Hi Frank,
Re the White-faced Heron, your info may be a bit out of date, as they are now
resident in Fiji and may be breeding. On my last visit I saw WF Heron on 3
separate days.
Cheers,
Tony Wilson.
Hi All,
Just returned from four days at Castaway Island in the Mamnuca chain, Fiji. Species in bold are
lifers. I had a copy of "Birds of the Fiji Bush", and also Pratt et al's "Birds of
Hawaii and the Tropical Pacific".
At Nadi Airport on 7/9 I walked out into the carpark and saw Red-vented bulbul,
Common Mynah, Jungle Maynah (a few), Red-faced Parrot Finch (tame and
conspicuous, not like Blue-faced PF in Australia), and Wattled Honeyeater. I'm
glad I did, because this was the only place I saw the last three species. Also
added Polynesian Triller to my trip list when walking aorund the same area
whilst waiting for the plane on return yesterday.
On Catsaway Island itself, I saw the following:
Brown Booby
Lesser Frigatebird
Eastern Reef Egret (all dark morphs)
Fiji Goshawk
White-throated Pigeon
Spotted Turtle-dove
Collared Kingfisher (Sacred Kingfisher according to taxonomy used in Pratt et
al)
Pacific Swallow
Red-vented Bulbul
Vanikoro Broadbill (Vanikoro Flycatcher in Pratt et al., appropriate since this
is a Myiagra flycatcher)
Slaty Flycatcher
Silvereye
Orange-breasted Honeyeater
Common Mynah
Fiji Woodswallow (Pratt et al. treat this as a race of White-breasted
Woodswallow)
Given that Castaway was a small island, but that it was reasonably densely vegtated
overall, I wasn't quite sure how many species or which to expect. "Birds of the
Fiji Bush" inidicated a number of species which were common and either widespread
throughout Fiji or were foudn in the Mamnucas generally, but were absent from Castaway,
such as Collared Lory, Red-faced Parrot Finch and Wattled Honeyeater. Conversely, Slaty
Flycatchers were stated to be absent from the Mamnucas but were present on Castaway.
On the return journey I caught a launch back to Denarau harbour on Viti Levu,
then back to the airport at Nadi. On the approach to Denarau Harbour I scanned
mudflats and saw lots of Pacific Golden Ploversa single Bar-tailed Godwit, a
Tattler (prob a Wandering Tattler), and nearby was a wader which was either a
Bristle-thighed Curlew or Whimbrel (again couldn't tell which). The most
amazing site of all didn't quite register as significant at first - a
White-faced Heron flew over the path of the boat in the channel. Turns out
that there has only ever been one confirmed report of a White-faced Heron in
Fiji! Cheers.
Frank
Frank Hemmings
Curator
John T. Waterhouse Herbarium
School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences
University of New South Wales
UNSW SYDNEY 2052
AUSTRALIA
--
Tony Wilson and Carol Harker,
Manu Tours,
106 Ocean Beach Rd.,
Tairua 2853,
New Zealand.
Email:
Phone/fax 64 7 864 7475
Cellular: 025 281 3809
Web site: www.nzbirding.co.nz
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