Friday 15 June 2012

Entre la tierra y el mar


How I wish there were time this evening to do justice to the first day of our tour, but there isn't. Southwards we headed from Lima, along Peru's painfully arid southern coast, broken here and there by fertile valleys crowded with crops. On our way we made four stops:

At the Pantanos de Villa where many-coloured rush-tyrants (a bird as delightful as its name) and wren-like rushbirds hopped through the rushes, cinnamon teal and great grebes swam on lakes and overhead were hundreds of grey-hooded gulls. At the shore were thousands of birds in an odd uber-flock of band-tailed, kelp and Franklin's gulls (many of this last species in radiant pink breeding attire), turnstones and a willet (which should have migrated but clearly didn't feel like it), moorhens (strolling cheerfully over the beach), puna ibis and neotropic cormorants, and among them a solitary (and very lost) roseate spoonbill.

At Pucusana, a charming fishing town where a charming fisherman, Javier, took us around the cliffs in his happy blue boat. Thousands of Inca terns, Peruvian boobies and equally Peruvian pelicans were on the rock-face, southern sea-lions dozed on ledges and outcrops, adorable Humboldt penguins huddled in a cleft in the cliff, and a single blue-footed booby stretched its long wings over the bay.

At Puerto Viejo where grassland yellow-finches (my streaky favourite of the yellow-finches) bounced through the rushes and Peruvian meadowlarks filled the plain with their buzzy song.

At Doña Paulina's roadside restaurant where Peruvian thick-knees sulked en masse in a broken-earth field and in a tiny patch of maize we found hooded siskins and blue-black grassquits.

A splendid, splendid day but I am tired and must sleep; there are more adventures to be had tomorrow.


New along Peru’s coast

Mammals

62
southern sea-lion
Otaria byronia

Birds

494
grey-hooded gull
Chroicocephalus cirrocephalus
495
little blue heron
Egretta caerulea
496
snowy egret
Egretta thula
497
wren-like rushbird
Phleocryptes melanops
498
blue-and-white swallow
Pygochelidon cyanoleuca
499
great grebe
Podiceps major
500
pied-billed grebe
Podilymbus podiceps
501
yellow-crowned night-heron
Nyctanassa violacea
502
cinnamon teal
Anas cyanoptera
503
Andean (slate-coloured) coot
Fulica ardesiaca
504
least bittern
Ixobrychus exilis
505
groove-billed ani
Crotophaga sulcirostris
506
many-coloured rush-tyrant
Tachuris rubrigastra
507
puna ibis
Plegadis ridgwayi
508
white-cheeked pintail
Anas bahamensis
509
roseate spoonbill
Platalea ajaja
510
Andean ruddy duck
Oxyura jamaicensis ferruginea
511
Franklin’s gull
Leucophaeus pipixcan
512
American oystercatcher
Haematopus palliatus
513
killdeer
Charadrius vociferus
514
willet
Tringa semipalmata
515
black skimmer
Rynchops niger
516
yellow-hooded blackbird
Chrysomus icterocephalus
517
guanay cormorant
Phalacrocorax bougainvillii
518
blue-footed booby
Sula nebouxii
519
surf cinclodes
Cinclodes taczanowskii
520
blackish oystercatcher
Haematopus ater
521
red-legged cormorant
Phalacrocorax gaimardi
522
Humboldt penguin
Spheniscus humboldti
523
croaking ground-dove
Columbina cruziana
524
grassland yellow-finch
Sicalis luteola
525
Peruvian meadowlark
Sturnella bellicosa
526
Peruvian thick-knee
Burhinus superciliaris
527
blue-black grassquit
Volatinia jacarina
528
hooded siskin
Carduelis magellanica

2012 Totals
Mammals: 62
Birds: 528
Reptiles: 14
Amphibians: 6
Fish: 6

1 comment:

  1. I love the many-coloured rush tyrants. And I think you should start taking photos to go with your blog x

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