Facebook Logo     Twitter Logo

Birding Thursday - Migrant Birds at Sibuya

Posted Thu, 10 Nov 2011 (6 months ago)

This week we've taken an article from Sibuya Game Reserve & Tented Camps on the summer migrant birds currently decorating the skies in their corner of the Sunshine Coast.

Summer Migrants

We were wondering  if the good news of our excellent rains spread far and wide across the  continent to the Summer Migrants, as many seem to have arrived earlier than  usual this year...to feast on the proliferation of food perhaps?
 

Each year  thousands of millions of African birds undertake seasonal movements, ranging  from a few hundred kilometres to fantastic trans-continental journeys of more  than 10,000km. Of the 1,800 bird species found in sub-Saharan Africa, nearly  200 species migrate seasonally between Palearctic (Europe/Asia) and  Afrotropical (sub-Saharan Africa) regions. More than 580 species are known to  make seasonal migrations within Africa.

DIEDERIK'S  (Chrysococcyx caprius)) and KLAAS'S CUCKOOS (Chrysococcyx klaas) have been  calling for some weeks and more recently, the BLACK CUCKOO (Cuculus clamosus).  YELLOWBILLED and BLACK KITES (Milvus migrans)   and STEPPE BUZZARDS (Buteo buteo) are scouring the landscape and feeding  on the numerous rodents, snakes and insects.

          

Swallows

During the early  hours of the morning on the 8th of September, the first LESSER  STRIPED SWALLOWS  (Hirundo Abyssinica)  arrived back at SIBUYA, defying the fact that they do not migrate (as many  other species), during the night! Each year we wonder exactly where they've  come from.....is it Zambia? Sudan? Sierra Leone? or Angola?...Their journey is  quite remarkable when one considers their size and of course predators and  weather conditions encountered along the way. Being slender streamlined little  creatures, they are excellent flyers and have a body suitable for aerodynamics  and endurance,  reputedly travelling at  speeds of up to 65km an hour while migrating!

These monogamous  medium sized SWALLOWS have an instinctive internal compass and return to SIBUYA  and the same nesting sites year after year. First-time breeders return to where  they were born and choose a nesting site close by.
 Last year very few LESSER STRIPED SWALLOWS  bred as the severe drought conditions meant there were not that many insects  around for food and because of the lack of moisture, the nests fell down as  quickly as they were repaired!This year however, we're sure they'll easily find  enough mud around to build their nests out of pellets and have numerous insects  to feed chicks.....it should in fact be a bumper breeding season for everything  at SIBUYA!
 

Hornbills

Very much in  evidence lately have been the TRUMPETER HORNBILLS (Bycanistes buchinator) so  named as a result of their loud trumpeting, wailing, far-reaching (quite  frightening to the uninitiated) cries. They fly for kilometres to eat ripening  fruit and have been feasting on that of   the NGWENYA TREES (Ekbergia Capensis) dotted about the Reserve....they  vary their diet by eat flying termites and large insects like locusts.
 

HORNBILLS mate for  life and have a fascinating and unique breeding ritual whereby courtship  feeding is common. Male birds feed  their mate continually before actually breeding, thus building up her reserves  for laying and replacing her feathers after she's moulted in the nest cavity.  The nest site is chosen carefully in a suitable hole in either a tree or  crevice in a rock. For security reasons, the entrance is partially sealed with  mud from the outside.  When the time is  right, the female squeezes in and continues to seal the entrance from the  inside until only a thin slit remains, through which she's fed by the male. He  takes this task very seriously and proceeds to bring her nesting material and  food frequently...even apparently sometimes bringing her the shells of snails,  thought to be additional calcium for the healthy production of her eggs. During  the incubation period  (approx 24 days)  she keeps the nest sanitary by defecating out of the slit.  Now a most remarkable HORNBILL feature takes  place- she sheds her tail and wing feathers first and then gradually her body  feathers are moulted! What a  defenseless  and ugly sight she must be! When the eggs hatch, the female breaks out of the  nest and lo and behold, her feathers have regrown! Between 39-50 days later  (depending on the food supply) the young HORNBILLS, flying strongly, leave the  nest and initially remain in a family group. Breeding is usually a great  success!


Stay at Sibuya

 

Sibuya Game Reserve & Tented Camps is a beautifully scenic game reserve on South Africa’s malaria-free Sunshine Coast. Spanning the Kariega Estuary on its course to meet the warm Indian Ocean, Sibuya is South Africa’s only game reserve accessed solely by boat, and includes the Big Five, with a cheetah breeding project.

 



Post a Comment


 
Name (required)  
Email (will not be published)(required)    
Website (optional) http://
Notify me of follow-up comments
Please enter the code shown below in the textbox :
  

Map Search

map
Limpopo Kwazulu-Natal Mpumalanga Gauteng North-West Lesotho Free State Eastern Cape Northern Cape Western Cape