China Coastal Update 3: Season’s Final Update, June 19

Shorebird Research Update 3 from Jason Loghry

Well, we are now in mid-June and I am back in Korea after having spent another great season of field work on the Chinese coast of the Yellow Sea. My last few weeks were spent at Nanpu, Bohai Bay as part of work with my good friend and colleague Peng Hebo, PhD student of the University of Groningen. Although the mud at Nanpu can be a bit challenging to work on at times, it’s a small price to pay for the incredible encounters with so many fascinating benthic and shorebird species. By the time I had arrived, many of the Great Knots had already departed, leaving a bit of time to focus on Red Knot and to help with counting and mostly benthic sampling.

take 2Collecting benthic samples with Peng Hebo and his team at Nanpu.

At Nanpu, there was a lot to see. Red Knots (rogersi and piersmai) and Curlew Sandpipers were already dressed in stunning plumages. I’m not a photographer, but sometimes I wish I was, so I could share just how gorgeous these birds can be in preparation for breeding. If you’re reading this, you probably already know! Still, I can’t help but recommend to see for yourself someday, if you are fortunate enough to have a chance to visit during the spring migration season.

Good numbers of Sharp-tailed Sandpipers, Broad-billed Sandpipers, hundreds of Relict Gulls and even small flocks of Asian Dowitchers were present. There are many salt ponds which provide good habitat for breeding species such as Gull-billed and Common Terns, Pied Avocets and Black-winged Stilts, and it’s quite common to come across really large flocks of White-winged Black Terns bouyantly flying and feeding over the tops on some of these ponds. The salt ponds are important for thousands of roosting shorebirds, and are also an important source of food for several migrating shorebird species. In the near future, there should be some papers published on the shorebirds of these salt ponds, which I will then highlight again, via our blog.

image 2A flock of mostly Relict Gull Ichthyaetus relictus at Nanpu © Jason Loghry

Although most of my time this season was spent at Yalu Jiang, there were still quite a few memorable highlights at Nanpu. The people of course are a big reason why field work at Bohai can be so amazing. This season I was able to spend some time with Mu Tong, a PhD student from Princeton University, and his team of volunteers, who is looking at the distribution of shorebirds at Nanpu. He’s doing fantastic work in the flyway and at the moment he’s up in Meinypil’gyno with researchers from Birds Russia and WWT as part of the monitoring and head start program for Spoon-billed Sandpiper. You can read about their exciting work on the breeding grounds in the latest news section of their website, Saving the Spoon-billed Sandpiper:

http://www.saving-spoon-billed-sandpiper.com/news/

image 3Mu Tong and his team joining us for a photo after their final day of field work at Nanpu.

I was also able to often spend time with the Global Flyway Network team: Chris Hassell, Adrian Boyle, Bob Loos, and the Lui family, which is always valuable. These guys are real experts and a lot of fun to be around. They are continuously working very hard to improve our understanding of shorebirds of the flyway, especially our understanding of Red Knots, and their use of these coastal habitats. If you don’t yet follow their blog, you should start:

http://globalflywaynetwork.com.au/latest-news/

HassAD_1Chris Hassell and Adrian Boyle checking for flags and colorbands.

Another highlight was meeting with Terry Townshend of Birding Beijing and being able to hear a bit more about the brilliant (and challenging) work he’s doing with The Beijing Cuckoo Project. It’s incredible. You can check out their webpage dedicated to the project here:

https://birdingbeijing.com/beijing-cuckoo-project/

And while I’m at it, recommending great blogs, I’d also add the Team Piersma website to your bookmarks page or blog roll. It’s pages are focused on the amazing and inspiring work of researchers affiliated with Sir Theunis Piersma of the University of Groningen and NIOZ. And they also have a section dedicated to our flyway, so check it out:

https://teampiersma.org/category/east-asian-australasian-flyway/

Now, back to bird highlights from Nanpu: I’d have to say my close encounter with a Pomarine Skua really hit the mark. I have seen Pom Skua a few times while seabird-watching in Korea – but never with this kind of close-proximity. The compact camera photo I captured doesn’t compare to what it was like in person, through my binoculars. What a stunner. And at the park in town, I was finally able to see one of my nemesis birds, Lanceolated Warbler. What a skulker. After the first one, I then saw another, and then it was topped off with a Baikal Bush Warbler. Talk about a great day for a walk in the park.

pom skua 3The Pomarine Skua Stercorarius pomarinus that made my day © Jason Loghry

But perhaps the biggest highlight at Bohai was when Adrian Boyle and I were doing a count, and he spotted and put me on a distant Spoon-billed Sandpiper. No matter how many times I see one, it feels special. This individual was un-flagged and it looked to maybe be a second-year bird, mottled and wearing about 75% breeding plumage. I wonder how many Spoonies pass through the Yellow Sea and are unseen.

And I’m sure we all wonder how many there really are at the moment.

Well, I am fortunate enough to have arrived in Korea just in time for a special mid-summer shorebird survey, with a focus on looking for over-summering Spoon-billed Sandpipers. This research is funded and supported by SBS in China, in coordination with Birds Korea.

We began the survey today at the Nakdong Estuary and from tomorrow we head west for a week-long look at the Korean Yellow Sea coastal tidal flats.

Please look for an update on the survey to come soon!

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