Showing posts with label branta hutchinsii. Show all posts
Showing posts with label branta hutchinsii. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 August 2012

SOME NOTES ON RARE BIRDS: PECTORAL SANDPIPER, RÜPPELL’S VULTURE, SANDHILL CRANE AND CACKLING GOOSE

Posts of this blog habitually deal with the vagrants that turn up in Extremadura. On this occasion we are going to look at several at once, each one of which had its own blog post or mention in the past.


Pectoral sandpiper (Calidris melanotos). The July 2012 summary reported the sighting of one bird at Charca de Esparragalejo (Badajoz) on 13 July (Ángel Luis Sánchez and Ángel Sánchez, top photo) and 14 July 2012 (Sergio Mayordomo, Eva Palacios -bottom photo- and César Clemente). This was the ninth record for Extremadura, the previous birds turning up in 2002, 2006, 2008 (3 birds), 2010 (2 birds) and 2011. As it happens the last bird also turned up in the same pond, Charca de Esparragalejo. The eight previous records were juveniles on post-breeding passage in September and October. The 2012 bird was an exception to this rule, an adult that turned up in July; it was also one of the four birds reported in Spain that month (according to Reservoir Birds) [Posts on pectoral sandpiper in Extremadura].


The pectoral sandpiper is in fact one of the most frequently reported rarities in Spain, with over 250 records up to 2009. There has also been an upward trend of observations in recent years, with at least 50-60 birds reported each year in 2008, 2010 and 2011. Oddly enough, in 2009 not one bird was seen in Spain; the last time this happened was back in 1989 (CR-SEO, 2011).


Rüppell's Vulture (Gyps rueppellii). In an earlier post we commented on a bird photographed in San Vicente de Alcántara (Badajoz) on 10 January 2009 (José Gordillo); this bird has now been accepted by the rarities committee (CR-SEO, 2011); according to the committee it was an adult with plumage features typical of the west African population. But the nature magazine Quercus of July 2012 has surprised us with an article signed by one of the photographers of the bird in question (Gordillo, 2012) suggesting that the bird shows traits typical of both Rüppell's Vulture and Griffon Vulture (Gyps fulvus). It is therefore quite possible that the bird is a hybrid, an opinion backed up by raptor experts like Dick Forsman, William Clark and Javier Elorriaga. The case doesn't yet seem to be closed, therefore. Sierra de San Pedro in Extremadura was the first site in Spain to record Rüppell's Vulure back in 1990; in the Portuguese stretch of the River Tagus a bird was seen shortly afterwards sitting on a nest (incubating?) and since then to date there have been regular sightings of adults in this area, especially over the border in Portugal. [Other posts on Rüppell's Vulture]

To wind up this small compilation of rarities, we are pleased to report that two Extremadura records of the utmost interest have now been officially accepted:
- Sandhill Crane (Grus canadensis), seen in November 2011 and January 2012 in Don Benito (Badajoz). First record for Spain.
- Cackling Goose (Branta hutchinsii), seen in January and February 2010 in Casas de Hitos, Navalvillar de Pela (Badajoz)-Madrigalejo (Cáceres). Second record for Spain.

Sources: 
- CR-SEO (Rarities Committee of SEO). 2011. Observaciones de aves raras en España, 2009. Ardeola 58(2). 
- Gordillo, J. 2012. Posible híbrido entre buitre leonado y buitre moteado. Quercus 217:43.

Friday, 2 December 2011

RARE GEESE IN EXTREMADURA


Greylag Goose (Anser anser). The only frequently seen goose species in Extremadura. By Juan Pablo Resino.

Winter in Extremadura is the time of cranes ... and also of geese. The latter are relative newcomers to the region and their distribution is still patchy but there is always the potential thrill of finding a stowaway rare goose amongst the annual winterers. Sometimes you can luck into one easily but usually it takes of hours of patiently scanning the hundreds or thousands of Greylags. The site hosting the national Crane Festival on 4 December is the place where most of the rarer geese have been sighted in Extremadura, so it provides the ideal chance for a bit of a "wild goose chase".

Ten different species of geese have been seen in Extremadura to date. Apart from the Greylag (Anser anser) these include four "grey geese" of the Anser genus and five "black geese" of the Branta genus. The best sites are those that also host the biggest wintering Greylag flocks, especially Vegas Altas (up to 15,000 geese), but also in reservoirs like Valdecañas (up to 4000), Portaje, El Borbollón, Arroyoconejos or Los Canchales.


White Fronted Goose (Anser albifrons). First winter. Portaje Reservoir, January 2011.
By Sergio Mayordomo.

The least rare of the nine is the White Fronted Goose (Anser albifrons), recorded 20 times in Extremadura since 1998 between the months of November and February in the reservoirs of Portaje Alange, Valdecañas, Sierra Brava, Arrocampo and Los Canchales and, above all, in the crop fields of Vegas Altas. In all, the sightings add up to nearly 50 birds, the biggest group being five. In November 2011 it has already been spotted several times in Moheda Alta, Navalvillar de Pela, including a possible sighting of two birds of the Greenland flavirostris race, classed as a rare vagrant in Spain. Also in 2011, but back in January and February of last winter, it was seen in Sierra Brava, Portaje, Peraleda de la Mata (near Valdecañas) and in Moheda Alta.


White Fronted Goose (Anser albifrons). Two birds with a very heavily barred breast, a typical feature of the Greenland subspecies (flavirostris). Moheda Alta, November 2011. By Samuel Langlois.

The Bean Goose (Anser fabalis) was the most numerous goose in the northern meseta until the mid nineteenth century. But the huge contraction of its wintering range has turned it into an official rarity since 2006. In Extremadura there have been only five records (11 birds) in the years 1998-99, 2002, 2005, 2007 (accepted by the rarities committee) and January 2011 (pending acceptance). It has been seen between November and February and only in Vegas Altas (Sierra Brava and Navalvillar de Pela) and Los Canchales, with records of both subspecies, the Tundra Bean Goose (beak nearly all black) and Taiga Bean Goose.


Pink Footed Goose (Anser brachyrhynchus). Casas de Hitos, Navalvillar de Pela. 27 November 2010.
By José María Salazar.

The Pink Footed Goose (Anser brachyrhynchus) was for a long time considered to be a subspecies of the similar Bean Goose so you need a keen eye to spot this rarity. Only two birds have ever been recorded in Extremadura, a single bird each time in Vegas Altas: Sierra Brava (Cáceres) on 12/01/2002 (J. Muddeman; accepted) and Casas de Hitos (Badajoz) on 27/11/2010 (J. M. Salazar et al; pending acceptance).

The fourth rare goose, the Bar-Headed Goose (Anser indicus) is in fact a feral bird that originally escaped from European wildfowl collections. There have been four records in Extremadura, always a single bird, in Valdecañas (January 1987), Arroyoconejos (February 1996), Saucedilla (March 2003) and Portaje (with ring, July to October 2009).


Barnacle Goose (Branta leucopsis). Portaje Reservoir, November 2011. By Sergio Mayordomo.

Moving onto the "black" geese, we find that the commonest one is the Barnacle Goose (Branta leucopsis), recorded 20 times in the region since 1993 between the months of November and February, with a one-off seen in April-May 2011. The best spots, with more than 5 records each one, are Valdecañas reservoir and its hinterland and Vegas Altas (Sierra Brava, Madrigalejo and Navalvillar de Pela). It has also been seen in the reservoirs of Portaje, Ayuela, Borbollón, La Anguila (Serrejón) and Arroyoconejos. In all they account for 26 sightings, the biggest group being five. In November 2011 three birds have already been seen in Moheda Alta and one bird in Portaje Reservoir. In 2010 there were sightings in Valdecañas, Casas de Hitos and Moheda Alta.


Brent Goose (Branta bernicla). Pale-Bellied bird, a typical plumage feature of the American hrota subspecies. Guadiloba Reservoir, April 2008. By Martin McGill.

The rest of the black geese are really rare in the region. The Red-Breasted Goose (Branta ruficollis), a species "Endangered" on a world level, has been seen only once in the region: a juvenile on 12/01/2002 in Sierra Brava Reservoir (in a flock with six species of geese and a hybrid) and on the next day in a Madrigalejo ricefield (J. Muddeman). The Canada Goose (Branta canadensis) is originally from America but now has many feral populations in Europe. The four Extremadura records (seven birds) are very scattered in time: two in Valdecañas in 1977 and 1999 and two recent in Sierra Brava and Moheda Alta in December 2009 and 2010. The Brent Goose (Branta bernicla) accounts four records, in November 1993 (Arroyo de la Luz), November 1996 (Los Canchales) and April 2008 (reservoirs of Guadiloba and Charco Salado, maybe the same bird, reckoned to be the American hrota subspecies).


Cackling Goose (Branta hutchinsii). Casas de Hitos, Navalvillar de Pela. 2 January 2010. By Antonio Ceballos.

To wind up, mention must also be made of the Cackling Goose (Branta hutchinsii), seen for the first time on the Iberian Peninsula in Casas de Hitos on 02/01/2010 (A. Ceballos) and again on 24 and 28 January and 1 February (SEO-Cáceres, including on a group excursion of this forum). Breeding in the American Arctic, it has only recently been separated from the Canada Goose and does even yet have an official name in Spanish. Although haling from such distant climes, ringed birds have proven that it does turn up in Europe naturally.


This brief overview shows that all the geese species recorded in Spain can, with luck, be found in Extremadura. All of them? No. There is one species that has yet to show up: the Lesser White Fronted Goose (Anser erythropus). Recently there was an exciting near miss, however. The above photo shows a tiny goose that seemed at first to be a juvenile Lesser White Front (size, wing length, beak colour), but was finally identified at as first-winter White Fronted Goose (Moheda Alta, Navalvilar de Pela, 13/11/2011; by M. Gálvez, J. Guerra, M. J. Valencia, X. Piñeiro, E. Palacios and S. Mayordomo; photo by Eva Palacios). Recently, however, a project in Sweden to reintroduce this internationally threatened species was dropped because the introduced birds were proven to have genes of the White Fronted Goose. Maybe the "half and half" bird of the photograph has something to do with this project... but this is pure speculation.

Sources:
- Anuarios ornitológicos of Extremadura (1998 to 2008).
- Monthly summaries of this blog (May 2010 to November 2011).
- Base de datos de Aves de Extremadura. Sergio Mayordomo (2009 and 2010, unpublished).