I saw a number of Plain Tiger Danaus chrysippus in Al Khafah recently and managed to photograph
one shown below. The Plain Tiger is a medium-sized butterfly with a wingspan of
about 7–8 centimetres. The body is black with many white spots and the wings
are tawny, the upper side brighter and richer than the underside. Background
color and extent of white on the forewings varies somewhat across the wide
range. They occur from Africa and southern Europe, eastwards via Sri Lanka,
India, and Myanmar to China, Java and Sulawesi. The butterfly is distasteful to
predators and therefore flies slowly and leisurely, generally close to the
ground and in a straight line giving a would-be predator ample time to
recognise and avoid attacking it. They can be seen throughout Saudi Arabia but
appear more common in the southwest than the Eastern Province.
Jem's Birding & Ringing Exploits in the Eastern Province and elsewhere in Saudi Arabia
27 February 2017
25 February 2017
Common Starlings near Jubail – Records by Vinu Mathew
Whilst in the Jubail area recently Vinu saw over 1000
Common Starlings Sturnus vulgaris at
local camel pens. These camel pens hold good numbers of livestock and attract
large numbers of House Sparrows but also a few Common Starlings in the winter.
This winter there appear to be more birds than normal but 1000 birds is easily
the highest number I have heard of in a single flock in Saudi Arabia. Common
Starlings are a winter visitor that is common in the Eastern Province but
rather uncommon and erratic in Tabuk, Riyadh and Jeddah. I would like to thank Vinu
for letting me use his photograph on my website which is shown below.
22 February 2017
Winter visitors and passage migrants – Haradh
Phil Roberts and I went to Haradh recently and found
plenty of good birds despite the temperature being 1 degrees Celsius the
coldest day for many years in the region as well as a bitingly cold northerly
wind. Some birds were winter visitors such as Mallard, Northern Lapwing, Desert
Wheatear, Eastern Imperial Eagle and Tawny Pipit whilst others were spring migrants
such as Common Redstart, Common Chiffchaff, Mauryan Grey Shirke. We also saw a
few interesting resident species such as Long-legged Buzzard, Spur-winged
Plovers that appear to have colonized the pivot irrigation and farm areas of
Haradh in recent years as well as Spanish Sparrows and Namaqua Doves. A few
winter harriers were still present including Marsh Harrier and Pallid Harrier
and there were plenty of Common Kestrels as well.
Mauryan Grey Shrike |
Desert Wheatear |
Eastern Imperial Eagle |
Greater Hoopoe Lark |
Mallard |
Northern Lapwing |
Spur-winged Lapwing |
Tawny Pipit |
21 February 2017
Two Great Black-headed Gulls – Jubail
Whilst birding the Jubail area last weekend we came
across two Great Black-headed Gulls sitting on a flooded area of sabkha. One
bird was an adult in full summer plumage with the other being a second calendar
year bird. Jubail has turned out to be a good site to see the species in the
last five years with birds seen each winter. The Great Black-headed Gull is an
uncommon winter visitor to the Arabian Gulf and southern Red Sea coastal areas
that is also rarely seen inland. The first birds are normally not seen until
December or January, with March probably the best time to see the species.
Apart from Sabkhat Al Fasl the other good location for seeing the species is
the causeway to Bahrain where birds can often be seen hanging in the wind over
the road and up to ten adult summer birds have been seen on recent crossings.
20 February 2017
Caspian Stonechat - Jubail
Whilst birding the Jubail area I noticed an
interesting looking Stonechat in the reed bed edge. Unfortunately it flew off
and I could not relocate it. I went back to the location where I had seen the
bird at the end of my birding and luckily saw the bird again in the reeds and
then on the ground and managed to get a few photos of it. I could see that the
bird had a lot of white in the tail when it flicked it, which it did on a
regular basis. With a tail pattern like this the bird was obviously a Saxicola maurus hemprichii or Caspian Stonechat also known as
North Caspian Taxon (NCT). The northern population has a very characteristic
male plumage with extensive white portions on each side of the inner tail
(between half and three-quarters of the outer tail feathers white), not unlike
the pattern in many wheatears or male Red-backed Shrike Lanius collurio.
This can be seen on one of the below photos and can easily be seen on a flying
bird, but can be more difficult to confirm on perched birds with closed tails.
The amount of white in the tail on males is subject to a subtle cline; at its
maximum in the Volga Delta region, becoming slightly more restricted in the
south. Both sexes resemble nominate maurus from further east and north
in that they have a large unstreaked pale rump patch, buffish when fresh, white
when abraded and bleached. In comparison, European Stonechat S. rubicola has
a streaked rump with usually limited white. The hemprichii male has a concentrated
red-brown chest patch and a large white patch on the neck-sides, again more
like nominate maurus and different from most rubicola which again
can be seen on the photographs below. The bird remained in the same place for at least two weeks.
19 February 2017
Fat Sand Rats near Jubail – Record by Arnold Uy
Arnold Uy took some
excellent photos of Fat Sand Rats near Jubail and has kindly allowed me to use
them on my website some of which are shown below. The Fat Sand Rat Psammomys obesus subspecies that lives
in Saudi Arabia is P. o. dianae.
Arnold mentioned there are a number of birds of prey in the area that appear to
be hunting them including Long-legged Buzzard, Greater Spotted Eagle and Steppe
Eagle. All these species are regular winter visitors to the Eastern Province of
the Kingdom but none are common so to see them all in a small area is very
interesting. I am still yet to see the Fat Sand Rat in Saudi Arabia as I
obviously bird the wrong areas but will try to see these animals in the near
future.
Labels:
Fat Sand Rat
18 February 2017
Migratory Locust – Abu Hadriyah
Whilst at Abu Hadriyah I saw a Migratory Locust Locusta migratoria in a small area of vegetation in a vast desert
of sand. They are most often seen in pivot irrigation fields where large
numbers can be seen but I only noticed one although it was a very small area of
vegetation. Normally they occur in small numbers throughout Arabia, but rarely
form into swarms. There are two colour forms, brown and green with the green
colour forms mainly solitary adult females. Under favourable breeding
conditions they can form into vast groups, with young ‘hoppers’ often all
marching in the same direction. They are very strong fliers and migratory
specimens have been recorded as far away as Great Britain. The migratory locust
is the most widespread locust species in the world, and the only species in the
genus Locusta. It occurs throughout Africa, Asia, Australia and New Zealand.
17 February 2017
Greater Hoopoe-lark at Qaryat Al Ulya – Record by Vinu Mathew
Vinu Mathew took some photos of a Greater Hoopoe-Lark
near Qaryat Al Ulya last weekend and has kindly allowed me to use them on my
website some of which are shown below. The Greater Hoopoe-lark is a common
breeding resident to all sandy desert areas of the Kingdom including the Empty
Quarter, the desert regions of the Southern Red Sea and the Tihamah. They are uncommon
in the North-west. They are common in the Eastern Province but normally seen in
small numbers except in winter when large gatherings can occur near pivot irrigation
fields and surrounding desert areas.
16 February 2017
Fifteen Oriental Skylarks – Jubail
Phil Roberts and I found a group of fifteen Oriental
Skylark Alauda gulgula in Jubail 10
February 2017, only the second time we had seen the species in the Kingdom. The
birds were discovered on the ground feeding with a few Greater Short-toed Larks
and a single Eurasian Skylark but were clearly different to either species and
in flight gave a very distinct buzzing flight call and lacked the white
trailing edge to the wing. The first records was only discovered in Saudi
Arabia in the mid 1980’s when six were found at Dhahran Saudi Aramco camp,
percolation pond, 22-23 October 1984, were found at Dhahran BROWN, G. K. &
J. PALFREY. 1986. The Small Skylark, a new species for Saudi Arabia. Sandgrouse
7:55-59. Since this date there have been very few records although the species
could be overlooked, as it is very similar to Eurasian Skylark save for a
distinctive buzzing call, short primary wing projection, and warmer
colouration. The other records I know of include one on 1 October 1999 at
Thumamah Estate in a big pivot-irrigated field, close to The King Khalid
Wildlife Research Centre where the bird gave a buzzing call: ”biz-biz” and had
a lack of white trailing edge to the wing. There are also a number of records
from the Eastern Province including, twenty five at Abu Ali party on 3 January
1991, Sabkha al-Fasl three on 17 November 1991 increasing to seven on 3 December
1991, three at Abu Hadayah on 6 October 1995, two at Uttayyiq Agricultural Area
2 February 1996, three near Thaj in March 1997 and a party of eighteen from 27
January - 2 March 2000 at Jubail on a landscape lawn and four Sabkhat Al Fasl
11 November 2016. The birds we found may have included the four seen at the same site 11 November 2016 in which case they would have spent the winter here. They were, however, in a different location and we have birded the site regularly in-between the dates without locating them.
15 February 2017
Long-legged Buzzard near Al Hassa – Bird record by Praleesh Prasannan
Praleesh Prasannan took the
below photographs of Long-legged Buzzard near Al Hassa recently and has kindly
allowed me to use them on my website. I also thank Vinu Mathew for getting me permission for there use. In the Eastern Province it is a breeding
resident, which is thinly distributed in small numbers. Bird numbers appear to
increase I winter so there is either an influx from elsewhere or birds move
from their breeding areas to more favourable wintering sites. This winter has
been a very good one for the species with birds seen over a wide area of the
Eastern Province and more than normal seen in nearby Bahrain and Qatar.
14 February 2017
Common Starlings - Jubail
Whilst in the Jubail area recently I saw plenty of Common Starlings
Sturnus vulgaris at local camel pens. These camel pens hold good numbers of
livestock and attract large numbers of House Sparrows but also a few Common Starlings
in the winter. This winter there appear to be more birds than normal possibly
as a result of the cold weather in the north, where Phil Roberts told me there
was snow whilst he was in Jordon on 27 January. The species is not easy to photograph
in the Kingdom so I was glad to get good views and a couple of photos even
though the conditions were not idea as there was a very strong wind and large
amounts of dust in the air. They are a winter
visitor that is common in the Eastern Province Gulf but rather uncommon and
erratic in Tabuk, Riyadh and Jeddah. I would like to Thank Arnold Uy for
letting me know the location of these birds.
13 February 2017
Woodchat Shrike at Abu Hadryia – Record by Munzir Khalid Khan
Munzir took some excellent photos of Woodchat Shrike
near Abu Hadryia on 8 February, a relatively early date for this uncommon
passage migrant. Munzir has kindly allowed me to use them on my website some of
which are shown below. Woodchat Shrike is an uncommon passage migrant normally passing
in mid-February until mid-May, peaking in April, and again from mid-August to
mid-October peaking in September. Variable numbers occur each year with some
year’s birds being plentiful and in others uncommon.
12 February 2017
Twelve Black-throated Thrushes still present – Deffi Park
After finding four Black-throated Thrushes at Deffi
Park, Jubail on 20 January I went back a week later to see if I could get
better photos and see if anything else had turned up and found 12 birds in the
same place. Other photogrpahers have been to the site in between and seen only
three birds but when I went back with Phil on 10 February we saw 12 birds
again. This suggests the birds move to somewhere else in Jubail for part of the
time and use Deffi park at other times. As these birds are extremely rare
visitors to Saudi Arabia this is an amazing sight particularly as there are at
least 15 Song Thrushes present as well. Photography is difficult as light is
poor in the early morning, they generally stay in the shade but occasionally
they would come out into more open areas.
11 February 2017
Pied Wheatear - Haradh
Whilst birding the Haradh area I found a Pied
Wheatear. The bird was very tame suggesting it was a tiered newly arrived
migrant and it spent most of its time busily catching insects. There were
plenty of other migrants seen in the same area meaning the strong winds and
very cod weather may have persuaded a few birds to start their spring migration
early. Pied Wheatear Oenanthe pleschanka
is a common spring migrant that is less common in autumn. Most years birds are
recorded in spring between early February and Mid-May, peaking in March and in
autumn from late August to mid-November commonest in second half of September. The
Birds of the Riyadh Region (Stagg 1994) stated they were a common spring
migrant, less common in autumn. Passes early January to early April and again
from September to early November. The spring movement peaks during late
February and early March then reduces to a trickle. Occasionally recorded in
December.
Labels:
Pied Wheatear
10 February 2017
Yellow Wagtails wintering in a field – Haradh
Whilst birdwatching the Haradh area in early a January
2017 I came across up to 30 Yellow Wagtails including some male Black-headed
Wagtails feeding in a stubble field. This is a very early date for the birds
and they may well have wintered in the area. Mid-February is the start of the
spring passage for this species and Black-headed Wagtail feldegg is often the first subspecies to occur. The Black-headed
Wagtail is part of the Yellow Wagtail complex a group of birds that are common
spring and autumn passage migrants, sometimes in hundreds. Thy pass from
mid-February to May and again from early August to mid-November with many races
identifiable in the field including feldegg,
melanogrisia, lutea, flava, thunbergi and bema. In spring the black-headed yellow wagtail feldegg (considered by some as a
separate species) is often the first subspecies to occur with bema, flava and thunbergi following. By April, flocks of more than a hundred birds
are regularly recorded in cultivated areas. During the autumn peak passage, in
October, numbers are higher with flocks occasionally exceeding 500 birds.
Occasionally they are also recorded during summer and winter such as these
birds.
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