22 December 2007

Broome 2007 part 1


Typical view on Roebuck Bay - rocks near Richard's Point
North West Australia Wader and Tern Expedition 2007 Broome and Anna Plains
9th November to 1st December

Broome Bird Observatory (BBO)

9th - Arrive late in the afternoon from Perth. I flew into Perth last night and stayed with the Rowleys before heading to Broome this afternoon. I settle into the Woodside block in room 3 with Nick Ward from Devon, UK. Half of the party are here by today but most of the rest are expected tomorrow.

Views near Richard's Point

10th - I sort out and settle in. Birds regularly seen about the BBO include two constantly calling Paperbark Flycatcher, lots of Double-barred Finch (black-rumped), numerous Rufous-throated Honeyeater and a few Brown Honeyeater and also few Singing Honeyeater. Occasional groups of Little Friarbirds drops in to the bird bath and 5-10 Greater Bowerbird often at the water. A splendid large Brown Goshawk is often seen at the water causing consternation and at least one immature Brown Goshawk has been dropping in occasionally. I believe the nest site is not far away. Rufous Whistler noted and some Yellow White-eye. Magpie-Lark and Pied Butcherbird are calling often. A party of Variegated Fairy-wren is seen occasionally with at least two full coloured males. Bar-shouldered Dove are slightly more numerous than Peaceful Dove but neither is in serious song although calling occasionally. In fact nothing much is in song at this time in the extreme heat! Long-tailed Finch have been seen but not, so far, by me.

Nick Ward and Dick Holmes having a look at the area near Richard's Point

11th - Meal Team today. First catch at Richard’s Point using a small mesh 3 cannon net. A good one of 296 birds, mostly Great Knot (215 with 44 retraps); Curlew Sandpiper (20/2); 5 Red Knot; 3 Greater Sandplover a couple each of Bar-tailed Godwit (1 retrap) and Terek Sandpiper, along with a Black-tailed Godwit and a Red-necked Stint. No less than four of the Great Knot had been flagged recently in China! I go to Broome very briefly with Julia and David Melville and Peter Jenkins for some last minute shopping and the day’s laundry run. A slide show was given in the evening by Adrian Boyle providing an introduction to the Australian NW. Brilliant pictures as one would expect from Adrian.


Shorebird processing teams at work

12th - Second catch at Tattler Rocks was also a good one of 378. Same routine using a small mesh net but this time the bulk of the catch was spread over five species. We caught a decent sample of Red-necked Stint (84/27), Great Knot (75/10), Greater Sandplover (52/5), Curlew Sandpiper (44/11) and Terek Sandpiper (44/10). We also caught a few Broad-billed Sandpiper (8/1)and Lesser Sandplover (3) together with Red Knot (2), an Oriental Plover and a Bar-tailed Godwit. The talk in the evening was given by Clive Minton on the subject of band returns and flag sightings and what they have revealed about shorebird movements throughout the West Pacific Flyway. He described the patterns of movement for each species as they undertake their annual migration to and from their northern breeding grounds which are mainly in the Russian and Alaskan arctic. He emphasised the important stop-over areas used by one or other species during their annual passage migrations through China and south-east Asia and he also indicated where each species spends the non-breeding seasons. For most migrant shorebirds this period is spent in Australia and New Zealand.


Some of the team waiting for the catch


Processing today
13th - Third catch at Two-dog Hermit was another good one with a total of 346. Again a small mesh 3-cannon net. This time the Great Knot were again dominant (145/38) but we also caught a decent sample of Red-necked Stint (80/12) along with Bar-tailed Godwit (25/5), Greater Sandplover (13/4),Red Knot (9/3), Red-capped Plover (6/1), Lesser Sandplover (2) and a Curlew Sandpiper.



Yellow Chat
Two vehicle loads of us went out onto the Roebuck plains with Pete Collins earlier this morning to track down some Yellow Chat. We found them and also numerous Golden-headed Cisticola, Australian Pipit, Singing Bushlark and a few Red-backed Fairy-wren but none of the latter in full male plumage. The talk this evening was given by Dick Holmes on Calidrine wader breeding systems. Another masterful summary on work that Dick had done more than 30 years ago but to which, surprisingly, little had been added by other workers since that time.

Broome 2007 part 2


Arriving to set the nets early in the morning

14th - Fourth catch again at Richard's Point, with 188 caught. A small mesh 3-cannon net was used and the bulk of the catch was either Bar-tailed Godwit (72/31) or Great Knot (56/13) with lesser numbers of Curlew Sandpiper (7/3), Red Knot (3), Grey Plover (1/1) and a Terek Sandpiper. One of the Bar-tailed Godwit was flagged from China! These past few days we have usually set two net but fired on only one of them. This practice gives two chances with one of the two nets being set rather lower on the beach than the other so that there is a chance to switch to the upper net if the lower net proves to be unworkable.


One of two net settings today near Richard's Point
The talk this evening was given by Larry Niles on the problems facing Red Knot along the western Atlantic flyway and in particular during their critical refuelling times in spring while in the Delaware Bay area. Again, another fantastic presentation but revealing some potentially alarming consequences for the Red Knot on this flyway.

Again, waiting in the intense heat


The other net is set on a rocky beach, but was not fired

Middle cannon in place

Keeping cages at the ready

View towards Dampier Creek

Processing completed

Shoreline

15th Move to Anna Plains. I travel with Roz Jessop, Peter Jenkins and Nick Ward. Nothing spectacular but we do stop off at the Roebuck Roadhouse as would be expected!

The Roebuck Roadhouse at the turnoff south to Port Hedland on the Broome to Derby road

Broome 2007 part 3

Some of the Party


Nick Ward


Chris Hassell

Roz Jessop

Naoko Takeuchi & Alice Ewing

David Melville

Julia Melville

Zhang Guangming (Big John!)

Ma Qiang from Chongming Is (Little John!)

Prue Wright

Sue Abbotts

Peter Jenkins

Maurice O'Connor

Clive Minton

John Curran AQIS

Frank O'Connor

Dianne Emslie

Hugh Hanmer

Rachel Blakey

Paul Barden

Pete Collins - BBO warden

Broome 2007 part 4

The wide landscape of 80 mile beach at low tide

Twinkling vehicles approaching from the south with plenty of birds
both sides of the nets! A typical scene before the catch on 80 mile beach

Anna Plains Station - 80 mile Beach


Dusk at Anna Plains

Panorama view of Anna Plains Station

16th Meal Team today. First attempt at Anna Plains. South approx 22 km. Catch failure on two small mesh 3-cannon nets set side by side. Used decoys after failing to attract any birds to the front of the nets. Ended up with a catch of 7 - six Red-capped Plover and a Curlew Sandpiper!

Selecting a catch site



A good catch of decoys!
Masses of Oriental Plover on the beach with good numbers of Great Knot and Bar-tailed Godwit and Greater Sandplover and small numbers of Lesser Sandplover and Red-capped Plover. Fewer Terek Sandpiper, Grey-tailed Tattler, Curlew Sandpiper, Eastern Curlew, Little Curlew, Red-necked Stint and Sanderling. So far no Asiatic Dowitcher seen. Talk by Clive Minton on moult in waders.


Fog and cobwebs at Passerine Bore
17th Catching passerine with Roz Jessop and team at the bore from dawn today (0530) until about 0930. Good numbers of Plumed Whistling duck are roosting here during the day.Must be 500 or more. We make a measly catch of 14 birds including Brown Honeyeater (4), Peaceful Dove (3), Singing Honeyeater (2/), Diamond Dove (20 and one each of the Pallid Cuckoo, Rufous Whistler and Rufous-throated Honeyeater.

Passerine Bore after the fog had cleared

Area surrounding the bore

Magnificent seed pod

The paired leaves of "Bauhinia" - Lysiphyllum (Bauhinia) cunninghamii
A typical component species of Pindan

Banding at Passerine Bore

Rufous-throated Honeyeater


Rainbow Bee-eater

Plumed Whistling ducks flighting in to the bore

Pallid Cuckoo

Swirling flocks of waders slipping past during the twinkle. Mostly Great Knot and Oriental Plover but at least one Terek Sandpiper and a Greater Sandplover
Second attempt at about 6 km (I have the GPS) also a failure with only a small catch of 8 birds (3 Grey-tailed Tattler, 3 Great Knot and 2 Bar-tailed Godwit) following the reset of the small mesh 3-cannon net after dragging it away from the incoming tide. Again decoys in place but nets today set apart by about 25 metres. Both days the twinkling brought in many Oriental Plover with sandplovers, mostly Greater Sandplover, as a broad band of loosely associated birds from the tide edge to the upper beach slopes where the sandplovers mostly headed. One Pied Oystercatcher. Talk by David Melville on the NZ to Alaska Bar-tailed Godwit flyway.

Sorting out the processing teams

Banding a Grey-tailed Tattler

Julia Melville with a Grey-tailed Tattler

Juvenile Grey-tailed Tattler

Measuring a Bar-tailed Godwit


Juvenile Bar-tailed Godwit

Female Bar-tailed Godwit

Working teams with no shade because of pleasant on-shore breeze

The activity of Sand Bubbler Crabs, probably Scopimera inflata. Apparently, each ball takes about 1 minute to form as the crab picks up sand and filters out the palatable bits

Shorebirds have been here!





Oriental Plover

More Oriental Plover but also a Greater Sandplover.
I like Oriental Plover!


Alice through the hatchway (apologies LC!)

Clive doing the paperwork

18th Dawn drive with Chris Hassell to the bores south of homestead. Many Oriental Plovers scattered across the plains and flying ahead of our vehicle. Some Australian Pratincole, a few Australian Bustard, Brolga and other plains birds such as Australian Pipit, Singing Bushlark but no Cisticola spotted. Three Sharp-tailed Sandpiper on one bore and 500+ Plumed Whistling Duck quietly resting at the passerine bore.

Gull-billed Tern over the plains

Australian Pratincole

Plumed Whistle Ducks at the Passerine Bore
A few birds of prey noted this morning but all the usual species, Brown Falcon, a Brown Goshawk on the large airstrip, a Wedge-tailed Eagle, a few Whistling Kite and several Black-shouldered Kite but no Letter-winged Kite!

Waders flying past during the twinkle today. Mostly Great Knot but some Red Knot, Oriental Plover, Bar-tailed Godwit, Greater Sandplover and a Marsh Sandpiper

Crested Terns

Crested Tern and a Whiskered Tern

Oriental Plover and White-winged Black Terns
Today we made a successful catch at about 1km S with two large mesh 4-cannon nets. We netted 353 birds. Both nets were fired and the combined catch was: Great Knot (269/6), Curlew Sandpiper (30/1), Grey-tailed Tattler (21), Red Knot (9), Bar-tailed Godwit (8), Common Greenshank (3), Sharp-tailed Sandpiper (2), Greater Sandplover (2) and a Marsh Sandpiper. We also caught one White-winged Black Tern. Two of the Great Knot were from China and two others from Broome catches. Worked almost up to sunset!
A pair of Red-tailed Black-cockatoo visited homestead area briefly in the late morning.

Cattle on Anna Plains
19th Walk out to the close bore in the cattle yards at 0700 noting that about 500 Plumed Whistling Duck were on the dried grasslands near the end of the airfield. They moved off E, probably to the passerine bore. Morning cleaning and preparing equipment for tomorrow. Loaded some cartridges.



Red-winged Parrot
Photographed some Red-winged Parrot. About 10 of them hang about the homestead area. Leaving at 1300 to catch at the beach after lunch at about 4km with a poor catch of only 77 birds. Maybe we will be out until dark! Late catch was successful and we finished close on darkness! Again we fired a large mesh 4-cannon net and the total was made up from: Common Greenshank (34), Red Knot (17), Marsh Sandpiper (5), Bar-tailed Godwit (4), Sanderling (3) and one Great Knot which was the only retrap for the day! we also caught White-winged Black Tern (11) and a Common Tern.



Gull-billed terns

Gull-billed Tern over White-winged Black Tern

Two Crested Tern amongst White-winged Black Tern

Mostly White-winged Black Terns. Note the dark underwing patches on some

Caspian Tern

Two Great Knot and a Bar-tailed Godwit take off

Great Knot


Mostly Great Knot with a Greenshank and a Bar-tailed Godwit

Setting up for processing the catch

Watching the sunset

AQIS processing team



Sunset. No green flash tonight!

Broome 2007 part 5


Twinkling parties about to set off
20th At dawn go to passerine bore and I am successful with a recording of about 500 Plumed Whistling Duck. They came in and I was able to record them take off and circle back to the bore. The flowing bore was a constant background noise to the left and also the bore pump was set into action soon after I arrived by the stockmen on their morning bore rounds. We catch a Sacred Kingfisher and see two Tawny Frogmouth roosting in the tree above our processing table!
Brolga at the bore

Plumed Whistling Duck coming in at the bore

Plumed Whistling ducks about to pitch in at Passerine Bore.
A very Peter Scott scene!

Sacred Kingfisher


Tawny Frogmouth at the Passerine Bore

Brown Snake at the bore
Again out to south of old dunes camp to about 7 km and a late catch with views of what I think was a Flatback Turtle Natator depressus laying at the foot of the fore dune after we had finished processing. Nobody seemed to be sure of its identity.

Two nets fired synchronously today!
We fire two large-mesh 4 cannon nets but make a catch of only 114 birds; Great Knot (75/8), Red Knot (14/1), Bar-tailed Godwit (4/1), Curlew sandpiper (4), Grey-tailed Tattler (2/1), Common Greenshank (2), Sharp-tailed Sandpiper (1) and a White-winged Black Tern.

Turtle tracks in the sand.
The vehicle track follows the most recent high tide line

Turtle egg laying at the foot of the dunes
There are often tracks of turtles to be seen crossing the sand from the last high tide and returning afterwards to sea later as the tide recedes. We use large nets today and tonight we reset the nets in the dark under car headlamps for a catch early tomorrow. The tides are weak and will be almost identical in height today and tomorrow so we can safely leave everything overnight. Net set in very wet sand! Andrea, Chris’s partner, arrives to bring Dianne and stays the night.

Silver Gull at the tide's edge

Bar-tailed Godwit and a few Greenshank with a couple of Terek Sandpiper at the tide's edge


Fire! Another synchronous effort
21st Up early and out to the beach leaving at 0630. Meal Team day again. We make a reasonable catch of 102 at 7 km with a strong bias to terns. We take a team photograph. Again, today we fire two large-mesh 4 cannon nets! Red-necked Stint (58/2), Curlew Sandpiper (2), Greater Sandplover (2) Red-capped Plover (1), Gull-billed Tern (18/1), Crested Tern (7), Common Tern (6) and five Whiskered Tern.

Common Tern with a Gull-billed Tern passing a breaking wave

Silver Gull

Two Gull-billed Tern and a Crested Tern with Common Tern.
No, that is not a dirty lens!


Gull-billed, Crested and Common Tern with a Bar-tailed Godwit

Gull-billed, Crested and Common Tern







Common Tern

A mixed flock with Common, Whiskered, Crested and a Gull-billed Tern

Mixed waders and terns.
Note that several birds are leg flagged


More mixed flocks along the tide edge


Mixed flocks being slowly shifted along the tide's edge


Great Knot with some Bar-tailed Godwit
Mandy and Larry leave us today to return home to the USA and also Jing Li who goes back to Shanghi.

Larry, Mandy and Jing Li leave with Andrea to return to Broome
Good comparison of Gull-billed Tern of both races; the migrant visitor affinis and the local macrotarsa. This macrotarsa must be candidate for species separation as the endemic Australian Gull-billed Tern.

Transition plumage of an Australian Gull-billed Tern
In the late afternoon almost everyone goes off for a recce south along the beach to about 40 km. They find several turtles on their return after sunset but do not find a large tern roost on the beaches to the south that Clive had been hoping for. In the late afternoon I find large numbers of Agile Wallaby grazing the lawns about the homestead area and drinking from the sprinkler points. In all there must have been several hundreds of them. I count about 80 not far from our quarters. Amazing!





Agile wallabies


Agile Wallabies on the move
We have a very nice corned silverside beef for late dinner starting at 2130. Another hot day and the bush flies at the beach were appalling! Some Rainbow Bee-eater came down onto the beach and took advantage of the concentration of flies and probably more importantly the shade under of the vehicles!

Pesky bush flies on the beach today in millions

22nd Set nets early morning after leaving for the beach at about 0630 and we catch a huge sample of 595 in the south net set by the Chinese! A large-mesh 4 cannon net. Curlew Sandpiper (311/21), Great Knot (73/7), Grey-tailed Tattler (54/4), Greater Sandplover (36/5), Red Knot (25), Bar-tailed Godwit (3), and singles of Marsh Sandpiper, Sanderling, Lesser Sandplover and Whiskered Tern. one of the Great Knot was from China and a Grey-tailed Tattler from Broome. The large number of Curlew Sandpiper in the catch was good. Back for lunch at about 1400. As we turn into the Homestead compound we see a Spotted Harrier close by the road under a small tree. Probably the one or one of those seen occasionally quartering the nearby paddocks. Tired and slept for a while in the heat of the early afternoon. A brief mist netting effort in the homestead area at least trapped a Pied Butcherbird and a Yellow-throated Miner. Talk in the evening by Ma Qiang about shorebirds on Chongming Dongnan Reserve, an island in the mouth of the Yangsi River which I visited in 2002. He showed how the hunters catch shorebirds with clap nets attracting them with specially made bamboo whistles. Catches are made to the tune of 70000 or more per annum for banding and colour flagging. The former shorebird hunters are now employed by the National Nature Reserve to catch waders for banding. A traditional method that will most likely die out over the next 20 years or so as the old hands give up and no younger recruits will take up the skills because they will most likely go to Shanghi where it will be easier to earn better money.

Curlew Sandpipers

Curlew Sandpiper, Terek sandpiper and Oriental Plover at the tide edge


Mixed flocks of 'medium' waders take off

Orietal Plover at the tide edge

23rd Another early set. We leave a 0630 and make a modest catch of 180 but it includes a small sample of Terek Sandpiper and some Greater Sandplover. We fired one large-mesh 4 cannon net at 10 km south. The catch included Great Knot (74/7), Greater Sandplover (37/5), Curlew Sandpiper (19/3), Grey-tailed Tattler (16/3) and Terek Sandpiper (16). Two of the Great Knot were from China and one of the Curlew Sandpiper was also from China. Otherwise mostly Great Knot. Frank O’Connor sees a Redshank in the twinkled flock viewed from the command hide. Oriental Plover again refuse to be involved. Hot. A tree full of Nankeen Kestrel on returning to the homestead. At least 7 of them in a small tree at the edge of the grass west of the northern house. We see a few Brown Falcon as we drive to the beach and on the beach there are some Brahminy Kite, but not many of them and a few White-bellied Sea-eagle. Not much else in the way of raptors although a Peregrine Falcon has been reported on a few occasions as we twinkle birds to the catching area.

Processing in the heat today

Zhang Guangming (Big John!) with a Greater Sandplover

The Greater Sandplover itself!

Mangoes!

Our location at the staion on Anna Plains.
Sue Abbotts and Xenia Dennett used the camper-trailer outside the house

Anna Plains water tower

Ablutions block.
Shared with the station stockmen




Views around the station at Anna Plains.
Note the swimming pool in John Stoate's garden!


The back of our house at Anna Plains with tents scattered around



Agile Wallabies again!

Free range Guinea Fowl

Yellow-throated Miner

Immature plumage of Pied Butcherbird
We are commonly setting two nets about 50 metres apart, firstly using the small mesh smaller nets but of the last few days we have resorted to the large mesh large nets. It is just too hot here after about 0800 for any worthwhile birding and little can be done until about 1800 in the evening leaving not much time before dark. Today we processed in a steady sea breeze which most of the time was cooling but often contained hot pockets of air that passed through the shaded work area. No birds seeking shade today. In the afternoon there is always flag making to do! Again I have a short nap after late lunch. Yahkat Barshep gave a very entertaining talk about bird work in Nigeria at Jos in the centre of the country of 137 million people! She works from an institute for ornithology sponsored by a wealthy Greek Nigerian with interests in Coca Cola. [J. V. Leventis?] She spoke about work in the highland rainforest reserves with interesting fauna at 1000m and above. Also the Institute is located in an area where a recently discovered endemic Firefinch occurs. She showed a selection of interesting pictures of the birds, mammals and various habitats of central Nigeria. The institute is involved with basic ornithological research at the simplest level - discovering what exactly is present in the country. Her own work will be on Curlew Sandpiper and their world migration routes. I must talk to her about Stephen Marchant. A dead and desiccated juvenile Pallid Cuckoo was found in the Homestead grounds this evening and it has been placed in a plastic bag and put into the deep freeze for the WA museum.

24th Election Day. Thankfully we have been blissfully ignorant of the final build up in the contest over these last two weeks and have no idea of how things stand although it seems the Howard Government is heading for a defeat.

Reactions later in the day as the first election results come through on the TV

The typical dune face on 80 mile beach
Off again at 0630 to set two large-mesh 4 cannon nets at 24km. All went well and during the twinkle Chris Hassell spots a Eurasian Curlew amongst his flocks from the north of the catching site. Several members of the expedition see it but many do not. We make a good catch of 349 mostly Greater Sandplover with Great Knot and Curlew Sandpiper but also useful samples of Grey-tailed Tattler and Terek Sandiper. he final tally was: Greater Sandplover (82/3), Curlew Sandpiper (74/4), Great Knot (74/4), Grey-tailed Tattler (56/2), Terek Sandpiper (40/4), Sanderling (4) and singles of Grey Plover and Sharp-tailed Sandpiper.

Waiting to start today's twinkle

80 mile beach

At the edge of the rising tide on 80 mile beach




Setting up for processing today's catch

Clive Minton allocating the teams
David Melville finding out what John Curran is doing at the AQIS table

Adrian Boyle, Chris, Andrea and Sue Abbotts

Yahkat and Roz

Chris, Adrian and Andrea

Roz and Maurice

The team of Nick, Yahkat, Roz and Maurice

Brian Little - resting at the end of the days work!

Feet of a Sharp-tailed Sandpiper

Hermit crab tracks


On the beach
We have lunch on the beach and go for a search for the Eurasian Curlew up the beach to the north but with no success. Back to the homestead and again I am tired and need a late afternoon nap! We plan a barbeque beside the pool for tonight, our last evening of the expedition at Anna Plains. It rained for a short time just on dusk and the barbecue was great fun with a capacity filling of the pool by 17 of the team! Needless to say I refrained from going into the pool despite much cajoling. Sat with Brian Little and Peter Jenkins and demolished a cask of Merlot!




A late afternoon shower

Roz looking at tents and other gear rescued from the rain

Poddy calves behind our house

25th Today we move back to Broome. No catching. Much work to be done packing up but despite this fact it was possible for several of us to go down to the beach and back to where some of our party saw the Eurasian Curlew yesterday. I organize to take Chris Hassell’s Toyota with Adrian Boyle driving together with Peter Jenkins Alice Ewing, David and Julia Melville. Another car load in Maureen’s Land Rover included Prue Wright, Sue Rice and Dianne Emslie. They set off ahead of us by 30 mins. After a bit of hesitation and potential disappointment we eventually got onto it and had some reasonable views as the tide rose much higher than it did yesterday. I have a GPS of the site and some passable shots at long range. The co-ordinates, using WGS 84 datum, were S19-23-41.3 E121-16-58.6 and the bird was supposedly at 4m altitude! I suspected that the bird was limping with a sore right foot. This foot was not obviously damaged but it was never seen using this leg while standing and it landed one-footed. However, subsequent encounters, by other observers, over the next few days suggest that it's feet were perfecty normal!

The Eurasian Curlew on 80 mile beach
We get back in time and eventually leave sometime after 1:30PM. On the way out we see about 7-8 Wedge-tailed Eagle, all immatures, at a small Agile Wallaby road kill. Nothing of note on the trip back to BBO and now I am settled into room 5 by myself.

Broome 2007 part 6

Some of the shorebirds we caught


Bar-tailed Godwit. A long billed female

Curlew Sandpiper

Greater Sandplover

Grey Plover

Grey-tailed Tattler

Gull-billed Tern of the huge Australian form Sterna nilotica macrotarsa
Note the immature plumage

Sharp-tailed Sandpiper

Sanderling

Terek Sandpiper

Whiskered Tern

White-winged Black Tern

Broome 2007 part 7


North side of the Woodside block at BBO.

Information boards outside the office at BBO

Back to BBO

This fine specimen awaited our inspection on return today. It is a Black-headed Python Aspidites melanocephalus. Regrettably, it was dead

26th Meal duty again! Today we plan a catch at Stilt Viewing and then out to Lake Eda for mist netting at night. Should be a hectic day. In to town early at 0730 with Peter Jenkins for a frantic shopping at Coles and for Prue to collect a Chiller van. Back by 0930 and out to sweat under a Bauhinia tree with little shade for an hour before the catch at about 1045. We use a small mesh 3-cannon net. A big one mostly of Bar-tailed Godwit (173/46) and Great Knot (73/15) and a Red Knot. One of the retrapped Bar-tailed Godwits was a bird flagged in Hong Kong. Rushed about trying to keep the party well hydrated and at the same time help with one of the processing teams that was illogically short handed. Again, another frantic rush into town for more supplies and back so late that I was not in a mood to go out to the mist netting despite the last two cars not leaving until a half hour later at about 0630. A small party of Red-tailed Black-cockatoo flew over the BBO to the south just before dusk calling. A Pheasant Coucal has called nearby this morning and again at dusk tonight. I remained in camp and have a quiet evening with David chatting over a couple of beers before Ian Newton and his wife arrived from Perth. We all then talked for a while longer before heading to bed. A party returned from the netting at midnight; the rest stayed over until early morning. Not a happy day and to cap it off I broke my watch strap on the shelving in the chiller van which was the final straw that convinced me to stay back at the BBO for the evening!


Solar panels that follow the sun. Two view - early and late in the day


Room 5
27th Last night at Lake Eda the mist netting catch was hugely successful! Well over 200 birds caught using 13 mist nets. The catch included Sharp-tailed Sandpiper (100/2), Black-winged Stilt (25/1), Black-fronted Dotterel (22/10), Wood Sandpiper (19), Long-toed Stint (16/1), Red-kneed Dotterel (11), Masked Lapwing (8),