A good month for the birders....

    What's happening here? 

    I heard my first night jar calling in the cool, dry morning a couple of weeks ago, forgot to tell you; the egrets have been here for months - have I mentioned them yet?; I saw some Rosy Minivets on the drive, they didn't even get a note in the diary.

    My bosses, of course, up in Anantara Towers will happily note that I must be doing some work at last, no time for the finer bird spotting - only wasters and travellers have time to hang out and watch the roses, right, still waiting on last year's bananas per billable hour breakdown and Lynchee's performance goals for this year - no time to be hanging around in bushes.

    But the birding is going on, I grabbed five minutes with local birders Mick and Dowroong of the Yonok Wetland Project yesterday, here to pick up some guests and take them out to the birding spots around the Mekong and up to the project itself.

    Without my concentrating on it we've managed to keep them fairly busy with the ornthologically minded and some support teaching from our guests, we're seeing more and more spotting scopes and bin's around the hotel just recently - and then (egrets leaving as I write) I note that, of the significant sightings in Thailand for January (as reported by the Bird Conservation Society of Thailand) about 30% for the whole country were from this area and the Yonok discovered sights, many with our guests!

    Now that's worth dragging me away from my work to report (honest boss).
____________________________________

 
BIRD RECORDS: Rapid roundup, January 2008

Two Chinese Egrets on the sand spit at Laem Phak Bia on 22 January (RFG, PDR), and an amazing 75 at Krabi on 24 January (DT).  There were no further sightings of the Great-billed Heron photographed in Laem Son National Park (Ranong) in the first half of January.

One Baer's Pochard along with 29 Ferruginous Pochards on Nong Bong Khai (Chiang Rai) on 23 January (YWP). The Common Shelducks at Ban Pak Thale (Phetchaburi) had risen to four by 31 January (SN). Greylag Goose photographed on Bung Boraphet (Nakhon Sawan ) on 21 January (Chanchai SURNAME?). Comb Duck at Bung Boraphet on 30 January (KE).

Masked Finfoot at Chiang Dao Hill Resort (Chiang Mai) on 24 and 25 January (BW) but not seen thereafter.  Three different Water Rails at Nong Samrong (Udon Thani) during 7-16 January (P.

Male Western Marsh Harrier photographed at Nong Lom (Chiang Rai) on 13 January (TS, CW).

Shorebirds in the Inner Gulf included 45 Asian Dowitchers on mudflats off the Samut Sakhon Mangrove Research Station on 20 January (SS); 14 different Spoon-billed Sandpipers during early January, the largest single group at Ban Pak Thale (where still six on 31 January; BCST Survey);15 Nordmann's Greenshanks roosting with 1600 Great Knots at Laem Phak Bia on 23 January (RFG, PDR); 450 Red Knots at Samkut Manirat (Samut Sahon) on 17 January (SN, AJP, PDR).   First-winter Black-tailed Gull at the Thachin River Mouth (Samut Sakhon) on 22 January (RFG ,PDR). One male “White-faced Plover” present at Laem Phak Bia from 5 to at least 28 January (many observers).

Four different Long-billed Plovers at Chiang Saen (Chiang Rai) this January (two seen together on 25 and 29 January; YWP). The long-staying River Tern was also present on 26 January (YWP).

A waterbird count at Krabi on 9 January produced a staggering 824 Lesser Crested Terns (DT).

Two nests of Grass Owl have been found at Nong Lom: one with two, roughly one-week old, chicks on 13 January (CW, TS, UK) was still intact on 24 January when surveyed by Thai Raptor Group. TRG then found a second nest with four older chicks which was sadly destroyed by fire set by villagers on 26 January.

Fourteen different Jerdon's Bushchats at six sites along the river between Chiang Saen and Chiang Khong on 30 January (YWP). Long-tailed Thrush on Doi Lang (Chiang Mai) on 17 January (IW) and male Black-breasted Thrush, Doi Ang Khang on 17 January (BL). Aberrant Bush Warbler (first record for the park)and Rufous-tailed Robin behind the newly constructed toilet black on the summit of Khao Khieo, Khao Yai  on 8 and 10 January (NL, RP, DW et al

Five Rosy Starlings and two Chestnut-cheeked Starlings at Chumphon on 29 January (CN).

Contributors: Philip Bawden (PB Krairat-Eiam-amphai/ Bung Boraphet Wildlife Research Station (KE), Richard Grimmett (RFG), Thai Raptor Group/Dr. Chaiyan Kasorndorkbua  (TRG), Dr. Ubonrat Kiewcham (UK), Banard Lau (BL), Nitthaya Lawrence (NL); Somchai Nimnuan (SN), Chukiat Nualsri (CN), Ralph Parks (RP), Andrew Pierce (AJP) Yonok Wetlands Project (Mick Davies and Dowroong Damlamajak (YWP), Philip Round (PDR), Dr. Taweewat Supindham (TS), Smith Sutibut (SS), Donnapat Tamornsuwan (DT), David Walsh (DW), Boontan Wangsithan (BW), Ingo Waschkies (IW) Chaiwat Wongchai (CW)

(Compiled by Philip Round on behalf of BCST Records Committee)


http://www.bcst.or.th/eng/sighting.htm
 
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  • Fri, 14 Mar 2008 15:59:35 GMT Antony Lynam wrote:
    27CDB6E-AE6D-11cf-96B8-444553540000>
    FLYWAYS AND BYWAYS - Birdwatching in Thailand’s Golden Triangle and Upper Mekong River Basin
     
    Birdwatchers spend billions of dollars on bird tours, chasing reports of rare and unusual birds. According to the US Bureau of Commerce and US Fish and Wildlife Service, in the late 1990s Americans alone spent over US$23 billion annually.

    With Thailand being home to 62 important birding sites and 960 species of birds (roughly 10 per cent of the world’s total) for at least for part of the year, the Thai kingdom is a hot spot for globe-trotting birdwatchers.

    The total number of species found in Thailand far surpasses that found in the United States, Australia, Southern Africa or West Europe, individually. In terms of total area, Thailand is only a fraction of the size of these places, so why the diversity?

    The kingdom spans the 14 degrees of latitude (from 6 to 20 degrees north of the equator), and has elevations of up to 2,565 metres above sea level, giving rise to diverse habitats. These include lush tropical rainforest and rugged karst forests in the south, mountains clothed in mixed evergreen and deciduous forests stretching to the Tenasserim border to the west, and cool montane evergreen and dry deciduous dipterocarp forests in the north.

    Thailand is also a tropical rest stop for birds that make long distance migrations between their breeding grounds in North Asia and feeding zones in Australia. As a result the Bird Conservation Society of Thailand and Birdlife International have identified sixty-two Important Bird Areas as outstanding places for birds and biodiversity. These are the main targets for visiting birders.

    Forests are essential habitats for most resident birds - those which live and breed within Thailand - and some migrants, notably birds of prey. But freshwater habitats such as lakes, pools, marshes, rivers and irrigated areas are absolutely critical as feeding and breeding grounds to an entirely different group of birds. Among the most important of these wetlands are places least disturbed by humans, that support globally threatened or vulnerable species, or support twenty-thousand or more waterbirds at a time, at least for some part of the year.

    Thailand is committed to protecting these rare places under the Convention on Wetlands of International Importance (Ramsar Convention). Almost a third of the country’s important bird areas fit this description. Eight are designated Ramsar sites.

    Click to expand
     
    Image Copyright Philip D. Round
    Striated Grassbird
    Image Copyright Philip D. Round
    Image Copyright Philip D. Round

    Chiang Saen Lake and Surrounding Areas
    Lying near the northernmost point of the Kingdom, where Thailand meets Laos and Myanmar (Burma), the Nong Bong Kai Non-hunting Area is a Ramsar Site protecting Chiang Saen Lake, one of several semi-natural swamps that support impressive birdlife. Floating mats of grass bob on the water’s surface attracting insects to the rotting vegetation which are devoured by swamp hens, jacanas and other waterbirds. The nearby Yonok Wetlands, protected by a local conservation group, is a major roosting area for Pied and Eastern Marsh Harriers. Hundreds of the big boldly-coloured birds can be seen there. Monks have constructed a viewing platform for birds on the lake.

    However, well-known ornithologist Philip Round indicates that some of the most important habitats for birds lie elsewhere – such as at the edges of the lakes and next to rice paddies. Grasslands may reveal grassbirds, bushchats and stonechats. Quiet roads leading out of Chiang Saen towards Chiang Khong or Mae Sai are both access points to the lakes and likely places along which to see grassland birds.

    During the winter months of November to January, the Mekong River is used as a flyway by ducks, gulls, terns and migratory waders as they move south from Laos, Myanmar, China and beyond. This includes globally threatened birds such as Baer’s Pochard and Swan Goose, globally near-threatened Ferruginous Pochard, and globally vulnerable Baikal Teal. Birds difficult to find elsewhere in Thailand like Bar-headed Goose, Ruddy Shelduck, Greylag Goose and Mandarin Duck, and more common species like Spotted Redshank are also possible. Vantage points are the riverbanks behind restaurants in Chiang Saen town.

    Habitats in and beside the Mekong River such as large sandbars and sandbanks are breeding places for Great Thick-knee, a comical looking bird with large yellow eyes and an upturned bill, and River lapwings, excitable birds with a high-pitched call. Large numbers of Small Pratincoles can be seen feeding in the river. Jerdon’s Bushchat, a quaint and shy bird, can be seen skulking through low vegetation on islands and riverbanks.

    Round says one attraction of the area is the chance to see unexpected birds. Grass Owls were discovered at Yonok in 2007, a first record for Thailand. Long-tailed Duck, seen this past January at Nong Bong Kai, was a new record for Thailand and Southeast Asia.

    The Mekong flyways and byways can be interesting and accessible all year round. And best of all, for the birder on a limited time budget, three or four days is enough to sample all habitats.

    ACKNOWLDEGEMENTS
    News Room sincerely thanks Philip D. Round, Regional Representative of The Wetland Trust and Assistant Professor at the Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University
    for the tremendous support and kind assistance in providing information and images for this feature.

    Related Links
    Yonok Wetlands Project
    Chiang Saen district, Chiang Rai province, Northern Thailand
    http://yonokwetlands.awardspace.com/

    Yonok Wetlands Project near Chiang Saen
    http://thaibirding.com/news/yonokwetlands.htm

    Birdwatching in Thailand
    http://www.thaibirding.com/

    Bird Conservation Society of Thailand
    http://www.bcst.or.th/eng/

    Birdlife International
    http://www.birdlife.org/

    A Guide to the Birds of Thailand
    by Boonsong Lekagul and Philip D. Round
    http://www.thaibirding.com/book_reviews/roundthai.htm

    About The Author
    An Australian citizen, Antony Lynam has authored 60 reports and popular articles on conservation related issues in Australia, North America and Asia. He writes for The Nation, The Bangkok Post, The Natural History Bulletin of The Siam Society, and travel magazines. He has also been involved in the production of documentaries related to his areas of expertise. These include Evolution: Extinction, Siamese Crocodile, Tigers Fighting Back, and Eye of the Tiger. He advises on wildlife conservation programmes in Asia for the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society, and has trained over a thousand government staff and graduate students since coming to the region in 1989.


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