Showing posts with label Stint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stint. Show all posts

Sunday, August 13, 2017

The Story of Little Stint in Borneo.


 Little Stint, Tawau, 16th July 2017.
Little Stint, Tawau, 16th July 2017.

Little Stint Calidris minuta, a very rare vagrant to Borneo. Mann included in his checklist of Birds of Borneo with one well documented record from Mumiang on 6th October 1984 by David Beadle. Mumiang is the only record historically accepted by most.

Mumiang is located at 50 49’ N 1180 19’ E, which is the estuary of the Kinabatangan River in East Coast of Sabah.

Another record from Seria , Brunei in 1985 lacked substantiating documentation and was generally ignored.

Mann's checklist (2008) as well as the two Bornean Fieldguides by Phillipps (2014) and Myers (2016) were since published and there wasn't any new record on this little fella included.

Birders and photographers in Sabah have been trying hard to nail a positive record of this bird as everyone believes it must be under recorded,  as it looks very similar to Red-necked Stint Calidris ruficollis in winter plumage, which occurs in large number in winter months here. So it must be somewhere out there mingling with the hundreds of Red-necked Stints foraging happily in the distant sand bars.

Waders expert Dave Bakewell, who has a number of well-written and well-illustrated blog postings on the identification of Little Stint has been approached numerous times to help identifying odd looking stints photographed in Sabah. These images represent a faint hope that one  might show a Little Stint, but all this while they show unmistakable Red-neck Stints in various ages and moults to Dave's expert eyes.

In 2015 MNS- BCC Record Committee reviewed the status of Little Stint in Sabah and Sarawak when it was updating the Malaysian Checklist in view of the lack of records in the intervening years. In order to put the record official, the  only record from Mumiang was put up for the consideration of the Record Committee, The Committee Chair managed to get in contact with the original observer, Mr. David Beadle, who amazingly still have his note book on the observation.

The Record Committee later accepted that record, and that remained the only record until 9th September 2016 when Mr Stanley T Shao photographed an odd looking Stint from Tawau, Sabah, which was later identified by Mr. Dave Bakewell to be Little Stint. The image is here.

Another bird was photographed in Tawau on 2nd January 2017, image here.

Another one in breeding plumage was photographed in Tawau on 16th July 2017, image here., the same bird was again photographed on 6th August 2017, image here.

No idea whether all the images are from the same bird that was first photographed in September 2016, though mid-July is early but not an unlikely date for waders arrival.

With this, our belief that Little Stint is definitely out there is confirmed.

Happy birding.


Monday, November 8, 2010

September water birds in Tawau.

These are some of the migratory and resident water birds photographed  in Tawau in the third week of September 2010.

A juvenile Little Tern Sterna albifrons
Non-breeding Little Tern
Breeding Little Tern

Little Tern is the smallest tern in Borneo and is the only tern that breeds here, comprising of both wintering and resident breeding populations. Recorded to breed in Sarawak and Kalimantan.

A lone Asian Dowitcher Limnnodromus semipalmatus (my new bird) among a group of Black-tailed Godwits Limosa limosa.
 A Little Egret Egretta garzetta which resembles a Chinese Egret Egretta eulophotes.
 Marsh Sandpiper Tringa stagnatilis
 A group Red-necked Stints Calidris ruficollis
 The middle bird looks a bit bigger than the others but it is still a Red-necked Stint.
 Another odd-looking Red-necked Stint
 Curlew Sandpiper Calidris ferruginea
A mud-crap trying to chase away a  Common Redshank Tringa totanus.
 Little-ringed Plover Charadrius dubius
 Wandering Whistling Ducks Dendrocygna arcuata
  Crab in 'HULK' stance.
 Mud- crab
 You know where the inspiration for Transformer comes from.

Many thanks to Sifu Dave Bakewell for confirmation on IDs of the Stints and Egret.

Happy birding.