Looks like Chlidonias may not win!
Hix, #436 was an Orange-bellied Parrot?
So I went back to the Salton Sea again, but this time with the local Audubon chapter and I got 10 new species.
238. White-tailed Kite
239. Black-bellied Plover
240. Snowy Plover
241. Red-necked Phalarope
242. Laughing Gull
243. Black Tern
244. Lesser Nighthawk
245. Gila Woodpecker
246. Peregrine Falcon
247. Bank Swallow
Poicephalus rufiventris: orange-bellied or red-bellied parrot (the name is variable).Hix, #436 was an Orange-bellied Parrot?
Good luck! Looks like the mammal race for a win will be between Hix and Maguari.Writing this from Goba. Wish me luck - tomorrow the plateau beckons...
From 2 weeks ago from the Coastal Center at Milford Point:
BIRDS:
59. Snowy Egret
60. Yellow-Crowned Night Heron
61. Mute Swan
62. Purple Martin
63. Double-Crested Cormorant
64. White-Winged Scoter
65. American Oystercatcher
66. Laughing Gull
Ah.... but *which* species of Lesser Galago?
should the terrapin be number 9? I have you down as 8 already for reptiles.BIRDS:
67. House Finch
REPTILES:
7. Diamondback Terrapin
146 Olive-backed Oriole
I got a tip-off from a birder that this bird was seen in the Gresswell forest Reserve (Macleod, Victoria). Naturally, I couldn't find it, but the birder was kind enough to meet me, and like an oriole-whisperer, he found it by listening for the call (which, given its mimicry of lorikeets, I couldn't identify). We had prolonged views at eye-level for a good 5 minutes.
Poicephalus rufiventris: orange-bellied or red-bellied parrot (the name is variable).
Ah ok ok I get you. Nice bird.