Birding Tour

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Birding Tour 2021 BULGARIA APRIL 25TH – MAY 9TH, 2021 [Birding Tour]; BULGARIA ‘Classic Spring Birding’ The 2018 Tour recorded 232 species; expect up to 22 warblers, 9 tits, 10 woodpeckers, 5 owls, and 24 raptors, vultures, and falcons. Rare migrant birds mostly arrive from East Africa or West Asia. Food is delightful, travel is easy, accommodations are cozy, and dozens of times each day the scenic countryside shouts ‘photo’. Tour Style [B] $3,945/pp MEXICO JUNE 5TH - 19TH, 2021 [Birding Tour] NORTHERN MEXICO’S SUMMER ENDEMICS Breeding endemics of Chihuahua's Sierra Madre Occidental, Saltillo Grasslands, Sierra Madre Oriental, and Tamaulipan coastal plain for Thicket Tinamou, Thick-billed and Maroon-fronted parrots, Yellow- headed and Red-crowned amazons, Eared Quetzal, Tamaulipas Pygmy- Owl, Tawny-collared Nightjar, Colima Warbler, Altamira Yellowthroat, Crimson-collared Grosbeak, and Worthen’s Sparrow. Tour Style [C] $3,995/pp CHILE OCTOBER 27TH - NOVEMBER 19TH, 2021 NORTHERN CHILE - The Atacama Desert and the Chilean Altiplan0 Amid an arid and rugged landscape with the least amount of rainfall on earth and high-elevation alkaline lakes... 'Good Heavens, what are we doing here?' Why birds of course --James's Flamingo, Giant Coot, Peruvian Thick-knee, Inca Tern, and Chilean Woodstar. CENTRAL CHILE - The towering Andes and the Humboldt Current Vineyards, farmland, rugged mountains; the lower slopes hold Chilean Tinamou, Moustached Turca, Dusky Tapaculo, Crag Chilia, Patagonian Forest Earthcreeper, and Dusky-tailed Canastero. The highlands possess Diademed Sandpiper-Plover, and Ochre-naped, Rufous-naped, White-browed and Black-fronted ground-tyrants. Major highlights of the pelagic trip include up to six species of albatrosses. SOUTHERN CHILE - The Nothofagus Forests and Tierra de Fuego Yet another pelagic with possibly the newly describe Pincoya Storm- Petrel, King Penguin, Magellanic Plover, Rufous-tailed Hawk, Chilean Pigeon, and Magellanic Woodpecker. Tour Style [C] Price available once airfare has been arranged [Extension Tour] EASTER ISLAND NOV 19TH - 21ST, 2021 Three-day add-on affords one-day each way in transit via a commercial airliner, and two nights on Rapa Nui with enough time for touring the monuments, and a short boat ride to a nearby islet for seabirds. MEXICO DECEMBER 1ST - 12TH, 2021 [Birding Tour]; BAJA SUR & NW MEXICO ‘Mexico's most magical and enchanting region’ - More than 30 endemic birds occur in NW Mexico. This ‘stand-alone destination is a- must for birders who target the full basket of Mexican endemics. Tour Style [C] $3,895/pp --- 2022 --- SOUTH KOREA JANUARY 14TH – 25TH, 2022 [Target Birding Tour]; SOUTH KOREA - An Extravaganza of Cranes Red-crowned, White-naped, and Hooded cranes, Oriental Stork, Scaly- sided Merganser, Baikal Teal, Swan Goose, Relict and Saunder's gulls, Steller's Sea Eagle, Hazel Grouse, Solitary Snipe, Daurian Jackdaw, Siberian Accentor, Chinese Grosbeak, and Pallas's Rosefinch. Tour Style [C] $4,495/pp MEXICO MARCH 16TH – 29TH, 2022 [Birding Tour]; OAXACA - ‘The Endemic Birds of Mexico’s Southern Highlands, Isthmus of Tehuantepec, & Sierra Los Tuxtlas, Vera Cruz’ More than 50 of Mexico’s endemics occur in Oaxaca’s ‘Southern Highlands.’ A destination that is both necessary and delightful. Tour Style [C] $3,895/pp LESSER NIGHTHAWK (female defending a nest) MEXICO MARCH 30TH – APRIL 10TH, 2022 [Birding Tour] CENTRAL MEXICO - ‘Finest Birding Route in North America’ - 450 SPECIES/60 MEXICAN ENDEMICS FOR THE ROUTE Route includes: [1] West Mexican Pacific slope, [2] Sierra Madre del Sur de Guerrero, [3] Balsas River drainage, and [4] Transvolcanic Belt. Tour Style [C] $3,895/pp REPUBLIC OF GEORGIA MAY 5TH – 17TH, 2022 [Birding Tour] GEORGIA & ARMENIA Classic Spring Birding to look for Caucasian and Caspian snowcocks, Caucasian Black Grouse, Bearded Vulture, Wallcreeper, Bimaculated Lark, Guldenstadt's Redstart, Mountain Chiffchaff, Raddes' Accentor, Menetries' and Upcher's warblers, Fire-fronted Serin, White-winged Snowfinch, Great Rosefinch, and Gray-necked Bunting. Tour Style [B] Price/Itinerary available 12-months before departure. MEXICO JUNE 15TH - 30TH, 2022 [Birding Tour] NORTHERN MEXICO’S SUMMER ENDEMICS Breeding endemics of Chihuahua's Sierra Madre Occidental, Saltillo Grasslands, Sierra Madre Oriental, and Tamaulipan coastal plain for Thicket Tinamou, Thick-billed and Maroon-fronted parrots, Yellow- headed and Red-crowned amazons, Eared Quetzal, Tamaulipas Pygmy- Owl, Tawny-collared Nightjar, Colima Warbler, Altamira Yellowthroat, Crimson-collared Grosbeak, and Worthen’s Sparrow. Tour Style [C] $4,095/pp SPAIN SEPTEMBER 27TH – OCTOBER 10TH, 2022 [OPEN Birding Tour]; SPAIN 'Fall Migration Birding - Superb Spanish Pyrenees and the Mediterranean Coast' The 2017 Tour recorded 201 species; likely species include - Great and Little bustards, Pin-tailed and Black-bellied Sandgrouse, Spanish Eagle, Audouin’s Gull, Iberian Green Woodpecker, Iberian Magpie, and Iberian Chiffchaff. Food is enchanting, the wine, charming… travel is swift, accommodations are relaxed, and a daily mix old and new, urban and rural, makes for adventures from dawn to dusk. Tour Style [B] Price/Itinerary available 12-months before departure. Everyone loves the Yucatan - birders, nature travelers, & general vacationers! MEXICO DECEMBER 2ND - 13TH, 2022 [Heritage-Style Birding Tour] YUCATAN, MEXICO This is an excellent tour for YOU to INVITE A FRIEND… Quality birding, sunny days, regional cuisine, Mayan archeological sites, and Cozumel Island for key birds that include Ocellated Turkey, Black- throated Bobwhite, Rufous-necked and Russet-naped wood-rails, Yucatan Poorwill, Yucatan Nightjar, Mexican Sheartail, Cozumel Emerald, Gray-collared Becard, Cozumel and Yucatan vireos, Gray- throated Chat, Rose-throated Tanager, and Orange Oriole. Tour Style [A] $3,795/pp --- 2023 --- FEBRUARY 18TH – MARCH 5TH, 2023 [Birding Tour] PUERTO RICO & LESSER ANTILLES Puerto Rico holds 17 endemics; with 19 other Caribbean endemics on five neighboring Lesser Antillean islands. Route involves a bit of island-hoping but the birds are exciting with Imperial, Puerto Rican, and Red-necked amazons, an endemic lizard-cuckoo, tody, nightjar, and screech-owl on Puerto Rico, plus Guadeloupe Woodpecker, Barbuda Warbler, and Montserrat and Martinique orioles. Tour Style [B] Price/Itinerary available 12-months before departure. WHITE-THROATED JAY (Mexican Endemic found in the Sierra Madre del Sur de Guerrero) MARCH 26TH – APRIL 10TH, 2023 [Birding Tour]; ‘Finest Birding Route in North America’ – CENTRAL MEXICO - 450 SPECIES FOR THE ROUTE - 60 MEXICAN ENDEMICS Route includes: [1] West Mexican Pacific slope, [2] Sierra Madre del Sur de Guerrero, [3] Balsas River drainage, and [4] Transvolcanic Belt. Tour Style [C] $3,995/pp JUNE 14TH - 29TH, 2023 [Birding Tour] NORTHERN MEXICO’S SUMMER ENDEMICS Breeding endemics of Chihuahua's Sierra Madre Occidental, Saltillo Grasslands, Sierra Madre Oriental, and Tamaulipan coastal plain for Thicket Tinamou, Thick-billed and Maroon-fronted parrots, Eared Quetzal, Tamaulipas Pygmy-Owl, Tawny-collared Nightjar, Colima Warbler, Altamira Yellowthroat, and Worthen’s Sparrow. Tour Style [C] $4,195/pp Style & Structure of Tour Planning: 2021 - 2023 [1] BIRDING TOURS [Codes B & C] Participation is open on a first-come- first-serve basis. Tours in this style repeat a daily pattern of searching-out key target species, and are best characterized as a 'birding as the primary-focus' experience. The difference between [B] and [C] is that the later is more intense, being laser focused with longer hours in the field each day. [2] HERITAGE-STYLE BIRDING TOURS [A] - are most often conducted in countries with a 'manageable' bird-list - Spain, Taiwan, Ireland, Sri Lanka, and Mexico's Yucatan. Though birding is the major focus, the daily program incorporates a variety of activities of interest such as historical and cultural interactions, or a more in-depth study in local natural history. Each one of the tours in Mexico is 'REQUIRED' if one wishes to SEE ALL of the ENDEMIC BIRDS on the mainland of the country. https://legacy-tours.com/mexico-birding-tours/ RED WARBLER (Race 'rowleyi' is a Mexican Endemic regularly seen in Oaxaca State) .
Recommended publications
  • Species List
    May 11 – 23, 2019 Spain: Birding and Nature Tour With: Christine, Laura, Brad, Cathy, Elizabeth, and Richard (HO)= Distinctive enough to be counted as heard only (I)=introduced Tour Summary: What an amazing destination! A journey through Spain is an experience one will never forget. Over the course of this tour, we explored wildlife rich areas from the lofty peaks of the Gredos Mountains to the mudflats of Andalusia, from the cork oak forests of Extremadura to the saline pools of Castilla-La Mancha. We recorded 188 bird species in that time – species such as Great Bustard, Egyptian Vulture, Eurasian Hoopoe, European Roller, Crested Tit, Great Spotted Cuckoo, Pin-tailed Sandgrouse, and more. In the end, there was no agreement as to the favorite bird of the tour – each person selected three completely different birds! It was just not the birds that captivated our group. It was the richness of Spain’s culture, history, architecture, and cuisine interwoven with the natural landscape. BIRDS (188 species recorded, 3 heard only): DUCKS, GEESE AND SWANS: Anatidae (10) Graylag Goose Anser anser—the ancestor of the domestic goose and quite common in winter in Spain, but only a small percentage remain to breed – a couple lingering birds at Dehesa Abajo in Andalusia and a family of adults and goslings at Laguna Navaseca in Castille-La Mancha Common Shelduck Tadorna tadorna—very handsome shelduck, associated with saline wetlands; our best views were at the various lagoons in Castille-La Mancha, where they were quite common Northern Shovler Spatula
    [Show full text]
  • La Mancha, Coto Donana & Extremadura 2017
    Field Guides Tour Report Spain: La Mancha, Coto Donana & Extremadura 2017 May 6, 2017 to May 18, 2017 Chris Benesh & Godfried Schreur For our tour description, itinerary, past triplists, dates, fees, and more, please VISIT OUR TOUR PAGE. Spectacular skies greeted us during our visit to old Trujillo in the heart of Extremadura. Photo by guide Chris Benesh. So many birds around that you don´t know which to choose and observe. Do you recognize this feeling? We experienced many of these exciting moments in Spain during the Field Guides tour in May. It started straight away, on the first day, overlooking the natural lagoons of La Mancha Húmeda, where we had the chance to observe a great variety of species of ducks, grebes, terns, and passerines. The highlights here were the White-headed Duck, Eared Grebe, Red-crested Pochard, Whiskered Tern and Penduline Tit. In the National Park of Coto Donana again we found ourselves surrounded by birds: larks, bee-eaters, flamingos, Great Reed Warblers, Glossy Ibis, Squacco and Purple herons and a surprisingly well showing Little Bittern. With a bit of searching, scanning and listening we were able to also detect Red-knobbed Coot, Marbled Teal and Isabelline (Western Olivaceous) Warbler. Later in the week, close to Trujillo (Extremadura), we all enjoyed the excursion on the open, rolling plains, with Great and Little bustards, Eurasian Roller, Hoopoe, Calandra Lark, Montagu´s Harrier and many, many White Storks. For the shy Black Storks we had to wait one day more. In Monfrague National Park we discovered 3 pairs nesting on the breathtaking cliff of Peña Falcón.
    [Show full text]
  • A Description of Mixed-Species Insectivorous Bird Flocks in Western Mexico’
    The Condor 89~282-292 0 The Cooper Omithologml Society 1987 A DESCRIPTION OF MIXED-SPECIES INSECTIVOROUS BIRD FLOCKS IN WESTERN MEXICO’ RICHARD L. HUTTO Department of Zoology, Universityof Montana, Missoula, MT 59812 Abstract. Insectivorousbird flockswere observed in all typesof forestedhabitats during the nonbreedingseason in westernMexico. The speciescomposition of flockschanged markedlyand predictablyamong five categoriesof habitat type. The averagenumber of speciesper flockin lowlandhabitats was 4.7, while a mean of 18.6 speciesparticipated in highlandflocks, ranking the latter amongthe most species-richflocks in the world. The meanproportion of the localinsectivorous species that participatedin mixed-speciesflocks wassignificantly greater in the highlands(6 1.3%)than in the lowlands(24.6%). About half of the flock participantsin both undisturbedlowland and highlandhabitats were north temperatemigrants, ranking west Mexican flocks among the mostmigrant-rich in the world as well. In highlandflocks, the maximum numberof individualsper attendantspecies was generallytwo to three,but therewere often six to twelveindividuals belonging to eachof severalnuclear species. The lowlanddeciduous forest flocks seemed to lack nuclearspecies. Key words: Mixed-speciesflocks; insectivorousbirds; Mexico; migratory birds;pine-oak woodlands;tropical deciduous forests. INTRODUCTION mixed-speciesflocks in 26 sites(Appendix I) that Mixed-speciesinsectivorous bird flockshave been were distributed among various habitats described from temperate and tropical areas throughout western Mexico. The habitat types worldwide (Rand 1954), and are known to occur that I surveyed can be roughly classified (after in practically every habitat type (Powell 1985). Pesman 1962) as belonging to either lowland Although mixed-species flocks are quite com- (tropical deciduous and tropical evergreen) or mon in north temperate regions during the non- highland (oak, pine-oak, and boreal) forests.
    [Show full text]
  • Birding Tour
    2020 JANUARY 4TH – 12TH, 2020 [Birding Tour] DOMINICAN REPUBLIC (HISPANIOLA) - 'Caribbean's Best Birding' - three endemic families of birds! Both evolution and geography has been 'kind' to the Island of Hispaniola with more 300 species of birds; THREE ENDEMIC FAMILES; six endemic genera; TWENTY-NINE ENDEMIC BIRDS; and 25 endemic subspecies. This is the Caribbean's most important center of avian variety... a 'must-see' birder's destination. Tour Style [B] $3,495/pp [Tour Filled] FEBRUARY 29TH – MARCH 14TH, 2020 [Birding Tour] OAXACA - ‘The Endemics of Mexico’s Southern Highlands, Isthmus of Tehuantepec, & Sierra Los Tuxtlas, Vera Cruz’ More than 50 of Mexico’s endemics occur in Oaxaca’s ‘Southern Highlands.’ This is a stand-alone destination that should be embraced by every birder interested in seeing the key species of Mexico. Tour Style [C] $3,795/pp [Tour Filled] RED WARBLER (Race 'rowleyi' is a Mexican Endemic regularly seen in Oaxaca State) MARCH 16TH – 29TH, 2020 [Birding Tour] CENTRAL MEXICO - ‘Finest Birding Route in North America’ – 450 SPECIES/60 MEXICAN ENDEMICS FOR THE ROUTE Route includes: [1] West Mexican Pacific slope, [2] Sierra Madre del Sur de Guerrero, [3] Balsas River drainage, and [4] Transvolcanic Belt. Tour Style [C] $3,895/pp [Tour Filled] 2020 APRIL 19TH – MAY 3RD, 2020 [Birding Tour]; BULGARIA ‘Classic Spring Birding’ The 2018 Tour recorded 232 species; expect up to 22 warblers, 9 tits, 10 woodpeckers, 5 owls, and 24 raptors, vultures, and falcons. Rare migrant birds mostly arrive from East Africa or West Asia. Food is delightful, travel is easy, accommodations are cozy, and dozens of times each day the scenic countryside shouts ‘photo’.
    [Show full text]
  • ORL 5.1 Hypothetical Spp Final Draft01a.Xlsx
    The Ornithological Society of the Middle East, the Caucasus and Central Asia (OSME) The OSME Region List of Bird Taxa, Part E: , Version 5.1: July 2019 In Part E, Hypothetical Taxa, we list non-passerines (prefixed by 'N') first, then passerines (prefixed by 'P'). Such taxa may be from distributions adjacent to or have extended to A fuller explanation is given in Explanation of the ORL, but briefly, Bright green shading of a row (eg Syrian Ostrich) indicates former presence of a taxon in the OSME Region. Light gold shading in column A indicates sequence change from the previous ORL issue. Red font indicates added information since the previous ORL version or the Conservation Threat Status (Critically Endangered = CE, Endangered = E, Vulnerable = V and Data Deficient = DD only). Not all synonyms have been examined. Serial numbers (SN) are merely an administrative convenience and may change. Please do not cite them in any formal correspondence or papers. NB: Compass cardinals (eg N = north, SE = southeast) are used. Rows shaded thus and with yellow text denote summaries of problem taxon groups in which some closely-related taxa may be of indeterminate status or are being studied. Rows shaded thus and with yellow text indicate recent or data-driven major conservation concerns. Rows shaded thus and with white text contain additional explanatory information on problem taxon groups as and when necessary. English names shaded thus are species on BirdLife Tracking Database, http://seabirdtracking.org/mapper/index.php. Only a few individuals from very few colonies are involved. A broad dark orange line, as below, indicates the last taxon in a new or suggested species split, or where sspp are best considered separately.
    [Show full text]
  • Ecology, Morphology, and Behavior in the New World Wood Warblers
    Ecology, Morphology, and Behavior in the New World Wood Warblers A dissertation presented to the faculty of the College of Arts and Sciences of Ohio University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy Brandan L. Gray August 2019 © 2019 Brandan L. Gray. All Rights Reserved. 2 This dissertation titled Ecology, Morphology, and Behavior in the New World Wood Warblers by BRANDAN L. GRAY has been approved for the Department of Biological Sciences and the College of Arts and Sciences by Donald B. Miles Professor of Biological Sciences Florenz Plassmann Dean, College of Arts and Sciences 3 ABSTRACT GRAY, BRANDAN L., Ph.D., August 2019, Biological Sciences Ecology, Morphology, and Behavior in the New World Wood Warblers Director of Dissertation: Donald B. Miles In a rapidly changing world, species are faced with habitat alteration, changing climate and weather patterns, changing community interactions, novel resources, novel dangers, and a host of other natural and anthropogenic challenges. Conservationists endeavor to understand how changing ecology will impact local populations and local communities so efforts and funds can be allocated to those taxa/ecosystems exhibiting the greatest need. Ecological morphological and functional morphological research form the foundation of our understanding of selection-driven morphological evolution. Studies which identify and describe ecomorphological or functional morphological relationships will improve our fundamental understanding of how taxa respond to ecological selective pressures and will improve our ability to identify and conserve those aspects of nature unable to cope with rapid change. The New World wood warblers (family Parulidae) exhibit extensive taxonomic, behavioral, ecological, and morphological variation.
    [Show full text]
  • Southern Spain: the Europe Introtour April 2019
    Tropical Birding Trip Report Southern Spain: The Europe Introtour April 2019 A Tropical Birding set departure tour SOUTHERN SPAIN: The Europe Introtour 1st – 9th April 2019 Tour Leader: Emma Juxon All photographs in this report were taken by Emma Juxon unless otherwise stated, species depicted in photographs are named in BOLD RED www.tropicalbirding.com +1-409-515-9110 [email protected] Tropical Birding Trip Report Southern Spain: The Europe Introtour April 2019 Introduction For European birders, there is nowhere better to take a birding trip than the Iberian Peninsula. A region largely overlooked by North American birders in the past, it boasts some of THE best birding on the continent, it’s certainly not to be missed. We visit the outstanding regions of Extremadura and Andalucía on this tour, making our way through breathtaking mountainous landscapes, through rolling steppes and spectacular marismas. With many participants visiting the Old World for the first time, it promises a wealth of lifers, great food, fantastic people and an easy-going introduction to the Mediterranean way of life. One of the many beauties of this tour is that we only have two bases. Starting in Madrid, we make our way through the beautiful Spanish countryside, passing vineyards and castillos to get to wildflower- carpeted Extremadura. Here we enjoy the Belen Steppe, Caceres Plains and the exceptional Monfragüe National Park, encountering incredible birds such as Eurasian Griffon, Pin-tailed Sandgrouse, Great Bustard and Iberian Magpie. From here we head south to our next base in the picturesque pilgrimage town of El Rocío; I love this charming place, with its sandy roads, wonderful bird-filled marshes and charismatic people.
    [Show full text]
  • An Analysis of Physical, Physiological, and Optical Aspects of Avian Coloration with Emphasis on Wood-Warblers
    (ISBN: 0-943610-47-8) AN ANALYSIS OF PHYSICAL, PHYSIOLOGICAL, AND OPTICAL ASPECTS OF AVIAN COLORATION WITH EMPHASIS ON WOOD-WARBLERS BY EDWARD H. BURTT, JR. Department of Zoology Ohio Wesleyan University Delaware, Ohio 43015 ORNITHOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS NO. 38 PUBLISHED BY THE AMERICAN ORNITHOLOGISTS' UNION WASHINGTON, D.C. 1986 AN ANALYSIS OF PHYSICAL, PHYSIOLOGICAL, AND OPTICAL ASPECTS OF AVIAN COLORATION WITH EMPHASIS ON WOOD-WARBLERS ORNITHOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS This series,published by the American Ornithologists' Union, has been estab- lished for major papers too long for inclusion in the Union's journal, The Auk. Publication has been made possiblethrough the generosityof the late Mrs. Carl Tucker and the Marcia Brady Tucker Foundation, Inc. Correspondenceconcerning manuscripts for publication in the seriesshould be addressedto the Editor, Dr. David W. Johnston,Department of Biology, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA 22030. Copies of Ornithological Monographs may be ordered from the Assistant to the Treasurer of the AOU, Frank R. Moore, Department of Biology, University of Southern Mississippi, Southern Station Box 5018, Hattiesburg, Mississippi 39406. (See price list on back and inside back covers.) Ornithological Monographs, No. 38, x + 126 pp. Editors of OrnithologicalMonographs, David W. Johnstonand Mercedes S. Foster Special Reviewers for this issue, Sievert A. Rohwer, Department of Zo- ology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; William J. Hamilton III, Division of Environmental Studies, University of Cal- ifornia, Davis, California Author, Edward H. Burtt, Jr., Department of Zoology, Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio 43015 First received, 24 October 1982; accepted 11 March 1983; final revision completed 9 April 1985 Issued May 1, 1986 Price $15.00 prepaid ($12.50 to AOU members).
    [Show full text]
  • Corvidae Species Tree
    Corvidae I Red-billed Chough, Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax Pyrrhocoracinae =Pyrrhocorax Alpine Chough, Pyrrhocorax graculus Ratchet-tailed Treepie, Temnurus temnurus Temnurus Black Magpie, Platysmurus leucopterus Platysmurus Racket-tailed Treepie, Crypsirina temia Crypsirina Hooded Treepie, Crypsirina cucullata Rufous Treepie, Dendrocitta vagabunda Crypsirininae ?Sumatran Treepie, Dendrocitta occipitalis ?Bornean Treepie, Dendrocitta cinerascens Gray Treepie, Dendrocitta formosae Dendrocitta ?White-bellied Treepie, Dendrocitta leucogastra Collared Treepie, Dendrocitta frontalis ?Andaman Treepie, Dendrocitta bayleii ?Common Green-Magpie, Cissa chinensis ?Indochinese Green-Magpie, Cissa hypoleuca Cissa ?Bornean Green-Magpie, Cissa jefferyi ?Javan Green-Magpie, Cissa thalassina Cissinae ?Sri Lanka Blue-Magpie, Urocissa ornata ?White-winged Magpie, Urocissa whiteheadi Urocissa Red-billed Blue-Magpie, Urocissa erythroryncha Yellow-billed Blue-Magpie, Urocissa flavirostris Taiwan Blue-Magpie, Urocissa caerulea Azure-winged Magpie, Cyanopica cyanus Cyanopica Iberian Magpie, Cyanopica cooki Siberian Jay, Perisoreus infaustus Perisoreinae Sichuan Jay, Perisoreus internigrans Perisoreus Gray Jay, Perisoreus canadensis White-throated Jay, Cyanolyca mirabilis Dwarf Jay, Cyanolyca nanus Black-throated Jay, Cyanolyca pumilo Silvery-throated Jay, Cyanolyca argentigula Cyanolyca Azure-hooded Jay, Cyanolyca cucullata Beautiful Jay, Cyanolyca pulchra Black-collared Jay, Cyanolyca armillata Turquoise Jay, Cyanolyca turcosa White-collared Jay, Cyanolyca viridicyanus
    [Show full text]
  • Seville and the Alentejo David Bradnum, Shaun Harvey & Howard Vaughan – June 2019
    Seville and the Alentejo David Bradnum, Shaun Harvey & Howard Vaughan – June 2019 Overview and Logistics This was a short, low-cost birding break to Spain and Portugal. We had two aims: to see a handful of late-arriving spring migrants – White-rumped Swift, Western Olivaceous Warbler and Rufous-tailed Scrub-robin – and to enjoy as many as possible of the local specialities on the Castro Verde plains and the Rio Guadiana valley. We flew Easyjet from Gatwick to Seville. This cost c. £140 return each, booked just over a month in advance of the trip. We hired a car from Europcar, via Easyjet. This turned out to be a Skoda Octavia diesel for a bargain £65. Collection and drop-off were both relatively quick and fuss-free. We stayed in an Airbnb rental in the tiny Portuguese village of Bens, east of Mertola, for three nights. This was very convenient for the White-rumped Swift site and also another bargain, coming in at a total of just £130 for three nights! The traditional cottage was very comfortable and peaceful, with Iberian Magpies outside during the day and Red-necked Nightjar calling (once, at least!) during the night. We self-catered throughout, contributing to an overall cost of around £270 per person for the entire trip. The weather was generally good, with plenty of sunshine and peak temperature around 32°C (probably a little lower than might be expected). Day three was unusually overcast and even a little rainy around lunchtime – though this was actually helpful in that we could keep birding through the warmest part of the day! Ahead of the trip, we used the Finding Birds in Southern Portugal Gosney site guide to identify the best sites, and then topped this up with more recent info from eBird.
    [Show full text]
  • Spain - Realm of the Iberian Lynx
    Spain - Realm of the Iberian Lynx Naturetrek Tour Report 19 - 24 January 2020 Iberian Lynx Iberian Lynx Cinereous Vulture Sunset Report compiled by Niki Williamson Images by Simon Tonkin Naturetrek Mingledown Barn Wolf's Lane Chawton Alton Hampshire GU34 3HJ UK T: +44 (0)1962 733051 E: [email protected] W: www.naturetrek.co.uk Tour Report Spain - Realm of the Iberian Lynx Tour participants: Simon Tonkin & Niki Williamson (leaders) with 13 Naturetrek clients.. Summary For our band of patient nature-lovers, this six-day exploration of the realm of the Iberian Lynx gave us something amazing every day! Six different individuals of the endangered Spanish Imperial Eagle, rare Marbled Ducks, Hawfinches, Spanish Ibex cantering across a rock face, herds of Red Deer swimming a lake, duetting Little Owls, clouds of Cinereous and Griffon Vultures, Golden Eagles and shades of blue in the form of Bluethroat, Blue Rock Thrush, Iberian Magpie and Common Kingfisher were just some of our trip´s natural highlights. Our hosts´ hospitality was fantastic at both bases, and the group enjoyed sampling delicious local food such as chickpea and spinach stew, salmorejo soup and egg revuelto dishes, not to mention mouth-watering picnics in the sun, sometimes accompanied by dazzling flocks of Iberian Magpies, always accompanied by wine! Our fleeting glimpse of a female Iberian Lynx in Doñana Natural Park was to provide a suitable appetite-whetter for our superb encounter in Sierra de Morena, where a stunning female stalked across the track in front of us before taking up a pose on a nearby rock, allowing us to watch for over an hour! Day 1 Sunday 19th January Leaders Simon and Niki met the group as they converged on Sevilla airport, from various flights and pre-trip stays.
    [Show full text]
  • Western Mexico
    Cotinga 14 W estern Mexico: a significant centre of avian endem ism and challenge for conservation action A. Townsend Peterson and Adolfo G. Navarro-Sigüenza Cotinga 14 (2000): 42–46 El endemismo de aves en México está concentrado en el oeste del país, pues entre el 40 al 47% de las aves endémicas de México están totalmente restringidas a la región. Presentamos un compendio de estos taxones, tanto siguiendo el concepto biológico de especie como el concepto filogenético de especie, documentando la región como un importante centro de endemismo. Discutimos estrategias de conservación en la región, especialmente la idea de ligar reservas para preservar transectos altitudinales de hábitats continuos, desde las tierras bajas hasta las mayores altitudes, en áreas críticas. Introduction and Transvolcanic Belt of central and western Mexico has been identified as a megadiverse coun­ Mexico were identified as major concentrations of try, with impressive diversity in many taxonomic endemic species. This non-coincidence of diversity groups20. Efforts to document the country’s biologi­ and endemism in Mexican biodiversity has since cal diversity are at varying stages of development been documented on different spatial scales13,17 and in different taxa17,19,20 but avian studies have ben­ in additional taxonomic groups17. efited from extensive data already accumulated18 In prior examinations, however, western Mexico and have been able to advance to more detailed lev­ (herein defined as the region from Sonora and Chi­ els of analysis6,12,17. huahua south to Oaxaca, including the coastal In the only recent countrywide survey of avian lowlands, the Sierra Madre Occidental and Sierra diversity and endemism6, the south-east lowlands Madre del Sur, and Pacific-draining interior basins were identified as important foci of avian species such as the Balsas Basin) has not been appreciated richness.
    [Show full text]