Monday, 20 April 2009

Birders from the British Isles: I need your help!

Am I lucky or not?

That is a good question, and I hope a few fellow birders from the UK and Ireland (or elsewhere) can help me answer it.
For the last few couple' years, I was more than interested in the different forms of the White (or whatever) Wagtail, Motacilla alba etc., that may or may not occur here in Germany.
So whenever and wherever I chanced upon one such bird, I studied it at length and with passion and affection.

Now, last week's Thursday was one such event, and to my great surprise and astonishment, the wagtail I was looking at was quite a bit darker than the usual albas and even had a few black areas on the "shoulders".

So it seems I had found a Pied Wagtail, Motacilla (alba or not) yarrellii from the British Isles, a surprisingly rare bird for the south-west of Germany with probably not even one observation each year (can you believe it? I can't, but that's another story).
Well, being a form so rarely reported in Germany away from the immediate North Sea coast, there are always a lot of discussions, issues and raised eyebrows connected to reports of it and if you have not seen a completely black-backed and classic male (which the bird I am referring to wasn't), then people will always tell you that ordinary albas may sometimes be quite dark as well and show black areas and that the yarrellii you have observed was likely just an ordinary alba or at the most a hybrid alba x yarrellii anyway.

Frankly, amongst the definite breeding birds in Germany (birds seen after the middle of May when migration really is over) I have only once seen a bird with a few black marks that might or might not have really been a hybrid. But apart from that, anything blackish or darkish where an alba is light grey is something I would strongly associate with yarrellii.

But as I have never really been to the British Isles, I may (or may not) have no idea what I am thinking or talking about. Thankfully though, there are the blessings of the bloggosphere and the Internet and if there are birding issues I am lacking expertise in (oh no!!!), I can just ask ...


... YOU!

So, please, if you have anything to say about the bird - whatsoever - let's hear it in the comments section.
By the way and before you scroll down to the pics, there is a second "mystery" bird following the wagtail, a Yellowhammer, so if the wagtail doesn't float your boat the other bird might and you'd possibly care to take a quick look.

Cheers, thanks in advance for your comments and happy birding trails!



Okay, now on to the Yellowhammer.

The following pictures show what I would call either a female Yellowhammer or - as I have no clue how to age Yellowhammers and am simply too lazy to look it up now - an immature 2nd CY bird.
At first glance, this looks like a typical bird but I have found a few features odd:

- The lesser coverts have white tips. This can occur sometimes and I have seen it once in a while on Yellowhammers, but it is quite rare.

- The greater coverts however have a white margin as well, and this is something I don't recall having ever seen on a Yellowhammer. Interestingly, the bird has moulted one of its coverts (the innermost) and the fresh one is of the neat rufous you'd expect to see in a Yellowhammer. But can the older, whitish ones be so heavily bleached?

- The colouration of the tertials is puzzling to me, too. The margin is supposed to be rufous and rather broad on the outer web with the extension towards the feather's centre so typical of the Emberiza-buntings. The tertials of the mystery bird however show a rather narrow whitish margin that is lacking the Emberiza-extension. Of course some of the margin is abraded, this is obvious, but still it is a more than strange pattern - in my honest and humble opinion.

- the central part of the back is almost white and reminiscent of an Arctic/Hoary Redpoll. This is also something I haven't seen before on a Yellowhammer.

- the neck is quite grey which is a pattern found frequently on Yellowhammers, but I have never noticed it as being so obvious as on this bird.

So, the big question is:

Can this be an ordinary Yellowhammer and I have as yet simply an over-simplified image of the species' variation? (Ha! Remember that stereotype post?)
Can this be an abnormal Yellowhammer, a mutation of some sort?
Can this be a hybrid with another species of bunting and if so, with which?

As with the wagtail, any comments whatsoever are highly appreciated.

Of course, if there is someone out there who knows for sure this is not a Yellowhammer after all but a classic individual of a highly range-restricted super-rare and special East Asian bunting that's never been recorded West of Tibet before: step forward valiantly and speak out. Your case will surely be met with more than just massive interest.

Thanks, cheers and here - finally! - are the pictures:




5 comments:

corey said...

As an American birder my opinion on these birds means nothing. So I won't offer it.

But I wish I was seeing them though.

Jochen said...

Oh, come on, Corey, doesn't that Yellowhammer look suspiciously like a western subspecies of Savannah Sparrow?

Oh well, you can't say I didn't try.

Listen, if you wish you were seeing those birds, how about I send you a Yellowhammer over to Central Park in return for a Louisiana Waterthrush along a German Black Forest stream?

Tom McKinney said...

Hi Jochen,

The flanks should be a little bit darker and the uppers should probably be a bit more dull black for a summer male (I can see some greyish in the photos) but I'd say it's still okay for our UK birds. What with them being so common at motorway service stations, they're about the only bird I tend to see on a regular basis nowadays!

Tom

Jochen said...

Whoooa, Tom!!!!!!!

Great to see you're still with us. You're being passionately missed. Seriously, the world is a sadder place without your posts.
Just mentioning it, you know...no pressure, dude, no pressure.

I have been listening to some of your music online. That's pretty nice stuff. You think Maiden could do with a 4th guitar player? I shall very much think so indeed! Just hang in there, they'll call eventually.

Thanks for commenting on the wagtail. Could it be a female or an immature male maybe? It seems we get a lot of these "intermediate" birds here in Germany and they always cause a lot of confusion. Crazy that we seem to know so much about Phyllos and Calidris sandpipers and so on but the wagtails right in front of us still causes us to scratch our heads bald.
That bunting is also getting some intersting feed-back. Cirl? Maybe. Difficult at best.
Geez, when will I find an ordinary breeding plumage Yellow-breasted Bunting in Germany? Or a male Ruby-throated Hummingbird? Would make life considerably easier.

Cheers mate, great to get a comment from you and I - heck WE ALL - hope and wish you'll eventually be back.

Happy birding trails and

"Scream For Me, Tom!!
I can't fucking hear you,
SCREAM FOR ME!!!!"

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