A couple of days in Suffolk and my first visit to minsmere have given me a few more
214. Nightingale
215. Broad-billed sandpiper
216. Curlew sandpiper
217. Dartford warbler
218. Red-necked palarope
219. Little gull
220. Beaded tit
I already had you down as having two reptiles on my tally sheet. Does that mean you actually have seven now? Or does the five above include the previous two? Or am I just proving that I cannot count herptiles (again!)?
very good, your seven herptiles currently puts you first-equal with lintworm.The five above counts the previous two reptiles. And I have two amphibians for good measure.
1 Pacific Tree Frog (Pseudacris regilla)
2 American Bullfrog (Lithobates catesbeianus)
Added another mammal
22 American Pika (Ochotona princeps)
Forgot to add a new bird I saw last Tuesday:
124. Lesser whitethroat Sylvia curruca
I also saw a new species from the car on the drive up to North Norfolk:
125. Red kite Milvus milvus
I am going to be in North Norfolk for a week, by which time I will have hopefully either equalised or beaten last year's total of 131 bird species.
@Chli, "fortunately" I saw an agile lizard 2 days ago, so that puts my herptile total at 8 (5 reptiles, 3 amphibians)
And 2 new birds
140. Mistle trush
141. Eurasian crag martin
I have also seen several European foxes the last days, 2 times a young litter and also an adult one. But for this year it is only a new subspecies, as I have seen a red fox already in Morocco this year.
I decided that rather than go back and constantly edit what I saw in Norfolk, I would just wait until I am home and then add a total list.
126. Little tern Sternula albifrons
127. Eurasian spoonbill Platalea leucorodia
128. Mediterranean gull Ichthyaetus melanocephalus
129. Little gull Hydrocoloeus minutus
130. Ruff Philomachus pugnax
131. Barn owl Tyto alba
132. Grey partridge Perdix perdix
133. Eurasian dotterel Charadrius morinellus
134. Sandwich tern Thalasseus sandvicensis
135. Eurasian hobby Falco subbuteo
136. Bearded reedling Panurus biarmicus
That means that I have now broken my record for the whole of last year already!
6) Southern elephant seal Mirounga leonina - Finally!!
...
This is my first new mammal since Horsfield's tarsier in Borneo last year.
6) Southern elephant seal Mirounga leonina - Finally!!
Elephant seals are a fairly regular vagrant to NZ coasts from the subantarctic, but they always seem to appear where-ever I am not! On Friday a young male arrived on the Kaikoura coast, a couple of hours north of my location, and today (Wednesday) I managed to get up there to try and find him.
Brilliant animal! So much more amazing in person than I would have imagined. I would LOVE to see a full adult male though!!