See that brown duck, he's not supposed to be here. This is Pallikaranai marsh, a wetland in Madras, and that brown bird is a Fulvous Whistling Duck. According to the experts, this is a first sighting for Madras!
Its visit to Madras was captured by MNS member Skandan. While we were all getting excited and celebratory by Skandan's report in our e-group, the coots don't seem in the least bothered, and the black-winged stilts in the foreground seem to be largely ignoring him.
Poor chap, here he's come from some far-away land, and nobody to give him a half-decent welcome. Now, if it was Bharatpur, it would be a different matter altogether.
Well, I bring up Bharatpur, because I went all the way there, (along with Skandan and others), and we saw Mr Fulvous' extended family - (I assume they are distant relations, the lesser whistling teals.)
Its like finding Toblerone in the local grocery store nowadays, when once they were symbols of your travel to distant and exotic foreign lands. Globalisation, I suppose.
So now, I need to learn how to tell a Greater Whistling Teal from a Lesser. The latter is below. Gorgeous aren't they?
The lesser ones that we saw in Bharatpur, did whistle a lot. They would take off as a flock, whistle away as they did a sortie and then land noisily back among the red azolla.
Well, its do with the streakings and the size. The larger, is larger (well, but naturally,), and also has more white streakings on its sides. The Fulvous Whistling Duck is supposed to have a distinct, dark black line down the rear neck.
So, now I need to go off to Pallikaranai and see if I find Mr Fulvous still there...after all, one has to be hospitable to visiting guests.....maybe a Mrs Fulvous has joined?
Fulvous Whistling Duck - videos with their calls - Click on the link.
It was not done with. Skandan and Sripad, then also witnessed a David-Goliath kind of battle. The courageous black-winged stilts (David), took on a black Kite and then some crows, chasing them away, as they fiercely protected their little chicks.
Sripad's photo of the black-winged stilt chasing a crow
Sripad's photo of the black-winged stilt taking on a Black kite
Update - 20/7/09
Of course, the sightings led to much excitement, and many MNS members trooped off to Pallikaranai to see the new bird in town.
Chitra wrote in that she saw around fifteen of the ducks (so it was not a maverick couple), as they flew overhead, crossing the road, and heading north. She also reported that the marsh was teeming with avian life.
spot billed ducks, pheasant tailed jacanas, grebes, coots, BWS, glossy ibises, and the fulvous whistling ducks, along with the usual pelicans, painted storks, egrets, moorhens, purple herons, we also saw three bar tailed godwits one male in breeding plumage (reddish upper body), blue tailed bee eaters, ashy prinias, and black kitesI dragged my husband off and had a quick look-see this morning. We did not see the "stars" of the show, well in any case not well enough to identify...there was a distant bunch of brown ducks.
But I did not mind, because I added two more to my lifer list - Pied avocets and Pheasant-tailed jacanas!
The Pied Avocets have a lovely black-and-white wing pattern, which is captured in this photo by Abhijit Avalaskar so beautifully. I enjoyed watching them take off as a flock, and then come and settle down in the water. When they rested, they were in the background, and I could not see their markings all that clearly, but when they were in flight, it was oh-so-clear.
I cam back home and read a bit about them. They seem to have interesting feeding habits with their long slender upcurved bill, but they were too far away for me to observe this, but I did hear their "high-pitched kleet call" (Salim Ali), as they took off in flocks.
My first encounter with a jacana was at Dungarpur in December 2008, when an immature bronze-winged jacana had me foxed, with its spidery legs and walk-on-leaf spryness.
This time, I was prepared. There were these four spidery-legged birds poking about in the mud, with a long elegant tail, like as if they were in coattails! It was a dull and cloudy day, and these pictures dont do justice to a rather interesting looking bird, with a touch of yellow on its neck.
We then saw another two in the water, holding their tails up, as if they did not want to get them wet.We wandered around for a while, seeing coots, black-winged stilts and dabchicks by the hundreds, and pelicans lining the electric pylons. There were so many bee-eaters, flashing past us, or sitting on the reeds. Then there were the large purple swamp hens and the smaller moorhens, the solitary purple heron, and a few white ibis. every now and then a black kite would glide overhead, and the ducks and stilts would all get a trifle nervous.
The cars and motorbikes zoomed by, honking impatiently and oblivious to all this lovely bird life.
About Pallikaranai
Pallikaranai is a freshwater wetland, situated in Madras/Chennai. I guess in the old days it served to keep the city's groundwater charged as well. Then came a few years of poor rain, and the city realtors and developers decided it was a jolly good idea to build in this marsh - how could we let such prime land go to waste.
On the other side, the city Corporation also decided to use it as a garbage dumping ground.
Choked from all sides, the birds fled. Citizens got together under various banners to reverse the trend, and there has been some success. The High Court has ordered that garbage dumping and burning in the area be stopped.
According to a report in the Times Of India, though, a High Court panel says garbage is still being burnt at Pallikaranai. The Chennai Corporation has been asked to reply to this charge by July 29th. Lets hope for the best.
Also, the remaining undeveloped areas have been notified as a Reserve Forest, and I noticed that the protective fencing has increased slightly.
These small steps have already brought the birds back. I do hope it continues!
Featured in I and The Bird #105.
Nice post and great pics, especially the stilt attacking the crow and the kite. I thought we saw teals in Dungarpur, too.
ReplyDeleteSekar
Amazing & gorgeous photographs by Skandan. The stilt chasing crow/kite is awesome.
ReplyDeleteYes we did see them in Dungarpur - the lesser ones, Sekar.
ReplyDeleteI agree Mr Ramakrishnan! (Though the photos of the kite and stilt are Sripad's!)
Fantastic pictures. That Whistling Duck looks quite at home among the coots. Isn't it odd that he was alone? Where are these birds normally seen?
ReplyDeleteyou should consider joining the nature blog network if you arent on it already!
ReplyDeleteExciting record, flowergirl!
ReplyDeleteWe have in SL list but its status remain vagrant. I will be scaning our LWDs carefully to see whether any of them has made this south.
Happy birding!
Kamini, if I'm not mistaken its seen only in the north (beyond the peninsula) and eastern parts of the country. On my Bharatpur trip, I did not see these ducks, only the lesser ones.
ReplyDeleteWhat is the nature blog network, ROS?
And pray, Gallicissa, what is LWD?!
http://natureblognetwork.com/
ReplyDeleteLWD=Lesser Whistling-duck - the name of Lesser Whistling-teal as per the Oriental Bird Club Checklist, which I usually follow.
ReplyDeleteYou must of been thrilled to find a new bird in your area.
ReplyDeleteI agree the people at Bharatpur would have been very interested in a new bird, they watch their birds very closely. They have so very many varieties in the area. Great place.
Wonderful photos you took.
Thanks ROS! Gallicissa, I should've guessed!
ReplyDeleteGlennis, thank you and the photos are by young naturalists Skandan, Sripad and Carthic! Have you been to Bharatpur? Then you must read my whole series on our January trip!
http://madraswanderer.blogspot.com/search/label/Bharatpur
Really awesome blog. Your blog is really useful for me. Thanks for sharing this informative blog. Keep update your blog.
ReplyDeletePackers and Movers Pallikaranai