There have been two White-throated Kingfishers at
Sabkhat Al Fasl this winter with the first birds seen in early January 2015. On
24 January we increased this number to three birds. This is the highest count
of birds at this site for many years but as they breed as near as Riyadh, 400
kilometres away, and this is an excellent wetland area then there is a
possibility they will breed here in the near future. The species was treated as
a vagrant to the Eastern Province but is now clearly a scarce winter visitor.
The below photos are all of a single bird seen along the main track of the
location where they have now become easier to see due to the eradication of
fishermen at the location due to the strong policing of the site by the Saudi
Wildlife Authority. This has created a much less disturbed habitat that most of
the species including White-throated Kingfisher appear to like.
Jem's Birding & Ringing Exploits in the Eastern Province and elsewhere in Saudi Arabia
31 January 2015
30 January 2015
European Honey Buzzard – Deffi Park
The European Honey-Buzzard occurs
in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia along with Crested Honey-Buzzard and
most of the records of Honey-Buzzards refer to Crested Honey-Buzzard. The two
species are difficult to identify unless good views of the underwing and flight
feathers can be seen. The Birds of the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia by
Bundy, Connor & Harrison (published in August 1989) has only six records of
Honey-Buzzard, Dhahran 4 March 1976, 6 October 1978, over Rub al Khali at Jawb
23 March 1980, Dhahran 27 October 1980, at Qatif 19 October 1891 and Dhahran 13
March 1983 and is classed as a vagrant. Since I have been in Saudi Arabia I
have seen European Honey Buzzards as follows, adult female 4 May 2011, adult
male 6 May 2011, adult female - 2 June 2011 and a female at Deffi Park, Jubail
24 January 2015. The species is a scarce passage migrant seen in small numbers
mainly in spring and autumn with the main movement of birds well to the west of
the Eastern Province. Winter records are rare in Saudi Arabia but interestingly
Brian James found two winter birds at KAUST golf course in November 2014 and
along with the bird from Deffi Park, Jubail it appears at least some winter
here. The bird at Deffi Park was seen very briefly in the very early morning
flying up from the ground and disappeared into the trees. It did not appear to
fly far and I was lucky to refind it in the trees again. I took a couple of
photos of the bird and it flew off again and was lost. No details of the
underwing were seen and as it was a winter record I assumed it would be a
Crested Honey Buzzard. When I looked at the photos better at home a few days
later it looked a bit different to perched Crested Honey Buzzards I had seen
before and was a female/immature as it had a yellow eye. I suspected the bird
may be a European Honey Buzzard but was not sure so sent it to Andrea Corso for
his valuable advice. Andrea said the bird was a European Honey Buzzard making
the record another winter one for the species and this time on the east coast
of the Kingdom.
29 January 2015
Common Blackbird – Sabkhat Al Fasl
Whilst
ringing on 23 January 2015 at Sabkhat Al Fasl we caught an adult male Common
Blackbird Turdus merula. They are regarded as vagrants to the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia with most records referring to first year
males and most occurring at Dhahran including two during January to February 1974, one 4
February 1975 with two 9-15 April 1975, one 2 March 1979, a female 3-5 January
1980 one 14 December 1982, one at Dhahran Saudi Aramco main camp in some Acacias on 11th Street 10 January 1984 with probably the same bird 8-21 February 1984 and one 15 November 1984. One was
also at Abqaiq 21 December 1979. Birds are relatively common in Jordon so it
is surprising that more have not been seen in the northwest and around Tabuk
but they remain a rare bird in Saudi Arabia. Other records from the
Kingdom include a bird at Tabuk and one at NADEC farm in the north 15 February
2009. Interestingly Dave Bishop sent me an e-mail on 17 January 2015 saying he
had seen Qatar’s 3rd record at Al Shamal Park, so it looks like the
cold weather in Jordon, Lebanon and the Tabuk area of Saudi Arabia, where snow
has fallen in recent weeks, may have displaced some birds to the south of their
normal range. The Common Blackbird at Sabkhat Al Fasl was in very good
condition with a healthy weight so will, hopefully, stay around in the same area
for some time. I looked for the bird the next day after it was ringed without
success but there is a lot of cover at the location and it could still easily
be about.
28 January 2015
Finally the bird – Taif Euphorbia Forest
As mentioned in a previous post,
Phil Roberts and I went to the Taif area in the mountains in western Saudi
Arabia to look for Arabian Golden-winged Grosbeak. This was the last regional
endemic species for us both o see in the country and as it had been seen in the
area a few times in the last couple of years including in November 2014 we
thought we would have a look. We were unsuccessful at the location where they
had been seen most recently possibly due to the inclement weather of strong
winds and low cloud cover and also failed to see them at Wadi Thee Ghazal where
a bird had been photographed by a camera trap set for Arabian Leopard in 2012.
Lou Regenmorter had mentioned to me that he had found a Euphorbia Forest near
to Taif with mature Euphorbia’s so we went to look here. We found the site that
had a hillside with many mature Euphorbia’s, a tree especially liked by Arabian
Golden-winged Grosbeak. The trouble was the trees were growing up a steep
hillside and this meant we had to climb up the hillside to get good views of a
wider range of the trees. A look from the raod could not locate any birds so we
moved up the hill when Phil saw a bird near the ground below a Euphorbia. I
then saw a second bird nearby but the distance was too far for photography and
soon the birds flew off. The species in unmistakable and the golden patches in
the wing very clear, but the views were brief and distant. Despite a long
search of the area we could not relocate the birds meaning we have already set
up another trip to the area to look again in the summer of 2015. One good point
is this is a new location for the species so it looks like they cover a wide
area around Taif, although are scarce and difficult to see. We worked very hard
in the field from dawn to dusk with only a brief view of the birds as a reward
but at least we did finally see the species in the Kingdom. Birds in nearby
Oman appear relatively easy to photograph when seen and Lou got a few photos of
the ones he saw in Saudi Arabia last year so we are hoping on the next trip we
will have better weather and are able to get a few photos. We also saw a few
other good birds including the regional endemic Yemen Serin and Yemen Linnet.
Tristram's Starling |
Tristram's Starling |
Desert Lark |
Yemen Serin |
27 January 2015
Sallal al-Dahna near Tanoumah Southwest Saudi Arabia – Bird records by Phil Roberts
Whilst in the southwest of Saudi Arabia Phil visited Sallal al-Dahna
a upland valley at 1955 metres above sea level on the outskirts of Tanoumah 11
December 2014. This is a favoured location to see Arabian (Asir) Magpie that is
generally regarded as a sub-species of Eurasian Magpie but sometimes treated as
a separate species. They are becoming increasingly rare with the total
population estimated to be between 135-500 birds. The valley holds mature
acacia and Juniper trees and has a permanent water supply at one end. Here Phil
managed to see and photograph te following species: Arabian Magpie, Little Rock
Thrush and Song Thrush. A very unusual record was a Steppe Eagle was taken
along the road from Tanoumah to Abha around 30km from Tanoumah. This species is
a passage migrant to the country and is particularly common in this region on
migration but is not a winter visitor. As this record was mid-December it
appears to have decided to winter in the area rather than continue its
migration onwards to Africa.
Arabian Magpie |
Arabian Magpie |
Little Rock Thrush |
Song Thrush |
Steppe Eagle |
26 January 2015
Schmidt’s Fringe-toed Lizard near Tabuk – Record by Viv Wilson
Viv Wilson sent me
the below photograph of a Schmidt’s Fringe-toed Lizard Acanthodactylus
schmidti taken near Tabuk in September. It is one of the more
common and abundant species in the genus Acanthodactylus and has ‘fringes’ of elongated scales
along the sides of each toe that provide better traction on loose sand,
allowing it to move much more efficiently across the desert. The scales on the
head are generally larger than on the rest of the long, cylindrical body, and
the smooth, rectangular scales on the belly are arranged in well-defined rows. They
are typically coffee-coloured, with a pattern of small, oval-shaped, pale or
white spots. They rely heavily on ants as prey and are probably diurnal digging
burrows among the roots of shrubs in sandy plains, dunes and sabkahs
(salt flats). This species ranges from southern and
eastern Jordan and southeastern Iraq and southwestern Iran into the Arabian
Peninsula where it has been recorded in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab
Emirates and Oman. It has been recorded from 200m asl, to 1,000 m asl.
25 January 2015
Some Arabian Endemics near Taif – Wadi Thee Ghazal
On Saturday 17 January Phil
Roberts and I went to Wadi Thee Ghazal near Taif. This is a well-vegetated wadi
with large mature Juniper trees and other large plants and was a site where
Arabian Golden-winged Grosbeak had been filmed by a camera trap in 2009 set to
look for Arabian Leopard by the Saudi Wildlife Authority. As we were trying to
see the species it was an obvious choice to bird and as it turned out the
birding was excellent here. We failed again to see the Grosbeak but located
Arabian Wheatear with both males and females seen, Yemen Linnet and Yemen Serin
of the Arabian regional endemics. Other good birds included Arabian Warbler,
Scrub Warbler, Song Thrushes, Eurasian Sparrowhawk, Abyssinian White-eye,
Eastern Black Redstarts, Tristram’s Starlings, Palestinian Sunbirds,
Brown-woodland Warblers and Pale Crag Martins. The number of Song Thrushes was
very high with about 50 birds seen during the day possibly due to the cold
weather further north where snow fell in Jordan, Lebanon and northern Saudi
Arabia a few days before. This is an excellent site for birding with a lot of
birds present although the species total was low. The location where the
Arabian Golden-winged Grosbeak was seen was 21.0795N, 40.3435E that is
approximately 2000 metres above sea level.
Arabian Wheatear - male |
Arabian Wheatear - male |
Arabian Wheatear - female |
Arabian Warbler |
Eastern Black Redstart |
Eurasian Sparrowhawk |
Tristram's Starling |
Tristram's Starling |
24 January 2015
Phil’s Fields near Sabya Southwest Saudi Arabia – Bird records by Phil Roberts
Phil
Roberts went on a birding trip for a few days to the southwest of the Kingdom
in December 2014 and saw a number of good birds. Phil also managed to
photograph a few and has sent them to me and allowed me to reproduce them on my
website. On the 10 December he went to Phil’s Fields a site that has produced
good birds over the last few years including seven Sociable Lapwings and Small
Buttonquail to name but two. This site is also a great place to see Singing
Bush Lark and Zitting Cisticola both of which Phil saw. He took photogrpahs of
the following species there: Singing Bush Lark, White Spectacled Bulbul, African
Silverbill, Red-throated Pipit, Long-legged Buzzard, Yellow-billed Kite and Western
Cattle Egret
Singing Bush Lark |
African Silverbill |
Long-legged Buzzard |
Red-throated Pipit |
Western Cattle Egret |
White-spectacled Bulbul |
Yellow-billed Kite |
23 January 2015
Comet Lovejoy photographed near Tabuk – Record by Viv Wilson
Comet Lovejoy is a gassy comet with a short tail appearing green proably due to the presence of two gases –
cyanogen (CN)2 and diatomic carbon (C2) – which glow green when their molecules
are ionised. Ionisation causes electrons within the
molecules to gain energy and when the electrons drop back down to their normal
state, they give off light of a certain wavelength. For these molecules they
emit green light and since they are very strong emitters, their green colour
dominates the comet. The evening sky remains free of moonlight
for excellent views until about January 23rd or 24th, when the waxing Moon will
brighten the sky further each night. Lovejoy passed closest by Earth on January
7th, at a distance of 70 million kilometers.
Although the comet is now receding from us, its intrinsic brightness is
still increasing slightly. That's because it doesn't reach its closest to the
Sun, until January 30th although by this date the comet will be fading from
Earth's point of view and the Moon will be brightening. The comet covers 3° per day at its peak, meaning it will move
noticeably in a single observing session. Amateur astronomer Terry Lovejoy
discovered this object on August 17, 2014, from Brisbane, Australia. Comets
that first light up the deep southern sky tend to have orbits inclined steeply
to the solar system’s plane, a characteristic that often carries them well
north after they wheel around the Sun. The below photographs were taken 16
January 2015, in the desert near to Tabuk in north-west Saudi Arabia by Viv
Wilson who has kindly allowed me to use them on my website.
Labels:
Comet Lovejoy
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