ZooChat Big Year 2020

Well, these last three days have been alright:

23/10/2020 (Cap Ghir, Morocco)
BIRDS:
*160 - Cory's shearwater, Calonectris borealis
161 - Scopoli's shearwater, Calonectris diomedea
162 - Pomarine jaeger, Stercorarius pomarinus

24/10/2020
(Cap Ghir, Morocco)
BIRDS:
163 - Parasitic jaeger, Stercorarius parasiticus
164 - Common scoter, Melanitta nigra
165 - Great skua, Stercorarius skua

---
(Embouchure de l'Oued Souss, Morocco)
BIRDS:
166 - West African crested tern, Thalasseus albididorsalis
167 - Great white egret, Ardea alba

25/20/2020
(Cap Ghir, Morocco)
BIRDS:
168 - Red phalarope, Phalaropus fulicarius
169 - Brown booby, Sula leucogaster


Day 1: A birder friend of mine who lives 6 hours away but came here for holidays and I, met in front of Cap Ghir, which is probably the best spot (or one of the best at least) for seawatching in Morocco. He brought an extra scope with him (as I don't have one) so I could do some seawatching for the first time in my life!

Didn't know seawatching would be this fun, especially when you see around 770 Northern gannets passing throughout the day, some very close, as well as your first ever jaeger species and your second and third shearwater species ever!

The only downside of the day was missing Common scoter while my friend saw them but nothing too bad.

Day 2: We met again at Cap Ghir and saw even more species than the eve, including this time 800 Northern gannets, 85 Cory's shearwater, 3 Scopoli's shearwater, 2 Pomarine jaegers as well as 3 new lifers: 1 Parasitic jaeger, 4 Common scoters (which I had missed the eve, my first seaduck!) and 2 Great skuas (my first skuas)

We then headed to do some gulling at a nice spot called Anza with no particular highlight barring a decent number of Lesser black-backed gulls (~1200 of them) before heading to my local spot where we saw 64 species (only the second time I see 60+ species there). The highlights were: no less than 19 Eurasian teal (never seen this many before), a very late European turtle dove, 5 species of terns including a lifer West African crested tern (a species I've been looking since a while now, which means I only have to see 2 more species of terns before I've seen every native species of this group in Morocco) as well as a lifer Great white egret (a rarity this south!)

In total, 78 species were seen on the day (a record for me in a single day) including 5 lifers!

Day 3: We met one more time, once again at Cap Ghir to do some seawatching, before my friend headed to his hometown. The conditions were better for seawatching than the previous two days because it was quite windy, meaning we've seen what we see usually but in bigger numbers: 5 Great skuas, 2 Pomarine jaegers, 2 Parasitic jaegers, 172 Cory's/Scopoli's shearwater, no less than 1200 Northern gannet throughout the day etc...

The first really good sighting came in when my friend noticed two small birds heading north which he easily identified as Red phalaropes, a lifer for me. This species isn't super rare in Morocco but it is rare enough for me to have thought we wouldn't be able to top this sighting on the three days...

...That was until, at 9:40 approximately, my friend noticed a weird booby/gannet like bird, close enough to us to give good but fleeting views. As we observed it, we could notice that it had a yellowish beak, a white belly that contrasted a lot with its brown back and especially an all brown rump (compared to juvenile gannets which have white rumps): it appeared clear to both of us that we were seeing was a Brown booby!

This species is only very rarely seen in Morocco, always in pelagic or seawatching during their fall migration to West Africa when some individuals wander more towards the coast than they should. It would be only the 7th record for Morocco if accepted, making it one of the rarest birds I've seen here. (Apparently, two other brown boobies were found in the Western Palearctic the same day: one in Italy and one in the Netherlands which means it was a particularly insane day for them!)

TL;DR: All-in-all, by far my best weekend birding with a total of 80 species observed including 10 lifers (and one of my best sighting if not my best sighting in Morocco). My first three attempts at seawatching were a total success and I hope to try to do this more in the future!

*160: I noticed that I forgot to count jackdaw for the year even if I've seen some last month, this means Western orphean warbler is now the 159th bird of the year thus leading to Cory's shearwater being n°160.

The October frenzy continues! A 2 hour session at my local spot was pretty rich in bird with 55 species seen (including 5 bird-of-prey species as well as 4 tern species) and granted me two more additions for the year:

27/10/2020 (Embouchure de l'Oued Souss, Morocco)
BIRDS:
170 - Common whitethroat, Curruca communis
171 - Northern pintail, Anas acuta

The whitethroat is pretty late in term of phenology so it is a nice pick-up but the pintails were even better as it is only the second time I ever see some (and this was by far the best view of the two)

This means I've now officially beaten last year's record of bird seen in a year! I never thought I could achieve this seeing how I couldn't bird at all from mid-March to early June due to lockdown and because I barely picked up any bird outside of Morocco due to the pandemic.
 
Bull ants and school don’t mix very well.

143. Common Inchmen (Myrmecia forficata)

Quoting myself earlier in the day "This day couldn't get much better" It got a lot lot lot better considering it's just a normal school day

144. Gisborne Cockroach (Drymaplaneta semivitta)
 
The October frenzy continues! A 2 hour session at my local spot was pretty rich in bird with 55 species seen (including 5 bird-of-prey species as well as 4 tern species) and granted me two more additions for the year:

27/10/2020 (Embouchure de l'Oued Souss, Morocco)
BIRDS:
170 - Common whitethroat, Curruca communis
171 - Northern pintail, Anas acuta

The whitethroat is pretty late in term of phenology so it is a nice pick-up but the pintails were even better as it is only the second time I ever see some (and this was by far the best view of the two)

This means I've now officially beaten last year's record of bird seen in a year! I never thought I could achieve this seeing how I couldn't bird at all from mid-March to early June due to lockdown and because I barely picked up any bird outside of Morocco due to the pandemic.

The nicest of lifers to cloture an October month that has been by far my best month birding!

29/10/2020 (Issen, Morocco)
BIRDS:
172 - Red-necked nightjar, Caprimulgus ruficollis

30/10/2020
(Issen, Morocco)
INVERTS:
16 - African grass blue, Zizeeria knysna

My first ever nightjar, what a sighting! Their flight is very characteristic and I've had good views of this one. Species n°117 of the month.
 
It's the start of November, with only two months left in the year..


BIRDS:

MRJ – 317
carl the birder – 296
Dannelboyz – 290
Vision – 274
Hix – 255
birdsandbats – 249
Ituri – 236
Mr. Zootycoon – 226
Maguari – 202
boof – 196
lintworm – 186
Birdlover – 184
Mehdi – 172
KevinVar – 171
animal_expert01 – 131
Coelacanth18 – 126
Najade – 123
Yoshistar888 – 118
WhistlingKite24 – 114
Junklekitteb – 96
oflory – 85
DesertRhino150 – 77
TeaLovingDave – 74
Macaw16 – 67
Chlidonias – 60
ThylacineAlive – 56
OstrichMania – 56
Fignewton – 56
Crowthorne – 54
Ursus – 50
TZDugong – 36
KevinB – 34
Luca Bronzi – 33
amur leopard – 27
Jungle Man – 18
ZooBinh – 5
Pleistohorse – 3
DavidBrown – 2
CGSwans – 1


MAMMALS:

carl the birder – 42
MRJ – 40
Dannelboyz – 38
lintworm – 28
Maguari – 25
Najade – 23
Coelacanth18 – 23
TZDugong – 21
Ituri – 20
Mr. Zootycoon – 17
Vision – 17
birdsandbats – 17
Hix – 16
animal_expert01 – 14
TeaLovingDave – 10
KevinVar – 10
Birdlover – 10
Crowthorne – 9
Macaw16 – 9
Yoshistar888 – 8
WhistlingKite24 – 8
DesertRhino150 – 7
ThylacineAlive – 7
Ursus – 7
oflory – 6
Junklekitteb – 6
Fignewton – 6
KevinB – 4
Luca Bronzi – 4
ZooBinh – 3
Mehdi – 3
amur leopard – 2
Chlidonias – 2
OstrichMania – 2
Pleistohorse – 1
DavidBrown – 1
Jungle Man – 1


HERPTILES:

Dannelboyz – 36 Herptiles total (21 Reptiles, 15 Amphibians)
MRJ – 20 Herptiles total (19 Reptiles, 1 Amphibian)
animal_expert01 – 18 Herptiles total (11 Reptiles, 7 Amphibians)
Mr. Zootycoon – 13 Herptiles total (4 Reptiles, 9 Amphibians)
birdsandbats – 11 Herptiles total (6 Reptiles, 5 Amphibians)
Mehdi – 11 Herptiles total (9 Reptiles, 2 Amphibians)
WhistlingKite24 – 10 Herptiles total (9 Reptiles, 1 Amphibians)
Ituri – 10 Herptiles total (5 Reptiles, 5 Amphibians)
Birdlover – 10 Herptiles total (3 Reptiles, 7 Amphibians)
Hix – 10 Herptiles total (7 Reptiles, 3 Amphibians)
Najade – 10 Herptiles total (4 Reptiles, 6 Amphibians)
carl the birder – 9 Herptiles total (7 Reptiles, 2 Amphibians)
Vision – 8 Herptiles total (3 Reptiles, 5 Amphibians)
lintworm – 7 Herptiles total (4 Reptiles, 3 Amphibians)
Maguari – 6 Herptiles total (2 Reptiles, 4 Amphibians)
Fignewton – 6 Herptiles total (4 Reptiles, 2 Amphibians)
Yoshistar888 – 6 Herptiles total (6 Reptiles, 0 Amphibians)
Junklekitteb – 6 Herptiles total (5 Reptiles, 1 Amphibians)
Jungle Man – 5 Herptiles total (4 Reptiles, 1 Amphibians)
TZDugong – 4 Herptiles total (2 Reptiles, 2 Amphibians)
Ursus – 4 Herptiles total (3 Reptiles, 1 Amphibians)
Luca Bronzi – 3 Herptiles total (3 Reptiles, 0 Amphibians)
Macaw16 – 3 Herptiles total (1 Reptiles, 2 Amphibians)
KevinB – 2 Herptiles total (1 Reptiles, 1 Amphibians)
oflory – 1 Herptiles total (1 Reptiles, 0 Amphibians)
DesertRhino150 – 1 Herptiles total (1 Reptiles, 0 Amphibians)


FISH:

animal_expert01 – 24
Luca Bronzi – 21
Yoshistar888 – 14
birdsandbats – 8
Maguari – 6
Birdlover – 6
Hix – 4
Ursus – 4
Vision – 4
Dannelboyz – 3
WhistlingKite24 – 2
MRJ – 2
Mr. Zootycoon – 2


INVERTEBRATES:

Mr. Zootycoon – 191
Vision – 156
Yoshistar888 – 144
Birdlover – 119
lintworm – 88
Ursus – 77
Maguari – 52
WhistlingKite24 – 46
DesertRhino150 – 33
MRJ – 26
KevinB – 21
Mehdi – 16
Dannelboyz – 8
Luca Bronzi – 6
animal_expert01 – 3
 
Quoting myself earlier in the day "This day couldn't get much better" It got a lot lot lot better considering it's just a normal school day

144. Gisborne Cockroach (Drymaplaneta semivitta)

Some inverts that were seen at school on Friday!, as well as an identification from the walk in the outer suburbs near the Findon Creek

Findon Creek

145. Giant Sugar Ant (Camponotus intrepidus)

Unspecified

146. Varied Dusky Blue (Candalides hyacinthinus)
147. Caper White (Belenois aurota)

148. Common House Centipede (Scutigera coleoptrata)*

Edit: this next entry won’t count as I’ve already seen this species this year but I think the form is cool enough to warrant a mention.

- White Banded House Jumping Spider (hypoblemum griseum) Leopard form
 
Last edited:
Some inverts that were seen at school on Friday!, as well as an identification from the walk in the outer suburbs near the Findon Creek

Findon Creek

145. Giant Sugar Ant (Camponotus intrepidus)

Unspecified

146. Varied Dusky Blue (Candalides hyacinthinus)
147. Caper White (Belenois aurota)

148. Common House Centipede (Scutigera coleoptrata)*

Edit: this next entry won’t count as I’ve already seen this species this year but I think the form is cool enough to warrant a mention.

- White Banded House Jumping Spider (hypoblemum griseum) Leopard form

Organ Pipes National Park


Birds

119. Striated Fieldwren (Calamanthus fuliginosus)
120. Brush Cuckoo (Cacomantis variolosus)
121. Grey Shrike Thrush (Colluricincla harmonica)

122. Pallid Cuckoo (Cacomantis pallidus)
123. Nankeen Kestrel (Falco cenchroides)
124. Black Falcon (Falco subniger)

Summary of birds: Very good including a few nice species not listed such as Red Browed Finch, Black Faced Cuckooshrike, Brown Falcon and Superb Fairy Wren.

Invertebrates

149. Baby Bullant (Myrmecia urens)
150. Red Headed Spiderant (Leptomyrmex erythrocephalus)
151. Blue Spotted Hawker (Adversaeschna brevistyla)
152. Multi Spotted Darner (Austroaeschna multipunctata)
153. Southern Vicetail (Hemigomphus gouldii)
154. Compost Fly (Bibio imitator)


 
Are Striated Fieldwrens even found at Organ Pipes NP?

I originally had my doubts as they weren’t on the Avibase list (neither is Pallid Cuckoo), however there was no species it could otherwise have been. It was also the right habitat, montane and lowland grasslands with a swamp.

I am 100% confident in it
 
I originally had my doubts as they weren’t on the Avibase list (neither is Pallid Cuckoo), however there was no species it could otherwise have been. It was also the right habitat, montane and lowland grasslands with a swamp.

I am 100% confident in it
Pallid Cuckoos are migratory, so seeing them in random places isn't unlikely. However I wasn't aware that Striated Fieldwrens are found in that park - they may indeed be there but it seems unexpected to me.
 
Pallid Cuckoos are migratory, so seeing them in random places isn't unlikely. However I wasn't aware that Striated Fieldwrens are found in that park - they may indeed be there but it seems unexpected to me.

Have you been to organ pipes before?

It is a pretty cool place, has amazing rock structures such as Rosette Rock and the Organ Pipes themselves, the wildlife is spotty but good, especially invertebrates, I did manage to see a mammal today being the Eastern Grey Kangaroo (third time of the year) but that was about it. The only thing I don’t like about is the ants, last time I was there I only saw a single Banded Sugar Ant but this time I saw Inchmen, Jack Jumpers, Giant Sugar Ants, Banded Sugar ants and Baby Bullants and Meat Ants all in plague proportions as well as two harmless ants being the Red Headed Spider ant and the introduced Argentine ant.

Does anyone know a good place to find Swamp Wallabies (not including Phillip Island) as I’m not sure if I’ll get to Phillip Island later in the year. I’ve seen plenty before but never any on the mainland.
 
Have you been to organ pipes before?

Does anyone know a good place to find Swamp Wallabies (not including Phillip Island) as I’m not sure if I’ll get to Phillip Island later in the year. I’ve seen plenty before but never any on the mainland.
No, I haven't been to Organ Pipes NP.

For Swamp Wallabies, I see them any time I'm at Sherbrook Forest. They seem pretty common there.
 
I am? Must have missed a post back there somewhere...
It was this one, from June:

Took a walk to the local country park. The Chiffchaff was a nice spot as I've been hearing them all lockdown but they've been very good at hiding. The Bank Vole was a complete surprise!

Mammals
9. Bank Vole, Myodes glareolus

Birds
52. Chiffchaff, Phylloscopus collybita
53. Great Crested Grebe, Podiceps cristatus
 
Does anyone know a good place to find Swamp Wallabies (not including Phillip Island) as I’m not sure if I’ll get to Phillip Island later in the year. I’ve seen plenty before but never any on the mainland.
Cranbourne Botanic Gardens is a surety. If going get in touch and I will tell you where.
 
eBird shows no sightings of Striated Fieldwren from Organ Pipes NP, but it doesn't seem too far from a place with quite a few recent sightings.
 
Cranbourne Botanic Gardens is a surety. If going get in touch and I will tell you where.

Not within 25km unfortunately (although it will be lifted soonish), although ironically the only time I ever am in Cranbourne is on the way to Phillip Island :p.


eBird shows no sightings of Striated Fieldwren from Organ Pipes NP, but it doesn't seem too far from a place with quite a few recent sightings.

I’m going to guess that place that is ‘not too far’ from there is Woodlands Historic Park :p.
 
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