Cabo de Palos lighthouse garden
Weather: Sky 1/8 cloud, no wind,
temp. 13ºC. 08:45 – 09:30.
An early
morning walk to check for migrants, but the only birds of note were a group of
31 Audouin’s gulls, heading north, and a few Black Redstarts and Blackbirds
about. I didn’t even see or hear a
Robin!
Species seen
Audouin’s
Gull (Larus audouinii)
Yellow
Legged Gull (Larus michahellis)
Sardinian
Warbler (Sylvia melanocephala)
Serin
(Serinus serinus)
Blackbird (Turdus merula)
Chiffchaff
(Phylloscopus collybita)
Black
Redstart (Phoenicurus ochruros)
Spotless
Starling (Sturnus unicolor)
Rock
Dove/Domestic Pigeon (Columba livia)
White
Wagtail (Motacilla alba alba)
Cormorant
(Phalacrocorax carbo)
Shag
(Phalacrocorax aristotelis)
House
Sparrow (Passer domesticus)
Collared Dove (Streptopelia
decaocto)
Marchamalo Salinas, La Manga
Weather: Sky 1/8 cloud, wind NE F1, temp. 15ºC.
09:40 – 09:50.
On the way
back from the lighthouse garden, I very rapidly called in at the Marchamalo
Salinas and checked over the lagoons visible from the car.
There
appeared to have been some movement here, as there was a good group of 42
Little Stints on the first lagoon down from the Go-Karts, together with 15
Kentish Plover and a total (that I could see) of 20 Black-winged Stilts, a
couple of Spotted Redshank and a single Greenshank. However I couldn’t hang around too long as I
had to go to work!
Species seen
Little
Stint (Calidris minuta)
Kentish
Plover (Charadrius alexandrinus)
Avocet (Recurvirostra avosetta)
Black-winged
Stilt (Himantopus himantopus)
Slender-billed
Gull (Larus genei)
Audouin’s Gull
(Larus audouinii)
Shelduck (Tadorna
tadorna)
Spotted
Redshank (Tringa erythropus)
Greenshank
(Tringa nebularia)
Southern
Grey Shrike (Lanius meridionalis)
Serin
(Serinus serinus)
Greenfinch (Carduelis chloris)
Chiffchaff (Phylloscopus collybita)
Fan-tailed
Warbler (Cisticola juncidis)
Monk Parakeet (Myiopsitta
monachus)
Calblanque, Los
Belones
Weather: Sky 1-2/8 cloud, wind NE F1, temp. 17ºC. 15:00 –16:50.
After lunch
I paid a quick call into the Salinas de Rasall in Calblanque, to read Audouin’s
Gulls ring numbers. Apart from the
Audouins, of which there were 205 (their numbers are definitely dropping from
the peak at the end of February), there was nothing too out of the ordinary,
although I did hear a single Dartford Warbler which may have been a migrant.
Species seen
Black-winged
Stilt (Himantopus himantopus)
Audouin’s
Gull (Larus audouinii)
Yellow-legged
Gull (Larus michahellis)
Red-legged
Partridge (Alectoris rufa)
Blackbird
(Turdus merula)
Songthrush
(Turdus philomelos)
Spotted
Redshank (Tringa erythropus)
Meadow
Pipit (Anthus pratense)
Southern
Grey Shrike (Lanius meridionalis)
Green
Woodpecker (Picus viridis)
Greenfinch (Carduelis chloris)
Fan-tailed
Warbler (Cisticola juncidis)
Dartford
Warbler (Sylvia undata)
Cabo de Palos
Weather: Sky 1-/8 cloud, wind NE F3, temp. 15ºC. 17:00 –18:00.
On
leaving Calblanque, as there was still
an hour or so’s light left, I decided to do an hours seawatch from Cabo de
Palos (the rocky peak to the east of the lighthouse. Here I struck lucky, as apart from the fact
that the light was good so birds were easier than normal to pick out (I
normally seawatch in the morning when you’re always looking into the sun), the
passage of Puffins had started and I managed to latch on to a good few of
them - 77 in total (and also saw another
31 unidentified auk sp. too far to identify, but which were in all probability
Puffins as well).
No-one
knows much about these birds, but there seems to be a strong passage the last 2
weeks of March. We first noticed them a
couple of years ago, but no-one on any of the other Mediterranean Cabo’s has
seen them. They come down from the
north, just inside Islas Hormigas off
Cabo de Palos, pass our seawatch point and then head out south-east, and the
best time to see them is definitely mid-afternoon, when the sun reflects off
their bodies and they are easy to see (but best with a telescope). Sometimes they come close enough that you can
see the full pattern on their bills, but this is not often.
Apart from
these, I noticed another species that was obviously on the move but in the
opposite direction – Mediterranean Gulls.
I had two groups of 9, another of 7 and another of 4, mainly adults in
breeding plumage, heading out northwest, quite distant (I needed the ‘scope to
identify them).
All in all,
quite a productive afternoon.
Species seen
Gannet
(Morus bassanus)
Shag (Phalacrocorax aristotelis)
Balearic
Shearwater Puffinus mauretanicus)
Mediterranean
Gull (Larus melanocephalus)
Audouin’s
Gull (Larus audouinii)
Sandwich
Tern (Sterna sandvicensis)
Great Skua (Catharacta
skua)
Puffin (Fratercula
arctica)
Razorbill (Alca
torda)
Auk.
Sp.
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