Showing posts with label stint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stint. Show all posts

Thursday, February 16, 2012

14th Feb 2012:Kampung Permatang Pauh, mainland Penang



This afternoon I set out to find the wettest area of padifields I could, since most of the area is now bone dry. After some scouting around, I came across a single sizable pool, and it was chock-full of waders!





A quick scan revealed over a hundred stilts, lots of Wood Sandpipers, several Grey-headed Lapwings, and a couple of Temminck's Stints creeping their way along the far muddy fringe. No doubt these are the birds last seen on 17 Dec by Mun. They must have been here the whole time!



There was also a lone Common Greenshank in the stilt flock.

There were lots of places for birds to conceal themselves from sight, so I settled down to wait. Soon enough I was rewarded by the sight of a Little Stint. Again, this is doubtless one of the 'Pulau Burung Four', at least one of which was later seen in these padifields, but not since 24 December.



I had originally hoped that the birds at Pulau Burung would stay long enough to moult into breeding plumage, and I am pleased to note that moult has begun on this bird. The longest tertial and the longest greater covert on the right hand side are new 'breeding' feathers. Colouration in breeding plumage feathers is influenced by hormone levels, and because it's still so early in the season, these feathers are rather weakly coloured. Later moulted feathers will show much brighter hues.



Two scapulars on the near side and one on the far side are also new breeding feathers (the ones with the neat, clearly-defined black centres). Again, because these are early feathers, they only show a trace of typical breeding colours, at the base of the edges. Generally, once feathers are fully grown, the supply of blood to them is cut off, so that they become 'dead tissue', preventing further infusion of colour. However, in some waders, it is believed that this does not always happen, and that some additional pigmentation changes are possible even after the feather is full-grown. This is known as aptosochromatosis (see this post for more on this!).





A couple of shots of the left side reveal a similar pattern of freshly moulted breeding feathers.



Oh, and there were some of the 'common' stints too! Interestingly, this Long-toed Stint has also replaced its longest tertial. The only stint species not represented today was Red-necked, which is overwhelmingly the commonest of Malaysia's four species!



Much later in the afternoon, after the two Temminck's had exited stage left, I found this lone Temminck's much closer. I can't say for sure that it was a third bird, but it seems odd that it was alone if it was one of the earlier closely associating pair.



Like the other stints, this bird has already started its moult. The second longest greater covert is a new, weakly-patterned breeding feather.



There were lots and lots of snipes in the pool, and these eventually became more active and visible as the sun lowered in the sky. Unfortunately, all the ones feeding in the open proved to be Common Snipes. I saw several 'Pintail/Swinhoe's' fly in over the course of an hour, but every one dropped in to cover and remained invisible!



Still, the Common Snipes put on quite a show, with much preening and posturing going on!









With a bit of patience, it proved not too difficult to get some 'tail shots', and I was surprised to see how broad the outer tail feathers are on Common Snipe.



They're even quite easily visible in flight, as on this late-arriving bird.



Eventually, once the light had gone, a single Pin/Swin Snipe did creep out into the open, looking very different from the neat, well-proportioned Commons.



Apart from the obviously different structure, it was much paler, buffier, more mealy in colouration, with a much broader supercilium. Unfortunately, it didn't hang around long, being chased back into cover by one of the Common Snipes .



Last of all to appear, this curious-looking juvenile Greater Painter-snipe. I wonder whether it is one of the four I saw on my last visit here, but perhaps it is too young to be one of these birds about 5 weeks on.

Monday, November 21, 2011

18th Nov 2011: Pulau Burung Landfill Site, Nibong Tebal, Penang

A visit from friends Peter Harris and Mel Ong of A Rocha (check out the website - they're doing some GREAT work around the world) gave me the excuse to take a couple of days out showing them around the famous sites of Penang, which include a landfill site (oh - I meant famous BIRDING sites!).

The usual birds were on their best behaviour, giving point blank views and photo opps in the golden early morning light. I mostly just enjoyed the scene, but occasionally deigned to point the camera in the direction of a bird.



A Wood Sandpiper posing in front of a blue studio backdrop (actually a metal fence).



A Paddyfield Pipit giving 'field guide views'in front of the same backdrop.



A Purple Heron contemplating the mysteries of life (in front of an actual blue sky).



A Blue-tailed Bee-eater in a typically photogenic pose.



While my friends were purring over these sumptuous delights, I was feeling pretty relaxed about everything, until I noticed a smaller duck among a flock of flying whistling-ducks...



Casting off my laid-back smugness, I sprang into action!...An eclipse male Garganey - long-awaited and much-looked for, my 559th species for Peninsular Malaysia.



It landed distantly, and before I could set up the digiscoping gear, had secreted itself in thick vegetation, not to be seen again that day (but it has behaved better since, see Muin's blog).

Much closer at hand was a nice selection of waders and wagtails in some muddy pools next to the road.





Some Eastern Yellow Wagtails...



...Little Ringed Plovers...

and stints...















Long-toed Stints - they're such beauties I'm not going to apologize for OD'ing on these!

And then, four other stints, which, much to the disappointment of Peter (from the UK), turned out to be ALL Little Stints! I tried to explain that these are really rare here compared to Red-necked, which is by far the commonest calidrid, normally, but this didn't seem to cheer him up much!



Two Little Stints with a Long-toed (bottom left).



Why are these Little rather than Red-necked? It's a combination of features rather than one stand-out.



Firstly, the 'bare parts'. The legs are long, both below and above the joint, but especially above (the tibia). (The legs are dark by the way - the yellowish colouration is due to the mud). The bill is finer and slighter than on Red-necked, both at the base and the tip.



They have a distinctive 'round-shouldered' shape when feeding, the legs are usually well bent and the tail-end tends to be slightly angled upward.



The head and neck of Little Stint (LS) are subtly different from Red-necked Stint's (RNS) - smaller, narrower head-on, and with more 'neck'. The back of the head (rear crown-nape area) often seems to slope away rather than being strongly angled (as it often looks on RNS).



The head seems to be 'stuck on' the top of the body, while on Red-necked it seems stuck on the front (I guess this means that LS tends to stand more upright, while RNS has a rather horizontal stance usually). The body itself is rounder on LS (especially in the chest area) and more slender on RNS.



Plumage-wise, there's not much to go on in adult non-breeding plumage. Most LS have rather dark-centred upperpart feathers in fresh plumage (with whitish tips on very fresh feathers), whereas most RNS have much plainer and paler upperpart feathers. One of the four (seen left here) was clearly more worn than the others, and was distinctly brownish above.









Some more shots showing the typically 'hunch-backed' appearance.

Some of the differences I've mentioned above are easier to assess on still photos than on fast-moving birds. Anyone interested in this tricky pair of stints should make the most of this opportunity to familiarize yourself with Little Stints (at least if you live in Malaysia!). They seem to be hanging around.





A late morning visit to Kampung Permatang Nibong yielded three Great Spotted Eagles (two of which are shown above).