Pied-billed Grebe @ Walkers Reserve |
Walkers Reserve – 23 Species observed
Pied-billed Grebe and two chicks @ Walkers Reserve |
This was my first visit to Walkers since the Introduction to Birding workshop on May 25th and I was eager to see what birds were
around. John visited the reserve the day
after the workshop and saw not only the Ruddy
Duck but also reported a Pied-billed
Grebe with seven chicks. I was keen
to see them and also to get a good sighting of the Ruddy Duck. We got started
at the Main Pond, which was not the plan but a cluster of shorebirds on the far
bank of the pond caught our attention.
We tallied 25 Semipalmated
Plovers, 75 Ruddy Turnstones and
a Sanderling. These birds appeared to be in the process of
migration as a small mixed group of Turnstones and Plovers flew in and we saw
the main group of Turnstones taking to the sky as one body and disappearing
over the trees. As we moved on to the
southern pond we quickly located the family of Grebes, the chicks appeared healthy, we even saw one diving. A few of the Common Gallinules in this pond also had chicks but we never saw the
Ruddy Duck. As we were leaving Walkers we saw a Great Blue Heron wading in the main
pond. It is rare to see Great Blues at
this time of year and even more so with the scarcity in seeing them last season,
but it was easily my bird of the afternoon.
Long Pond – 14 Species observed
Sanderlings and Semipalmated Plovers @ Long Pond |
There were only a few birds at Long Pond. The main bird of interest was a Sanderling molting to breeding plumage.
The transformation which some birds make
to breeding plumage still intrigues me and sanderlings are one of the poster
birds for this change. In normal
plumage, it is a pale-ish grey bird but around this time of year, the breeding
season, it starts to replace that pale look with a reddish-brown and black
livery, making it distinguishable from its non-breeding self. Sadly while the molting process may start here
on the island, by the time the process is completed the bird would already have
migrated.
Greenland Irrigation Pond – 8 Species observed
With the sun setting over the hills of St. Andrew, we made
our final stop at Greenland Irrigation Pond. This small and usually deep pond
has suffered greatly from the dry conditions and is now very shallow and
receding at the banks. This pond still attracted Common Gallinules (21) but
not much else.
At the end of our trip to St. Andrew, we tallied 26 species
made up of 388 individual birds. Common Gallinules accounted for 163 birds
with 141 of that number recorded at Walkers Reserve. Even though I did not see the Ruddy Duck it
was still a good afternoon of birding in the east.
---See images here
---See images here
Birds seen:
- Pied-billed Grebe - Podilymbus podiceps
- Scaly-naped Pigeon - Patagioenas squamosa
- Eurasian Collared-Dove - Streptopelia decaocto
- Common Ground-Dove - Columbina passerina
- Zenaida Dove - Zenaida aurita
- Green-throated Carib - Eulampis holosericeus
- Antillean Crested Hummingbird - Orthorhyncus cristatus
- Common Gallinule - Gallinula galeata
- American Coot - Fulica Americana
- Semipalmated Plover - Charadrius semipalmatus
- Ruddy Turnstone - Arenaria interpres
- Sanderling - Calidris alba
- Greater Yellowlegs - Tringa melanoleuca
- Great Blue Heron - Ardea Herodias
- Little Egret - Egretta garzetta
- Snowy Egret - Egretta thula
- Cattle Egret - Bubulcus ibis
- Green Heron - Butorides virescens
- Caribbean Elaenia - Elaenia martinica
- Gray Kingbird - Tyrannus dominicensis
- Caribbean Martin - Progne dominicensis
- Yellow Warbler - Setophaga petechia
- Grassland Yellow-Finch - Sicalis luteola
- Bananaquit - Coereba flaveola
- Black-faced Grassquit - Tiaris bicolor
- Barbados Bullfinch - Loxigilla barbadensis
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