhynchostruthus
percivali & Arabian Serin Serinus rothschildi. We
arrived at about 03:00 hrs and immediately started looking for Owls without
success although located two Montane Nightjars on the road and in flight. As it
started getting light we went to the more bare area of the site with large
boulders in the hope of seeing Philby’s Partridge an Arabian endemic Phil had
not previously see. We heard birds calling briefly but despite extensive
searching failed to locate any. We did, however, see four Arabian Magpie Pica
pica asirensis an endemic subspecies of Eurasian Magpie sometimes treated
as a separate species and with population in danger of extinction with probably
less than 500 birds left? Soon after this we found Yemen Warbler in the trees
along with a drumming male Arabian Woodpecker, a species we would see three
more of during our birding here. The most common species seen were Yemen Serin,
a species we had previously not seen before, and Palestine Sunbird with over
100 of each seen. Gambaga Flycatcher was also common as was Yemen Linnet. A few
Arabian Wheatears were located along the road along with Red-breasted Wheatears
and Long-billed Pipits were also seen in this area in good numbers. Other
interesting species seen included Violet-backed Starlings, Abyssinian
White-eyes, Common Kestrel, Fan-tailed Ravens and a Barbary Falcon, another new
species for me in Saudi Arabia. Two Dusky Turtle Doves were in the wooded areas
but little else was seen here. In the late afternoon we returned to look for
Philby’s Partridge and saw three birds on the cliff edge. We then located and photographed
Arabian Scops Owl in the nighttime (see previous post) and the next morning we
returned and saw four more Philby’s Partridges a little further along the cliff
top although they remained at distance. All in all we had a great time here and
I will certainly be returning to this area again, as it the best birding site
in the area that I know off.
Arabian Magpie |
Philby's Partridge |
Yemen Warbler |
Yemen Serin |
Yemen Linnet - male |
Palestinian Sunbird |
Palestinian Sunbird |
Violet-backed Starling |
Common Kestrel |
Abyssinian White-eye |
Gambaga Flycatcher |
Long-billed Pipit |
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