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Shining Flycatcher female |
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Shining Flycatcher male |
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Water Mouse nest |
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Barred Cuckoo-shrike |
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Rose-crowned Fruit-Dove |
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Baillon's Crake |
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Spotless Crake |
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Lewin's Rail |
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Pale-vented Bush-hen |
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Bush Rat |
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Eastern Horseshoe Bat |
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Shining Flycatcher female |
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Shining Flycatcher male |
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Water Mouse nest |
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Barred Cuckoo-shrike |
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Rose-crowned Fruit-Dove |
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Baillon's Crake |
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Spotless Crake |
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Lewin's Rail |
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Pale-vented Bush-hen |
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Bush Rat |
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Eastern Horseshoe Bat |
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Semi-palmated Plover |
Birder Scott Fox did well to spot a small plover on the far side of a rapidly shrinking freshwater pool midway between Bundaberg and Bargara in south-east Queensland on November 24, 2023. Observations by Scott and other observers left little doubt at the time that this was a Common Ringed Plover (Charadrius hiaticula) and not the similar Semipalmated Plover (C. semipalmatus). Both species are known from a handful of records in Australia scattered across various states.
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Ringed Plover |
I turned up at the pool late in the afternoon of November 30. A tightly bunched flock of Sharp-tailed Sandpipers, evidently spooked by a raptor, were flying around the pool, and with them was a small plover with an obvious white wing bar (a feature which rules out Little Ringed Plover C. dubius). Others noted that although the bird had been seen late in the late afternoon, it was much more regular early in the morning, especially the first hour of daylight, after which it evidently flew away to unknown sites, returning later to the pool.
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Early on the morning of December 1, I met up with Chris Barnes, Andy Jensen and Jane Hall at the site. Andy picked up the plover on the far shore. This is not an easy bird to log. Lighting conditions were dreadful. It stuck to the opposite bank - too far for decent images. Usually it fed in the interface between dying hyacinth and living hyacinth and was difficult to spot; if resting or its back was turned, it was not visible. However, observers agreed that features favoured its identification as Common Ringed Plover: a more pointed, longer bill; a conspicuously broad breast band that is broken; an equally conspicuous supercilium; no white extending above the gape; no indication of an eye ring; no evidence of webbing between the toes noted in the field or in sharper shots that Chris managed in better light conditions (though this feature requires confirmation). I’ve included a couple of Chris’s images in this post. At the time of writing (December 3) the bird has been seen daily since November 24, although it was not seen this morning, possibly due to heavy rain overnight, it was seen in the afternoon. The bird was generally feeding alone, although associating loosely with Sharp-tailed Sandpipers and Black-fronted Dotterels.
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Ringed Plover (Chris Barnes) |
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Ringed Plover with Sharp-tailed Sandpiper (Chris Barnes) |
This was a previous record of Ringed Plover for Queensland: at Boonooroo in 1983; that bird frequented a tidal shorebird roost. There are two records also of Semipalmated Plover from Queensland: 1 bird has been present the last two summers at Geoff Skinner Reserve near Brisbane; the other was spotted by Chris Barnes near Bundaberg in 2012.
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Semipalmated Plover at Geoff Skinner Reserve |
POSTSCRIPT 8/1/2024
The plover appeaed to have have vacated the Rubyanna Road swamp and was being seen regularly in recent days on sandflats at nearby Burnett Heads. Here it was much more approachable and observers were getting clearer views and images. Angus Daly noted that he detected a faint yellow eye ring and raised questions about the supposed lack of webbing between the toes. Fresh images by Chris Barnes did indeed show more extensive webbing, clinching the identification of this bird as a Semi-palmated Plover.
Back at the Bundaberg pond in January, an adult female Black-necked Stork accompanied by an immature bird were seen.
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Black-necked Stork |
I was pleased to catch up with an Oriental Cuckoo in woodland along a walking track behind Bargara Caravan Park, where we were staying.
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Oriental Cuckoo |
Strong south-easterly winds offshore brought large flocks of terns inshore: they were mostly noddies, both Black Noddy and Brown Noddy in what looked to be about equal numbers (though birds were distant) in mixed flocks. Among them were 20+ Bridled Terns, which were even further out to sea.
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Black Noddy & Brown Noddy offshore (distant) |
In the camping ground, a fine Frill-necked Lizard entertained us for a couple of days, feeding on the short grass until well after sunset, when it appeared to be catching numerous ground insects at dusk.
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Frill-necked Lizard |
A pair of Radjah Shelduck were spotted flying over the camping ground and located later in a nearby tidal creek. This species is becoming increasingly regular in south-east Queensland in recent years.
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Radjah Shelduck |
POSTSCRIPT 29/3/2025
I saw the plover well on the Burnett Heads sandflats on an incoming tide in December 2024, the second consecutive summer when the bird has been present at this site. Below are a couple of my images from that time. More recently, images of the bird coming into breeding plumage have been published from this site. Some observers have questioned again whether the species is in fact a Common Ringed Plover, which it was initially identified as. It appears as though the matter remains unresolved.
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Sociable Lapwing |
After a lengthy tour of five European countries (Italy, Finland, United Kingdom, Portugal and Spain: see following posts) we had a few days in Muscat, Oman, on our way home. Our hotel was close to a beach used by local fishing boats so we checked it out just as a boat was offloading a catch.
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Caspian Gull |
Large numbers of gulls were present including Caspian, Common, Slender-billed, Lesser Black-backed (fuscus fuscus Baltic) and Sooty.
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Slender-billed Gull |
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Sooty Gull |
Offshore were a few Common Terns and large flocks of Red-necked Phalaropes.
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Red-necked Phalaropes |
Crested Tern and Lesser Crested Tern (the latter scarce in Oman) were present on the beach with the gulls.
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Crested Tern (middle) & Lesser Crested Terns |
The following day I had
hired a local driver, Nabeel, to pick me up at the hotel at 5.30am
for a day in the field. We drove just over an hour to reach a wadi
near Nakhal where Arabian Partridge had been reported.
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Nakhal wadi & Nabeel |
We found none but the scenery was superb and a few birds were about including Indian Silverbill, Green Sandpiper and Pale Crag-Martin. Then a bird showed which puzzled me until I worked out after I got home that it had to be a Pale Rockfinch.
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Green Sandpiper |
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Indian Silverbill |
We then headed north-west to Sawadi Beach where I had arranged to hire a young man to take us out to the delightful Daymaniyat Islands (below) offshore.
We circled several islands, enjoying fabulously close views of Socrota Cormorant (3 on one island and 1 on a second island), a species I’d seen just once previously, and then poorly, in the neighbouring United Arab Emirates. Great Cormorants and Western Reef-Egrets were present.
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Socrota Cormorant |
Around the outermost islands we found a nice flock of Persian Shearwaters (below) a lifer for me, offering similarly close views.
With them was a single Red-necked Phalarope (below).
Circling one island we had an immature Sooty Falcon (below) fly overhead.
We landed on the main island, Jazirat Jabal, and did the steep climb to an ancient lookout post at the summit. Others had reported Egyptian Nightjar roosting here but we failed to score. A few passerines present included Black Redstart (below) and Red-tailed (Persian) Wheatear.
Our next stop was
eastwards to the fields and cultivated flatlands of the Barka area.
There were several reports of Sociable Lapwing from this area last
year and records in recent years suggested this may be an important
wintering ground for this endangered shorebird, which had long been
high on my target list. We searched sites where
birds were seen most recently and were about to give up when we
decided to give one area near the Al Nahda Resort a final lookover.
This was fortuitous because I spotted two lapwings in a field that
we’d overlooked earlier. Further searching found 11 more: 13 in
all. This was a trip highlight and I’m thankful to Dr S.S. Suresh
for guidance with both this site and the Daymaniyat Islands.
Of surprise was a large flock of about 80 mixed Pin-tailed and Common Snipe (some in the image below) roosting under bushes on a dry paddock with no water in site.
Arabian Green Bee-eaters added a colourful touch to the landscape.