Saturday, February 1, 2014

Jeju in January

Eurasian Coot Fulica atra
Grey Wagtail Motacilla cinerea
Japanese Bush Warbler Horornis diphone
Dead loon, probably oiled
Eurasian Magpie Pica pica
Mandarin Ducks Aix galericulata - NOT in a hotel lobby...
Mandarin Duck Aix galericulata (male, fully puffed)
female Pale Thrush Turdus pallidus
Daurian Redstart Phoenicurus auroreus
Eastern Great Tit Parus minor
Warbling (Japanese) White-eye Zosterops japonicus
White Wagtail Motacilla alba
Eurasian Wren Troglodytes troglodytes dauricus
female Blue Rock Thrush Monticola solitarius
Red-throated Loon Gavia stellata
White-backed Woodpecker Dendrocopos leucotos quelpartensis
(Jeju subspecies, which is the provincial bird)
Red-flanked Bluetail Tarsiger cyanurus
Mandarin Duck Aix galericulata feeding in tree
male Mandarin Duck Aix galericulata feeding in tree
female Mandarin Duck Aix galericulata

male Mandarin Duck Aix galericulata feeding in tree
Red-billed Starling (Silky Starling) Spodiopsar sericeus
White's Thrush (Scaly Thrush) Zoothera aurea
Varied Tit Sittiparus varius 
Tree Sparrow Passer montanus
Coal Tit Periparus ater
Pacific Reef Egret Egretta sacra
Eastern Spot-billed Duck Anas zonorhyncha
Seogwipo, Jeju Island - January 2014 highlights
 I have been checking my local Seogwipo patch daily for the past month. It’s been an unseasonably warm and hazy January, with double digit temperatures most days. I haven’t encountered anything unexpected, but Jeju has a nice mix of winter birds to see, some of which are not so common on the mainland at this time of year.
  The hills are alive with...tits! Varied, Long-tailed, and Coal Tits are exclusively found up at higher elevations, while Eastern Great Tits are widespread in wooded areas and parks. A White’s Thrush has been spotted several times at a dry riverbed that in summer is home to Japanese Paradise Flycatchers. I’ve also encountered several Bramblings at higher elevations, whereas Eurasian Siskins and Grey-capped Greenfinch can be found reliably in several parks around town. 
  These parks also feature Little Grebe, Green Sandpiper, White-backed Woodpecker, Red-flanked Bluetail, Daurian Redstart, White and Grey Wagtail, Olive-backed Pipit, Japanese White-eye, Blue Rock Thrush, plentiful Yellow-throated Bunting, as well as an overwintering Striated HeronPale Thrushes can be heard burbling through most areas with shady undergrowth, but rarely seen, as they are quite shy. On the 29th I witnessed a group of close to 20 Mandarin Ducks awkwardly feeding on fruit in a large riverside tree – quite a spectacle!
  In and around the harbour, several Common Sandpiper, Pacific Reef Egrets, Mandarin Ducks (120+), several Gadwall, Mallard, Spot-billed Duck, Eurasian Teal, a Common Pochard, as well as Common Coots, several Black-crowned Night Heron, and a Red-throated Loon. On the coast, Great Crested and Black-necked Grebes can be seen relatively close in to shore at a number of sites.
  Recently I was surprised to hear the exotic 'summer song' of the Japanese Bush Warbler - very early in the year I thought (January 27). Usually at this time of year they can be heard 'check-check-checking' from the underbrush. Their ‘winter call’ is very similar to the Eurasian Wren, a bird which can be found at several quiet riverside sites around town.
  On the 30th near Jungmun, I found a flock of almost two dozen Red-billed Starlings perched on wires, competing for berries with Brown-eared Bulbuls. Nearby, a small band of personata Black-faced Buntings moved through thick underbrush on a quiet riverside. White-cheeked Starlings and Dusky Thrushes have been conspicuously absent from Seogwipo this winter. Raptors were represented in January by several pairs of Eastern Buzzard, a Eurasian Sparrowhawk, several Peregrine Falcons, Common Kestrels, and a Northern Goshawk.

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