ZooChat Big Year 2021

A couple of birds added today.

87) Banded Dotterel Charadrius bicinctus
88) Black-fronted Dotterel Elseyornis melanops

Normally I go up to the Waikanae Estuary around the start of the year for waders and suchlike birds. It's not exactly a convenient place for me to get to (about three hours on two buses and a train) but it is otherwise the easiest place to pick up a lot of the non-urban birds. I didn't go there this year because I went for a trip around the upper North Island in February where I saw most of those species.

I was having to pass by the estuary today though, so I stopped to add Banded Dotterels to the year-list; and then afterwards stopped in at the Otaki Sewage Ponds a bit further north for Black-fronted Dotterels (self-introduced from Australia in the 1950s, and now distributed patchily around the country).
 
A surprise lifer hanging out along the stream behind the local pool, presumably attracted by the influx in water following Hurricane Ida.

Birds
162) Solitary Sandpiper Tringa solitaria

~Thylo

A few more surprise additions from a school-related trip to Block Island in the Long Island Sound.

Birds
163) Merlin Falco columbarius
164) Sanderling Erolia alba
165) Black-Bellied Plover Pluvialis squatarola
166) Ruddy Turnstone Arenaria interpres

Mammals
19) Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphin Tursiops truncatus

For anyone unfamiliar and interested, Block Island represents the furthest southern extent of the Laurentide Ice Sheet and is made of glacial till deposited from the glacier as it retreated.

~Thylo
 

For anyone unfamiliar and interested, Block Island represents the furthest southern extent of the Laurentide Ice Sheet and is made of glacial till deposited from the glacier as it retreated.

~Thylo

That's interesting. I've only ever heard the name before in the Billy Joel song 'The Downeaster Alexa' - 2nd line 'sailing through Block Island Sound'....;)
 
That's interesting. I've only ever heard the name before in the Billy Joel song 'The Downeaster Alexa' - 2nd line 'sailing through Block Island Sound'....;)

Certainly a lot of people sailing through to this day!

The island is comprised of mainly Cretaceous Period rock, with two halves of the island comprised of different compositions of rock as a result of two lobes of the glacier meeting here and pushing rocks of two different origins together. There are a lot of freshwater ponds throughout the island due to chunks of ice getting left behind as the glacier receded and creating large water-filled impressions. When sea levels were lower Block Island was connected to Long Island, allowing native wildlife to settle and become trapped once sea levels rose. I'd be interested to see an ecological study conducted on the natives here to see if there's been any slight divergence over the last few tens of thousands of years.

~Thylo
 
Bit overdue for an update!

Birds:

102. Spotted Sandpiper (Actitis macularius)
103. Ash-throated Flycatcher (Myiarchus cinerascens)
104. MacGillivray's Warbler (Geothlypis tolmiei)
105. Wilson's Warbler (Cardellina pusilla)
106. Hooded Oriole (Icterus cucullatus)
107. Western Tanager (Piranga ludoviciana)
108. Black-chinned Hummingbird (Archilochus alexandri)

Invertebrates:

24. Common Buckeye (Junonia coenia)

8-108-6-2-0-24

Long time since an update from me! Between heat, smoke, and not traveling new species have been fairly slow. But got a fair few to update and things should still start picking up here soon with arrival of cooler weather so here I am again.

Mammals:

9. Gray Fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus)

Birds:

109. Willow Flycatcher (Empidonax trailii)
110. Dusky Flycatcher (Empidonax oberholseri)
111. Yellow Warbler (Setophaga petechia)

Reptiles:

7. California Kingsnake (Lampropeltis californiae)

Fish:

1. Sacramento Pikeminnow (Ptychocheilus grandis)

Invertebrates:

25. Widow Skimmer (Libellula luctuosa)
26. Twelve-spotted Skimmer (Libellula pulchella)
27. Common Whitetail (Plathemis lydia)
28. Black & Yellow Mud-Dauber (Sceliphron caementarium)

9-111-7-2-1-28
 
Some nice bird sightings and even nicer mammal to end August:

26/08/2021 (xxxx location, Morocco)
BIRDS:
169 - Spotted flycatcher, Muscicapa striata

MAMMALS:
4 - Dorcas gazelle, Gazella dorcas

28/08/2021
(Embouchure de l'Oued Souss, Morocco)
BIRDS:
170 - Squacco heron, Ardeola ralloides

Some really nice birding (and wildlife-watching in general) gave me some really nice species!

01/09/2021 (Plage de Tifnit, Morocco)
HERPS:
7 - Acanthodactylus margaritae
---

11/09/2021 (Embouchure de l'Oued Souss, Morocco)
BIRDS:
171 - Montagu's harrier, Circus pygargus
---

12/09/2021 (Champs d'Aghorimze, Morocco)
MAMMALS:
5 - Least weasel, Mustela nivalis

BIRDS:
172 - Eurasian reed warbler, Acrocephalus scirpaceus

The highlight of it all was obviously the weasel, which is a species that although common isn't super hard to find here so I was delighted when one crossed my path at the fields near Aghorimze and started jumping and running until it disappeared in the shrubbery.

The harrier, though, comes close behind and it was fantastic to be able to observe it for more than half an hour as it was hunting, creating panic among the migrant waders at my local spot. The reed warbler is also a nice tick as I've certainly seen one before but this is the first time I got good enough views to tell apart this migrant species from the very similar locally breeding African reed warbler.

All these additions might pale in comparison to what could be coming this week though... :D
 
the first week of septeber is falsterbo birds show every year the swedish bird fair. it on the south tip of sweaden alos the closest land way to denmark wich makes huge numbers of migrants going this way. got to sped 3 day here for the first time and had a great time. tho it wasent the greatest migration weather ever. still nice birding and a great to meat meany well now swedish birders for the first time. anyhow here is the new aditons
146 red kite Milvus milvus
147 black kite Milvus migrans
148 paild harrier Circus macrourus swedish lifer
149 merrlin Falco columbarius
150 black tailed godwit
151 bar tailed godwit
152 pied avocet : Recurvirostra avosetta
153 common cuckoo Cuculus canorus
154 sandwich tern Thalasseus sandvicensis
155 tawny pipit Anthus campestris
and from this weekend
156 Red-necked grebe Podiceps grisegena
mammals
16 common seal Phoca vitulina
17 european rabit Oryctolagus cuniculus
 
A few more surprise additions from a school-related trip to Block Island in the Long Island Sound.

Birds
163) Merlin Falco columbarius
164) Sanderling Erolia alba
165) Black-Bellied Plover Pluvialis squatarola
166) Ruddy Turnstone Arenaria interpres

Mammals
19) Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphin Tursiops truncatus

For anyone unfamiliar and interested, Block Island represents the furthest southern extent of the Laurentide Ice Sheet and is made of glacial till deposited from the glacier as it retreated.

~Thylo

A surprise early fall addition:

Birds
167) Black-and-White Warbler Mniotilta varia

~Thylo
 
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the first week of septeber is falsterbo birds show every year the swedish bird fair. it on the south tip of sweaden alos the closest land way to denmark wich makes huge numbers of migrants going this way. got to sped 3 day here for the first time and had a great time. tho it wasent the greatest migration weather ever. still nice birding and a great to meat meany well now swedish birders for the first time. anyhow here is the new aditons
146 red kite Milvus milvus
147 black kite Milvus migrans
148 paild harrier Circus macrourus swedish lifer
149 merrlin Falco columbarius
150 black tailed godwit
151 bar tailed godwit
152 pied avocet : Recurvirostra avosetta
153 common cuckoo Cuculus canorus
154 sandwich tern Thalasseus sandvicensis
155 tawny pipit Anthus campestris
and from this weekend
156 Red-necked grebe Podiceps grisegena
mammals
16 common seal Phoca vitulina
17 european rabit Oryctolagus cuniculus
i wood like to remove the seal for now cose i dident keep into cout that grey seal are about as common in the area. i dident look to hard at the seals i saw. and i stillthink some of them must have bean common but cat be 100% at the moment so
i am one 16 with european rabit Oryctolagus cuniculus
 
the first week of septeber is falsterbo birds show every year the swedish bird fair. it on the south tip of sweaden alos the closest land way to denmark wich makes huge numbers of migrants going this way. got to sped 3 day here for the first time and had a great time. tho it wasent the greatest migration weather ever. still nice birding and a great to meat meany well now swedish birders for the first time. anyhow here is the new aditons
146 red kite Milvus milvus
147 black kite Milvus migrans
148 paild harrier Circus macrourus swedish lifer
149 merrlin Falco columbarius
150 black tailed godwit
151 bar tailed godwit
152 pied avocet : Recurvirostra avosetta
153 common cuckoo Cuculus canorus
154 sandwich tern Thalasseus sandvicensis
155 tawny pipit Anthus campestris
and from this weekend
156 Red-necked grebe Podiceps grisegena
mammals
16 common seal Phoca vitulina
17 european rabit Oryctolagus cuniculus
i just saw my number one birss is way of it shoud be 186 to 196 sorry for that
 
We should have been celebrating Moonlit's 20th Anniversary this weekend. However mostly spent at home under lockdown with some exercise in the Sanctuary. There are some advantages to having your own zoo.

Birds

210. Dusky woodswallow Artamus cyanopterus

Invertebrates

94. Gisborne cockroach Drymaplaneta semivitta
 
BIRDS:
309) Great skua, Stercorarius skua
310) Arctic jaeger, Stercorarius parasiticus
311) Northern fulmar, Fulmarus glacialis
312) White-tailed lapwing, Vanellus leucurus
313) Bearded reedling, Panurus biarmicus
314) Common murre, Uria aalge
315) Sooty shearwater, Ardenna grisea
316) Long-tailed jaeger, Stercorarius longicaudus
317) Black-browed albatross, Thalassarche melanophris
318) Willow ptarmigan, Lagopus lagopus

319) Red-legged partridge, Alectoris rufa
320) Ortolan bunting, Emberiza hortulana
321) Bonaparte's gull, Chroicocephalus philadelphia

000) Eurasian penduline tit, Remiz pendulinus
000) Iberian chiffchaff, Phylloscopus ibericus
000) Common nightingale, Luscinia megarhynchos
000) Common grasshopper warbler, Locustella naevia
000) Savi's warbler, Locustella luscinioides
000) Icterine warbler, Hippolais icterina
000) European nightjar, Caprimulgus europaeus
000) Baillon's crake, Zapornia pusilla
000) River warbler, Locustella fluviatilis
000) Boreal owl, Aegolius funereus
000) Grey-headed woodpecker, Picus canus
000) Hazel grouse, Tetrastes bonasia
000) Rock ptarmigan, Lagopus muta
000) Indian Silverbill, Euodice malabarica

MAMMALS:
22) Harbour porpoise, Phocoena phocoena
23) Grey seal, Halichoerus grypus

Since I visited Tenerife in early 2019, I've been really interested in the island wildlife of Europe. As a bit of a graduation gift, my parents took me to another island for a short 5 day trip: Mallorca!

The entire trip was a lot of fun, and granted me 7 bird lifers: three (near-)endemics, and a bunch of other nice southern European species I had been missing until now. Special highlights go to the Marbled ducks and Red-knobbed coots that showed incredibly, the Balearic warblers that were actually surprisingly difficult, and of course Balearic shearwater which is one of the most threatened seabirds on the planet. The hedgehogs and wall lizards were great as well!

BIRDS:
322) Spotless starling, Sturnus unicolor
323) Mediterranean flycatcher, Muscicapa tyrrhenica
324) Black-crowned night heron, Nycticorax nycticorax
325) Common nightingale, Luscinia megarhynchos
326) Marbled duck, Marmaronetta angustirostris
327) Red-knobbed coot, Fulica cristata
328) Audouin's gull, Ichthyaetus audouinii
329) Eleonora's falcon, Falco eleonorae

330) Thekla's lark, Galerida theklae
331) Balearic shearwater, Puffinus mauretanicus
332) Balearic warbler, Curruca balearica


000) Eurasian penduline tit, Remiz pendulinus
000) Iberian chiffchaff, Phylloscopus ibericus
000) Common grasshopper warbler, Locustella naevia
000) Savi's warbler, Locustella luscinioides
000) Icterine warbler, Hippolais icterina
000) European nightjar, Caprimulgus europaeus
000) Baillon's crake, Zapornia pusilla
000) River warbler, Locustella fluviatilis
000) Boreal owl, Aegolius funereus
000) Grey-headed woodpecker, Picus canus
000) Hazel grouse, Tetrastes bonasia
000) Rock ptarmigan, Lagopus muta
000) Indian Silverbill, Euodice malabarica

MAMMALS:
24) Domestic goat, Capra hircus
25) North African hedgehog, Atelerix algirus


HERPS:
8) Mediterranean house gecko, Hemidactylus turcicus
9) Lilford's wall lizard, Podarcis lilfordi
10) Ibiza wall lizard, Podarcis pityusensis


FISH:
4) Mediterranean three-spined stickleback, Gasterosteus gymnurus
5) Mirrorwing flying fish, Hirundichthys speculiger
6) Common two-banded seabream, Diplodus vulgaris
7) White seabream, Diplodus sargus
8) Saddled seabream, Oblada melanura
9) Mediterranean chromis, Chromis chromis


Also, I finally took the time to summarize a few more of my inverts. These are a mixture from the France, England and Mallorca trips and some from Belgium between them:

INVERTS:
75) Silver-ground carpet, Xanthorhoe montanata
76) Purple bar, Cosmorhoe ocellata
77) Northern spinach, Eulithis populata

78) Brindled pug, Eupithecia abbreviata
79) Wormwood pug, Eupithecia absinthiata
80) Tawny speckled pug, Eupithecia icterata
81) Maple pug, Eupithecia inturbata
82) Tawny-barred angle, Macaria liturata
83) Swallow-tailed moth, Ourapteryx sambucaria
84) Banded pine carpet, Pungeleria capreolaria
85) Pale shining brown, Polia bombycina

86) Smoky wainscot, Mythimna impura
87) Scarce dagger, Acronicta auricoma
88) Denisia similella
89) Bee moth, Aphomia sociella
90) Little grey, Eudonia lacustrata
91) Ground-moss grey, Eudonia truncicolella
94) Olive pearl, Udea olivalis
94) Long hoverfly, Sphaerophoria scripta

95) Scarce swallowtail, Iphiclides podalirius
96) Small elephant hawk-moth, Deilephila porcellus
97) Japanese leafhopper, Orientus ishidae
98) Cymus claviculus
99) Small tortoiseshell, Aglais urticae
100) Light knot grass, Acronicta menyanthidis
101) Painted lady, Vanessa cardui
102) Common darter, Sympetrum striolatum
103) Rusty tussock moth, Orgyia antiqua
104) Dark strawberry tortrix, Celypha lacunana
105) Lesser marsh grasshopper, Chorthippus albomarginatus
106) Common field grasshopper, Chorthippus brunneus
107) Roesel’s bush cricket, Roeseliana roeselii
108) Two-tailed pasha, Charaxes jasius

109) Hummingbird hawk-moth, Macroglossum stellatarum
110) Migrant hawker, Aeshna mixta
 
89) Little Egret Egretta garzetta


I've seen hundreds of Little Egrets in Asia but only one in New Zealand, which was almost a decade ago in Auckland. They aren't a regular species to see in New Zealand but when one does turn up from Australia it often hangs around in the same place for years. There is currently one living at the Foxton Estuary which my sister mentioned last week as having seen so this weekend I went up to her place, which is about two hours north for me (by bus and train), and we drove up to Foxton which is about another twenty minutes by car.

There was a bit of an issue at the start of the intended egret search with a body unfortunately being found on the mudflats, so the main birding area was then cordoned off by the police (Body found at Manawatū Estuary likely to be missing fisherman), but once all was clear it was on with the birding. Of course an estuary is quite big and a Little Egret is quite little, so naturally it wasn't until pretty much the entire walkway along the shore had been walked and we had decided that the egret was simply a no-show this day, that I - at the last minute - spotted it perched on a log further up-river. There was no longer any track to walk but some clambering along the rocks of the shoreline resulted in some closer views.


There was another interesting animal sighting this morning as well, but I'm not counting it on my year-list. While on the train from Wellington, I saw several people standing in the Porirua harbour splashing at some black objects in front of them. (This harbour is more like a shallow estuary, mostly only a couple of feet deep and you can almost wade across the entire thing). I thought they were whitebaiting although their positioning in the harbour was weird. Anyway, it turned out later that there were three Dusky Dolphins which had got themselves lost and the people were actually attempting to rescue them. The black objects I'd seen were the dolphins' fins. At the latest news one of the dolphins had died but the other two had been safely returned to the ocean. (One of three dolphins stuck in Porirua Harbour dies after showing signs of distress). I'm not counting them on my year-list because I didn't even know I'd seen them until I heard the news about it later and connected the dots.
 
We should have been celebrating Moonlit's 20th Anniversary this weekend. However mostly spent at home under lockdown with some exercise in the Sanctuary. There are some advantages to having your own zoo.

Birds

210. Dusky woodswallow Artamus cyanopterus

Invertebrates

94. Gisborne cockroach Drymaplaneta semivitta
Congrats on them 20 years :)
 
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Birds
308. Yellow-bellied Flycatcher Empidonax flaviventris
309. Sanderling Calidris alba
310. Franklin's Gull Leucophaeus pipixcan
311. Sabine's Gull Xema sabini
312. Parasitic Jaegar Stercorarius parasiticus
313. Red-necked Grebe Podiceps grisegena
314. Black-bellied Plover Pluvialis squatarola
315. Baird's Sandpiper Calidris bairdii
 
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In an odd post for me, some new birds but no new insects. The migratory birds are now passing through.

Birds:

81. Yellow-throated vireo (Vireo flavifrons)
82. American redstart (Setophaga ruticilla)
83. Field sparrow (Spizella pusilla)
A short trip to far southern Wisconsin and Northern Illinois yielded some new birds, even if it wasn't the primary focus of the trip and I didn't have my camera for some of the warblers.

Birds:
84. Herring gull (Larus argentatus)
85. Sanderling (Calidris alba)
86. Great egret (Ardea alba)
87. Osprey (Pandion haliaetus)
88. Green heron (Butorides virescens)

Insect/Invertebrate:
190. Spotted beet webworm moth (Hymenia perspectalis)
191. Typical green lacewing (Chrysopa oculata)
192. Great spreadwing (Archilestes grandis)
193. Sand wasp (Microbembex monodonta)

I also saw a dead Chinook Salmon washed up on the beach
 
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