An evening visit to try to show some friends the Oriental Bay Owls drew a blank - no sound of them at all.
We caught sight of what seemed like a scrap of bright blue litter in the top of a tree - it turned out to be a roosting male Asian Fairy Bluebird!
Some compensation for the no-show by the Bay Owls was a nice exhibition by a pair of Brown Hawk Owls.
This pair hangs out by a guard house, so are very accustomed to people.
I'd hate to be on the menu!
This fluky shot, taken at a very slow shutter speed, shows that this bird has caught a moth.
Sunday, August 31, 2008
Thursday, August 28, 2008
26th August 2008: Pelagic off Tanjung Dawai, Kedah
Choo Eng and I took advantage of a public holiday to go on another pelagic trip on an anchovy boat - our last was April 15th.
When we got to the boat the fishermen took great delight in telling us we should have been there last month! They had seen up to 8 'ducks' which they described as bigger than terns, all black, with duck-like feet and a large beak like a nose. They dived from height to catch fish when the boat was hauling in the nets, coming so close they could have caught them. They ran along the water to take off. We figured that these birds were most likely Brown Boobies. They had hung around for a week! They then told us that there weren't many birds about now. But, as a sage seawatcher once observed, "the great thing about seawatching is that there's always plenty of sea to watch!" so we decided to go out anyway.
I had my big camera back but this time my little point and shoot was in for repairs, so for more pics of the boat, please see the April 15th posts.
We headed out past Gunung Jerai as the sun came up.
The weather varied between stormy and bright, giving some interesting photographic opportunities. This Black-naped Tern flies past an approaching downpour.
In April we only saw 4 Black-naped Terns, but there were good numbers about on this trip.
The adults are stunningly attractive in any light!
There were quite a number of juveniles about too, perhaps indicating that these birds are breeding not too far away.
These slightly older birds already have an adult-like head pattern and are gaining adult-type scapulars and coverts, so don't present much of an identification problem.
However, younger birds showed largely black crowns, and an upperpart pattern strikingly similar to juvenile Roseate Tern. Photos of juv Roseates in flight are hard to find on the web, but this pic suggests they may be very similar to juv Black-naped.
Toward the end of the day the low sun showed off the translucence of the primaries to perfection!
This pic shows how poor light can often result in a more interesting image.
Bridled Terns were present in abundance, with a variety of plumages.
The lighting at sea is constantly changing, making birds look pale at some times and very dark at others. This bird is not a Sooty Tern, though it might easily get identified as such. The shape of the white forehead, extending back over the eye, confirms that the bird is a Bridled Tern.
I found Bridled Terns tricky to age, and I suspect that this whitish mantle is a feature of fresh adult non-breeding plumage.
This bird still had some of the breeding head pattern.
Most birds had completed wing and tail moult, but a few were obviously still in mid- moult. This bird has 8 new full-grown primaries, the 9th is half-grown and the tenth (outermost) is an old unmoulted feather. Secondary moult has just started, with the outermost fresh and full-grown, the second is a half-grown new feather and the others are old and very worn. I wonder if this could be a 1st summer bird moulting into adult non-breeding?
There weren't many Common Terns around yet, but they proved a challenge as they had in April. There appeared to be two types; one a heavier-set bird with an all-dark heavyish bill; the other seemed to be of lighter build, and to have a slimmer, reddish bill. Again though, the light could cause amazing changes in apparent colours.
Here's the first type, tentatively identified as the race 'longipennis'.
Here's the second type, perhaps 'tibetana'?
A similar difference in bill colour and proportions was evident in the juveniles, though perhaps age was also a factor in the differences. This is a black-billed juvenile (longipennis?).
And here's one with a red bill (tibetana?).
In mid-afternoon, during the hottest part of the day, birds seemed to vanish. Eventually we discovered one or two rafts of resting birds. Bridled were never seen swimming, they preferred to sit on floating debris. These are Black-naped and Common Terns.
During the birdless times there were other things to see, like this amazing jellyfish.
In fact, our 'bird of the day' was a fish!
This Indo-Pacific Sailfish spent a minute or two performing spectacular leaps not far from our boat.
A juv Little Tern appeared briefly, uncharacteristically far from land. Barn Swallows passed us quite regularly through the day, and once a Grey Wagtail almost landed on the boat.
The times when we weren't catching fish were an opportunity to mend nets.
One fisherman's T-shirt caught my eye!
As they had done in April, some terns followed us as we made our way back to port against a spectacular sunset. I have to confess that there is a bit of Photoshop skulduggery going on here!
Monday, August 25, 2008
18th-22nd August: Oil Palm plantation BioD surveys, Negeri Sembilan
With my big camera in hospital, no nice bird shots here, but a few to show what we got up to!
The best birds were probably the owls - 5 species, while 2 Leopard Cats were the pick of the mammals. I got 3 new dragonfly lifers too, but photos of only one of them.
This is Nannophya pygmaea, one of the smallest dragonflies in the world.
Check out the very cool shades!
This is a male Panorpoides acisoma, one of the most attractive of Malaysian dragonflies.
Plus two stowaways!
Another really smart species is Libellago lineata. This is a female. Males are even brighter!
Dragonfly hunting in mandatory safety clothing!
The last we saw of Ian (Part 1).
After we had trashed a Jimny gearbox... or, the last we saw of Ian (Part 2).
Su Li's reward for stream-dipping was this spectacular buffalo leech. After this one was removed she went straight back for more!
Some of our night survey finds:
A Common Bronzeback.
A Lesser Golden Fluffball roosting in the oil palm -
aka Common Iora.
And a Greater Golden Fluffball - or juv Black-naped Oriole.
The best birds were probably the owls - 5 species, while 2 Leopard Cats were the pick of the mammals. I got 3 new dragonfly lifers too, but photos of only one of them.
This is Nannophya pygmaea, one of the smallest dragonflies in the world.
Check out the very cool shades!
This is a male Panorpoides acisoma, one of the most attractive of Malaysian dragonflies.
Plus two stowaways!
Another really smart species is Libellago lineata. This is a female. Males are even brighter!
Dragonfly hunting in mandatory safety clothing!
The last we saw of Ian (Part 1).
After we had trashed a Jimny gearbox... or, the last we saw of Ian (Part 2).
Su Li's reward for stream-dipping was this spectacular buffalo leech. After this one was removed she went straight back for more!
Some of our night survey finds:
A Common Bronzeback.
A Lesser Golden Fluffball roosting in the oil palm -
aka Common Iora.
And a Greater Golden Fluffball - or juv Black-naped Oriole.
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