Zoochat Big Year 2023

I suggest googling Australasian grebe :p. Vagrants don't exactly turn up as breeding pairs...
I am familiar with Australasian Grebes and was able to view these well enough to be sure that these were not them. I assure you I have looked at as many photos as I could this afternoon of both Tachybaptus novaehollandiae and T. ruficollis and am almost entirely certain that these were the latter. I still can't believe it.
 
I am familiar with Australasian Grebes and was able to view these well enough to be sure that these were not them. I assure you I have looked at as many photos as I could this afternoon of both Tachybaptus novaehollandiae and T. ruficollis and am almost entirely certain that these were the latter. I still can't believe it.

With vagrants the burden of proof lies with the finder, so if you really think you have seen a little grebe you have to prove it with details proving the ID of the species, preferably with pictures/videos/sound recordings of the animal involved. Looking at photos of the species involved is some proof. So if you show it, prove it.
 
With vagrants the burden of proof lies with the finder, so if you really think you have seen a little grebe you have to prove it with details proving the ID of the species, preferably with pictures/videos/sound recordings of the animal involved. Looking at photos of the species involved is some proof. So if you show it, prove it.
I thought this might happen. Very unfortunately, I did not get any such proof. If you don't believe that I did see these grebes, that's perfectly fine.
 
Is the place reachable by train? I could check it out tomorrow, also are you certain it was Tricoloured Grebe(Don't believe there's any little grebe records considering how geographically distant they are)? Ie. could you point out what features of the bird you saw that made you certain that it was Little/Tricoloured rather than Australasian?
 
Today, I saw several Little Grebes (Tachybaptus ruficollis), a rare vagrant to Australia!!! There was a male and two females, and what is more, one of the females had at least two chicks!!! As far as I am aware, this is the first record of this species breeding in Australia!

For Australia Ebird only has records of Little Grebe in Darwin (all well over a decade old at that), and very few at that. If the breeding birds you saw were in NSW (off your profile location), then they are basically certainly not Little. Australasian Grebe on the other hand is common and widespread throughout most of Australia, particularly on the eastern coast.

If you don't believe that I did see these grebes, that's perfectly fine.

You'll find not many birders are going to accept a sight report of a breeding trio of what would be extremely rare (unprecedented, even) vagrants when there's a very explainable common species...
 
I thought this might happen. Very unfortunately, I did not get any such proof. If you don't believe that I did see these grebes, that's perfectly fine.

Not to sound rude, but with a claimed sighting like this, the matter is a little more serious than "If you don't believe that I did see these grebes, that's perfectly fine."

If a pair of Little Grebes has bred in Australia, that's pretty big news and of big interest to the ornithological community. This would be a new species record entirely. But something like that needs proof. If you really think you saw a breeding trio and chicks of Little Grebe, I'd suggest you head back out there with a camera or at least a second pair of eyes and get some photos/recordings. Get the listing on ebird at least, let some others go out and try and prove it one way or the other.

~Thylo
 
I have looked at some more photos and found that the female with chicks was indeed an Australasian Grebe. I should probably have never said anything before doing more research.
 
Birds
241. Latham's Snipe
242. Striated Heron
243. Scaly-breasted Lorikeet
244. Pacific Golden Plover
245. Whimbrel
246. Comb-crested Jacana
247. Tawny Frogmouth
248. Black-tailed Godwit
249. Red Knot
250. Curlew Sandpiper
251. Little Tern
252. Brahminy Kite
253. Hoary-headed Grebe
254. Black-tailed Native Hen
255. Singing Honeyeater
256. Crimson Chat
257. White-fronted Honeyeater
258. Rainbow Bee-eater
259. Mulga Parrot
260. Emu
261. Orange Chat
262. Australian Pipit
263. Western Gerygone

Mammals
14. Western Grey Kangaroo

Reptiles
7. Long-necked Turtle
8. Eastern Water Dragon

:p

Hix
 
I have looked at some more photos and found that the female with chicks was indeed an Australasian Grebe. I should probably have never said anything before doing more research.
It is fine bring up observations but if it is an exceptional one expect it to be challenged. But that is how it should work, and if they were little grebes, vital that you did bring it up. So you brought it up, you were challenged, did some more research and decided that your original conclusion was wrong. You then informed the thread. That is how it should happen, and good on you for doing so.
 
Only one month left in the year...



BIRDS:

MRJ – 862
Mehdi – 806
ThylacineAlive – 688
oflory – 337
Tetzoo Quizzer – 300
Najade – 295
Hix – 263
birdsandbats – 261
CMP – 243
Mr. Zootycoon – 224
WhistlingKite24 – 219
Coelacanth18 – 209
Maguari – 206
boof – 203
Jaguar_X – 203
Ituri – 200
Macaw16 – 193
OskarGC – 189
DesertTortoise – 177
Prochilodus246 – 170
Junklekitteb – 170
OboeKade – 147
Bisonblake – 146
Great Argus – 132
Platypusboy – 130
Lota lota – 126
Crotalus – 118
BerdNerd – 116
Chlidonias – 113
WalkingAgnatha – 112
DesertRhino150 – 94
red river hog – 91
Tiktaalik – 71
amur leopard – 71
ifesbob – 51
Bactrian Deer – 45
Hipporex – 21
CleZooMan – 9
Ursus – 1


MAMMALS:

ThylacineAlive – 151
Giant Eland – 141
MRJ – 136
Najade – 123
Mehdi – 78
Jaguar_X – 41
RatioTile – 36
Ituri – 26
Mr. Zootycoon – 26
Coelacanth18 – 25
Maguari – 26
birdsandbats – 25
oflory – 24
Macaw16 – 23
CMP – 22
Tetzoo Quizzer – 21
Crotalus – 21
Bisonblake – 17
OskarGC – 17
WhistlingKite24 – 17
ifesbob – 16
Prochilodus246 – 16
Bactrian Deer – 15
BerdNerd – 15
Lota lota – 14
Hix – 14
DesertTortoise – 12
Chlidonias – 12
Junklekitteb – 10
red river hog – 9
DesertRhino150 – 9
Platypusboy – 9
Great Argus – 9
OboeKade – 8
WalkingAgnatha – 7
Hipporex – 7
amur leopard – 3
CleZooMan – 1
Tiktaalik – 1


HERPTILES:

Najade – 68 Herptiles total (49 Reptiles, 19 Amphibians)
Mr. Zootycoon – 38 Herptiles total (16 Reptiles, 22 Amphibians)
MRJ – 35 Herptiles total (29 Reptiles, 6 Amphibians)
WhistlingKite24 – 27 Herptiles total (22 Reptiles, 5 Amphibians)
DesertTortoise – 22 Herptiles total (14 Reptiles, 8 Amphibians)
OskarGC – 18 Herptiles total (14 Reptiles, 4 Amphibians)
ThylacineAlive – 17 Herptiles total (16 Reptiles, 1 Amphibian)
BerdNerd – 17 Herptiles total (10 Reptiles, 7 Amphibians)
Coelacanth18 – 17 Herptiles total (17 Reptiles, 0 Amphibians)
birdsandbats – 14 Herptiles total (6 Reptiles, 8 Amphibians)
Bisonblake – 13 Herptiles total (6 Reptiles, 7 Amphibians)
Junklekitteb – 13 Herptiles total (13 Reptiles, 0 Amphibians)
CMP – 11 Herptiles total (6 Reptiles, 5 Amphibians)
Crotalus – 11 Herptiles total (7 Reptiles, 4 Amphibians)
ifesbob – 9 Herptiles total (3 Reptiles, 6 Amphibians)
red river hog – 9 Herptiles total (9 Reptiles, 0 Amphibians)
Great Argus – 9 Herptiles total (6 Reptiles, 3 Amphibians)
Jaguar_X – 9 Herptiles total (8 Reptiles, 1 Amphibian)
Macaw16 – 8 Herptiles total (2 Reptiles, 6 Amphibians)
Prochilodus246 – 8 Herptiles total (4 Reptiles, 4 Amphibians)
Hix – 8 Herptiles total (7 Reptiles, 1 Amphibian)
amur leopard – 7 Herptiles total (4 Reptiles, 3 Amphibians)
Ituri – 6 Herptiles total (6 Reptiles, 0 Amphibians)
Bactrian Deer – 6 Herptiles total (4 Reptiles, 2 Amphibians)
OboeKade – 4 Herptiles total (3 Reptiles, 1 Amphibian)
WalkingAgnatha – 4 Herptiles total (4 Reptiles, 0 Amphibians)
oflory – 4 Herptiles total (2 Reptiles, 2 Amphibians)
Maguari – 4 Herptiles total (1 Reptile, 3 Amphibians)
Platypusboy – 3 Herptiles total (3 Reptiles, 0 Amphibians)
Lota lota – 2 Herptiles total (1 Reptile, 1 Amphibian)
DesertRhino150 – 1 Herptile total (0 Reptiles, 1 Amphibian)


FISH:

Hix – 60
MRJ – 27
Mr. Zootycoon – 22
red river hog – 17
Platypusboy – 17
DesertTortoise – 17
birdsandbats – 12
CMP – 11
WhistlingKite24 – 10
Lota lota – 7
Crotalus – 7
WalkingAgnatha – 4
BerdNerd – 4
Prochilodus246 – 3
Bisonblake – 2
DesertRhino150 – 2
Maguari – 2
Great Argus – 1
Hipporex – 1


INVERTEBRATES:

CMP – 295
Prochilodus246 – 291
WhistlingKite24 – 235
Mr. Zootycoon – 157 total (including 86 moths, 34 butterflies, 25 dragonflies, and 12 bees)
DesertTortoise – 107
MRJ – 96
Crotalus – 69
Maguari – 49
WalkingAgnatha – 49 total (including 36 insects; 6 arachnids; 4 molluscs; 1 annelid; 1 flatworm; 1 crustacean)
red river hog – 30
DesertRhino150 – 25
Great Argus – 22
BerdNerd – 20
Tetzoo Quizzer – 13 total (including 10 butterflies, 2 dragonflies, and 1 ladybird)
Platypusboy – 8
Junklekitteb – 7
Hipporex – 2
ifesbob – 1
Hix – 1
 
It is fine bring up observations but if it is an exceptional one expect it to be challenged. But that is how it should work, and if they were little grebes, vital that you did bring it up. So you brought it up, you were challenged, did some more research and decided that your original conclusion was wrong. You then informed the thread. That is how it should happen, and good on you for doing so.
Thank you. That made me feel a lot better.
 
Some great seasonable diver action at Staines Reservoirs - very possibly my last two new birds for the year, unless something unexpected turns up!

336. Great northern diver
337. Black-throated diver

I spoke too soon! A weekend trip to Dorset produced an unexpected razorbill off the beach.

338. Razorbill
 
I have looked at some more photos and found that the female with chicks was indeed an Australasian Grebe. I should probably have never said anything before doing more research.
I've been bird watching for close to 40 years. I still get things wrong from time to time. The challenge of trying to ID something it what I love about it.
 
Finally catching up again on my Kenya trip photos and finally getting some more birds IDed. Came across one encounter I'd forgotten about, which adds a previously removed species back on the list!

686) Mouse-Colored Penduline-Tit Anthoscopus musculus
687) Purple-Banded Sunbird Cinnyris bifasciatus
688) Southern Black Flycatcher Melaenornis pammelaina


~Thylo

This past Saturday I took a drive to Rhode Island. I wanting to revisit the Biomes Marine Biology Center for a little while now and that gave me a good excuse to chase some western rarities in the state as well. Since about 11/23 (Thanksgiving here in the US), Rhode Island has been hosting some pretty spectacular western vagrants that have remained relatively stationary since. Sedge Wren, Pacific Loon, Townsend's Warbler, and an insanely lost Pacific-Slope Flycatcher have all been being seen with frequency the past couple weeks. I mapped out a route for the flycatcher --> loon --> warbler --> aquarium with the wren being saved for if I had some daylight left as that's been the most difficult to find from what I hear.

Unfortunately, I ended up 0/4 on the bird front.. I started with the flycatcher, by far the easiest of the vagrants to see. Every day since it's discovery it has been found around 9am feeding at one location and then around 1pm it moves to a secondary location, with some infrequent sightings at a third spot, all on the edge of a small patch of forest within a state campground. I arrived around 8am to the sight and stayed until around 11:30. After over a week of consistent sightings, Saturday became the first day the bird was not seen on-schedule. After spending so many hours on the flycatcher, I knew my plans were at risk of entirely falling about if I did not keep moving. I made my way to the loon spot, only about a 15 minute drive away. The loon had been seen around 9am that morning, but by this point in time it was long gone and has not turned up since. While I was combing the beach, other birders slightly ahead of me had spotted a few Bonaparte's Gulls and a single Lesser Black-Backed Gull, two other species I lack for the year. Unfortunately, by the time I'd caught up the birds had seemingly moved further down the shoreline. I did pick up one unexpected duck while here, however, ultimately my only new bird of the day.

It was now around 1pm and I had a choice: try for the close-by flycatcher again or continue forward. It was about an additional 30 minutes drive to the aquarium and 45 to the warbler. I decided to grab some lunch nearby and see if anyone would report the flycatcher. When nothing came in over the next 20 minutes, I made my way towards the aquarium. I decided to abandon the warbler as I'd learned it hadn't been seen since the prior Tuesday. I arrived, paid, and as I stepped up to the first tank, a report came in that the flycatcher had reappeared at its normal afternoon feeding spot. I conducted a rather rushed visit through the (thankfully) small aquarium, then hightailed it the 40 minutes back to the flycatcher spot, arriving at its feeding grounds with about 20 minutes of solid daylight left. As I had a feeling would happen, I arrived to find no birders remaining and no bird to be seen. A rather frustrating end to a long day with a long drive home ahead of me.

689) North American Ruddy Duck Oxyura jamaicensis

As mentioned, the ruddy duck seen while looking fruitless for the Pacific Loon is the only new addition for the day despite many potential additions in the area. That said, in a way that is a testament to the success I've had this year, as while I didn't see much in the way of new or targeted birds, I did see a fair number of species I'd seldom or never seen prior to this year, including Red-Throated Loon, Horned Grebe, Razorbill, Brown Creeper, and Golden-Crowned Kinglet.

To add to this already too long post, I've finally finished combing through my Kenya photos for new IDs. There are still a few tough bird and especially amphibians that remain unidentified, but I'm not too sure I'm going to be able to get much further with those that remain, so this will likely be my last update with Kenyan species.

Birds
690) Grey Penduline-Tit Anthoscopus caroli
691) Mosque Swallow Cecropis senegalensis
692) Tacazze Sunbird Nectarinia tacazze
693) Fine-Banded Woodpecker Campethera taeniolaema


Reptiles
16) White-Headed Dwarf Gecko Lygodactylus mombasicus
17) Tropical House Gecko Hemidactylus mabouia

18) Baobab Leaf-Toed Gecko Hemidactylus platycephalus
19) Speckle-Lipped Skink Trachylepis maculilabris
20) Giant Plated Lizard Matobosaurus validus
21) Speke's Sand Lizard Heliobolus spekii
22) Von Höhnel's Chameleon Trioceros hoehnelii
23) Gregory's Blue-Headed Agama Acanthocercus gregorii
24) Kenya Rock Agama Agama lionotus

25) Nile Monitor Varanus niloticus
26) Large-Eyed Cat Snake Telescopus dhara

Amphibians
2) Marsabit Clawed Frog Xenopus borealis
3) Müller's Clawed Frog Xenopus muelleri
4) Garman's Toad Sclerophrys garmani
5) Guttural Toad Sclerophrys gutturalis
6) Anchieta's Grass Frog Ptychadena anchietae


Also going to add the one I've seen this year in CT because why not:
7) American Bullfrog Lithobates catesbeianus

I also saw one or two species of puddle frogs (Phrynobatrachus), but I doubt I'll ever be able to identify those to species level. I also heard a number of reed frog species but failed to ever actually lay eyes on one.

Now for some fun stuff -

African Lepidoptera
1) Walker's Owl Moth Erebus walkeri
2) Reticulate Bagnest Moth Anaphe reticulata
3) Alicia Amber Acraea alicia
4) Spotted Joker Byblia ilithyia
5) Green Veined Emperor Charaxes candiope
6) Pearl Emperor Charaxes varanes
7) Dorippus Tiger Butterfly Danaus dorippus
8) Gold-Banded Forester Euphaedra neophron
9) Pied Piper Eurytela hiarbas
10) African Diadem Hypolimnas misippus
11) Yellow Pansy Junonia hierta
12) Dark Blue Pansy Junonia oenone
13) Eyed Pansy Junonia orithya
14) Blotched Leopard Lachnoptera ayresii
15) Evening Brown Melanitis leda
16) Albizia Sailer Neptis laeta
17) Forest Mother-of-Pearl Protogoniomorpha parhassus
18) Natal Acraea Stephenia natalica
19) Abyssinian Admiral Vanessa abyssinica
20) Red Admiral
Vanessa atalanta (seen in France during my layover)
21) Common Painted Lady Vanessa cardui
22) Dimorphic Admiral Vanessa dimorphica
23) Large-Striped Swordtail Graphium antheus
24) Black Swordtail Graphium colonna
25) Chrapkowski's Green-Banded Swallowtail Papilio chrapkowskii
26) Citrus Swallowtail Papilio demodocus
27) Mackinnon's Swallowtail Papilio mackinnoni
28) Veined White Belenois gidica
29) Red Tip Colotis antevippe
30) Magenta Tip Colotis celimene
31) Purple Tip Colotis hetaera
32) African Migrant Catopsilia florella
33) Common Grass Yellow Eurema hecabe
34) Convolvulus Hawk-Moth Agrius convolvuli
35) Comma Nephele Hawk-Moth Nephele comma


African Decapoda
1) Inversed Fiddler Crab Cranuca inversa
2) Western Calling Fiddler Crab Gelasimus hesperiae
3) Pink Ghost Crab Ocypode ryderi
4) East African River Crab Potamonautes johnstoni


African Scorpions
1) Speckled Pygmy-Thicktail Afrolychas burdoi
2) Eastern Ridge-Back Scorpion Hottentota eminii
3) Obst's Arrow-Breasted Scorpion Lychas obsti
4) Pallid Thicktail Scorpion Parabuthus pallidus


African Hymenoptera
1) East African Lowland Honey Bee Apis mellifera
2) Double-Banded Carpenter Bee Xylocopa caffra
3) Giant Carpenter Bee Xylocopa flavorufa
4) Spirifex Mud-Dauber Sceliphron spirifex
5) Black Mud Wasp Delta emarginatum
6) cocktail ant Crematogaster mimosae
7) East African Safari Ant Dorylus nigricans
8) African Matabele Ant Megaponera analis


~Thylo
 
This past Saturday I took a drive to Rhode Island. I wanting to revisit the Biomes Marine Biology Center for a little while now and that gave me a good excuse to chase some western rarities in the state as well. Since about 11/23 (Thanksgiving here in the US), Rhode Island has been hosting some pretty spectacular western vagrants that have remained relatively stationary since. Sedge Wren, Pacific Loon, Townsend's Warbler, and an insanely lost Pacific-Slope Flycatcher have all been being seen with frequency the past couple weeks. I mapped out a route for the flycatcher --> loon --> warbler --> aquarium with the wren being saved for if I had some daylight left as that's been the most difficult to find from what I hear.

Unfortunately, I ended up 0/4 on the bird front.. I started with the flycatcher, by far the easiest of the vagrants to see. Every day since it's discovery it has been found around 9am feeding at one location and then around 1pm it moves to a secondary location, with some infrequent sightings at a third spot, all on the edge of a small patch of forest within a state campground. I arrived around 8am to the sight and stayed until around 11:30. After over a week of consistent sightings, Saturday became the first day the bird was not seen on-schedule. After spending so many hours on the flycatcher, I knew my plans were at risk of entirely falling about if I did not keep moving. I made my way to the loon spot, only about a 15 minute drive away. The loon had been seen around 9am that morning, but by this point in time it was long gone and has not turned up since. While I was combing the beach, other birders slightly ahead of me had spotted a few Bonaparte's Gulls and a single Lesser Black-Backed Gull, two other species I lack for the year. Unfortunately, by the time I'd caught up the birds had seemingly moved further down the shoreline. I did pick up one unexpected duck while here, however, ultimately my only new bird of the day.

It was now around 1pm and I had a choice: try for the close-by flycatcher again or continue forward. It was about an additional 30 minutes drive to the aquarium and 45 to the warbler. I decided to grab some lunch nearby and see if anyone would report the flycatcher. When nothing came in over the next 20 minutes, I made my way towards the aquarium. I decided to abandon the warbler as I'd learned it hadn't been seen since the prior Tuesday. I arrived, paid, and as I stepped up to the first tank, a report came in that the flycatcher had reappeared at its normal afternoon feeding spot. I conducted a rather rushed visit through the (thankfully) small aquarium, then hightailed it the 40 minutes back to the flycatcher spot, arriving at its feeding grounds with about 20 minutes of solid daylight left. As I had a feeling would happen, I arrived to find no birders remaining and no bird to be seen. A rather frustrating end to a long day with a long drive home ahead of me.

689) North American Ruddy Duck Oxyura jamaicensis

As mentioned, the ruddy duck seen while looking fruitless for the Pacific Loon is the only new addition for the day despite many potential additions in the area. That said, in a way that is a testament to the success I've had this year, as while I didn't see much in the way of new or targeted birds, I did see a fair number of species I'd seldom or never seen prior to this year, including Red-Throated Loon, Horned Grebe, Razorbill, Brown Creeper, and Golden-Crowned Kinglet.

To add to this already too long post, I've finally finished combing through my Kenya photos for new IDs. There are still a few tough bird and especially amphibians that remain unidentified, but I'm not too sure I'm going to be able to get much further with those that remain, so this will likely be my last update with Kenyan species.

Birds
690) Grey Penduline-Tit Anthoscopus caroli
691) Mosque Swallow Cecropis senegalensis
692) Tacazze Sunbird Nectarinia tacazze
693) Fine-Banded Woodpecker Campethera taeniolaema


Reptiles
16) White-Headed Dwarf Gecko Lygodactylus mombasicus
17) Tropical House Gecko Hemidactylus mabouia

18) Baobab Leaf-Toed Gecko Hemidactylus platycephalus
19) Speckle-Lipped Skink Trachylepis maculilabris
20) Giant Plated Lizard Matobosaurus validus
21) Speke's Sand Lizard Heliobolus spekii
22) Von Höhnel's Chameleon Trioceros hoehnelii
23) Gregory's Blue-Headed Agama Acanthocercus gregorii
24) Kenya Rock Agama Agama lionotus

25) Nile Monitor Varanus niloticus
26) Large-Eyed Cat Snake Telescopus dhara

Amphibians
2) Marsabit Clawed Frog Xenopus borealis
3) Müller's Clawed Frog Xenopus muelleri
4) Garman's Toad Sclerophrys garmani
5) Guttural Toad Sclerophrys gutturalis
6) Anchieta's Grass Frog Ptychadena anchietae


Also going to add the one I've seen this year in CT because why not:
7) American Bullfrog Lithobates catesbeianus

I also saw one or two species of puddle frogs (Phrynobatrachus), but I doubt I'll ever be able to identify those to species level. I also heard a number of reed frog species but failed to ever actually lay eyes on one.

Now for some fun stuff -

African Lepidoptera
1) Walker's Owl Moth Erebus walkeri
2) Reticulate Bagnest Moth Anaphe reticulata
3) Alicia Amber Acraea alicia
4) Spotted Joker Byblia ilithyia
5) Green Veined Emperor Charaxes candiope
6) Pearl Emperor Charaxes varanes
7) Dorippus Tiger Butterfly Danaus dorippus
8) Gold-Banded Forester Euphaedra neophron
9) Pied Piper Eurytela hiarbas
10) African Diadem Hypolimnas misippus
11) Yellow Pansy Junonia hierta
12) Dark Blue Pansy Junonia oenone
13) Eyed Pansy Junonia orithya
14) Blotched Leopard Lachnoptera ayresii
15) Evening Brown Melanitis leda
16) Albizia Sailer Neptis laeta
17) Forest Mother-of-Pearl Protogoniomorpha parhassus
18) Natal Acraea Stephenia natalica
19) Abyssinian Admiral Vanessa abyssinica
20) Red Admiral
Vanessa atalanta (seen in France during my layover)
21) Common Painted Lady Vanessa cardui
22) Dimorphic Admiral Vanessa dimorphica
23) Large-Striped Swordtail Graphium antheus
24) Black Swordtail Graphium colonna
25) Chrapkowski's Green-Banded Swallowtail Papilio chrapkowskii
26) Citrus Swallowtail Papilio demodocus
27) Mackinnon's Swallowtail Papilio mackinnoni
28) Veined White Belenois gidica
29) Red Tip Colotis antevippe
30) Magenta Tip Colotis celimene
31) Purple Tip Colotis hetaera
32) African Migrant Catopsilia florella
33) Common Grass Yellow Eurema hecabe
34) Convolvulus Hawk-Moth Agrius convolvuli
35) Comma Nephele Hawk-Moth Nephele comma


African Decapoda
1) Inversed Fiddler Crab Cranuca inversa
2) Western Calling Fiddler Crab Gelasimus hesperiae
3) Pink Ghost Crab Ocypode ryderi
4) East African River Crab Potamonautes johnstoni


African Scorpions
1) Speckled Pygmy-Thicktail Afrolychas burdoi
2) Eastern Ridge-Back Scorpion Hottentota eminii
3) Obst's Arrow-Breasted Scorpion Lychas obsti
4) Pallid Thicktail Scorpion Parabuthus pallidus


African Hymenoptera
1) East African Lowland Honey Bee Apis mellifera
2) Double-Banded Carpenter Bee Xylocopa caffra
3) Giant Carpenter Bee Xylocopa flavorufa
4) Spirifex Mud-Dauber Sceliphron spirifex
5) Black Mud Wasp Delta emarginatum
6) cocktail ant Crematogaster mimosae
7) East African Safari Ant Dorylus nigricans
8) African Matabele Ant Megaponera analis


~Thylo
I missed a Pacific Loon this weekend, too. That's a nemesis bird of mine, I just keep missing every time they show up in Wisconsin.

How did people ID the flycatcher as a Pacific-slope? They're considered essentially impossible to distinguish from Cordilleran Flycatcher, and most taxonomic schemes lump them nowadays anyway.
 
I missed a Pacific Loon this weekend, too. That's a nemesis bird of mine, I just keep missing every time they show up in Wisconsin.

How did people ID the flycatcher as a Pacific-slope? They're considered essentially impossible to distinguish from Cordilleran Flycatcher, and most taxonomic schemes lump them nowadays anyway.

Pacific Loons show up in CT from time to time, too, but more often than not the bird is seen once and then never again.

The flycatcher has been IDed as the lumped Western Flycatcher. A few have recorded audio from the bird and say the calls are more consistent with PS than Cordilleran, however no official consensus has come out yet on that one.

~Thylo
 
Pacific Loons show up in CT from time to time, too, but more often than not the bird is seen once and then never again.

The flycatcher has been IDed as the lumped Western Flycatcher. A few have recorded audio from the bird and say the calls are more consistent with PS than Cordilleran, however no official consensus has come out yet on that one.

~Thylo
I know you didn't see it so the point is perhaps moot, but calls are unfortunately unreliable for differentiating those two "species" - hence why they got lumped.
 
Back
Top