Qinghai,
China 16th June – 14th July 2004
David & John Cooper
Itinerary
16th June Arrived Beijing
at 8am and found the shuttle bus to the nearby Sino-Swiss Hotel arriving there
at 9.15am. We met Jesper Hornskov who had arranged our trip at 10.30am and three
of the other participants being John David, John Geale and Heinz Remold and
took a taxi to the Summer Palace where we birded in continuous rain around the
pools and woodland for 4 hours. We returned to the Sino-Swiss Hotel meeting our
good friend Ed Hagen, the final participant, and enjoyed a good meal in a
nearby restaurant.
17th June Birded the
grounds of the Sino-Swiss Hotel from 6am to 7.30am before enjoying a large
buffet breakfast. Left the Hotel on the 9.30am shuttle bus to the airport for
our 11.55am flight to Xining arriving at c.2.30pm. Met our two drivers, both
being Mr. Zhou’s, and our minder Mr. Jiang. Drove to a Hotel in the City Centre
and then to the eroded hillsides on the outskirts of Xining where we birded
until 7.30pm. Altitude 2818m.
18th June Out at 5am for
the 70km drive west to the Dongxia Forest at an altitude of 2,818m. Birded the
spruce forest until c.4pm before returning to Xining.
19th June Left Xining at
6am for the 2 hour drive to Koko Nor. Spent until 1.30pm at the eastern end at
a freshwater lake and marsh and surrounding pastures. We then drove west along
the southern shore for 30 minutes before a noodles stop and then a walk to the
southern shore of Koko Nor. We then drove on to Heimahe where booked into a
local Motel before driving to a stupa on the shore of Koko Nor where we
remained until 7pm.
20th June Left Heimahe at
6am for some scrubby hillsides to the west of town. Walked the hillsides until
2.30pm before driving into the Chaka Desert west of Koko Nor where we birded an
oasis that had formerly been used as a prison before booking into another local
motel at Chaka.
21st June Left Chaka at 6am
continuing west into the Chaka Desert where we birded until midday before
walking a nearby wadi until c.2pm. We returned to the oasis for the late
afternoon before making an evening drive to Heimahe.
22nd June Left Heimahe at
6am for scrubby hillsides along the road to Gonghe where we birded until
midday. Then drove to Gonghe and birded a nearby farmland oasis for 2 hours
during an inclement evening. Stayed in a Hotel at Gonghe.
23rd June Birded the Gonghe
farmland oasis but again in the rain. Then drove south through poor weather
stopping at a deep wadi enroute to Er La Pass where walked to the saddle the
weather by now having improved. Stayed in a local Motel just beyond the Pass.
24th June Out at 6am for 10
hours at Er La Pass before returning to the nearby Motel.
25th June Left the Motel at
6am for an all day drive to Banma seeing Tibetan Gazelle, Wild Ass and many
Pika enroute. Stayed in a Hotel at Banma Town.
26th June Left Banma at 6am
and birded enroute whilst driving to the Banma Forest Station arriving at 2pm.
Walked to the bridge and birded the hillsides and the Stream Trail accessed by
crossing the bridge just downstream of the Station.
27th June Left Banma at 6am
and spent until 8pm on a logging track c.5km upstream from the Forest Station.
28th June Out by 6am
walking the Stream Trail then up onto a ridge before dropping through the
forest to a dry ravine getting back to Banma Forest Station at 4.30pm. Evening
walk to the Blue-eared Pheasant meadow where got caught in a heavy rainstorm.
29th June Out by 6am
spending the entire morning in the dry ravine. Spent a wet afternoon driving to
Banma Town with a couple of stops enroute.
30th June Left Banma Town
at 6am for the 450km drive to Maduo checking marshland just north of town
seeing a pack of 3 Wolves, c.15 Wild Ass and a few Tibetan Fox.
1st July Left Maduo at 6am
in cold wet weather. Stopped at wetlands just south of town and then at a high
pass enroute to Yushu where the weather was still miserable. Stayed in a
comfortable Hotel in Yushu.
2nd July Left Yushu at
6am for high passes to the south of town towards Nangjen.
3rd July Left Yushu at
5.30am for an all day drive again via the high passes to Nangjen Forest
Station.
4th July Out at 6am and
walked up the First Valley opposite Nangjen Forest Station.
5th July Out at 6am and
walked up the Third Valley opposite Nangjen Forest Station.
6th July Up at 4am for an
unsuccessful attempt at relocating the Pere David’s Owl. Heavy rain started
just before dawn and persisted until midday. We then drove to the Tibet border
walking a narrow gorge on our return to the Forest Station.
7th July Left Nangjen at
6am and drove over the Kanda Shan Pass in poor weather to stay in a motel at
Nangjen Town.
8th July Left Nangjen Town
at 6am and returned to a drier Kanda Shan Pass where we walked from a narrow
gorge to near the pass. In the afternoon we walked through the narrow gorge.
Returned to Nangjen Town.
9th July Left Nangjen Town
at 6am for Yushu stopping at the high pass enroute.
10th July Left Yushu at
7.45am for a nearby monastery before making the long drive to Huaxisha seeing
Wild Ass, Gazelles and a Red Fox on our approach to town.
11th July Left Huaxisha at
6am and drove to a high pass just south of Er La Pass. Then drove north to
Gonghe and birded the farmland oasis in the evening.
12th July Out at 6am to
Gonghe oasis before driving to Xining at 10.30am. Revisited the eroded
hillsides for the late afternoon.
13th July Flew from Xining
to Beijing at 10.30am visiting the Lama Temple and the Firendship Store in
Beijing.
14th July Flew from Beijing
at 10am to Paris and onto London arriving at 4.15pm.
Systematic
List
Little
Grebe Tachybaptus ruficollis poggei /
capensis C
We
saw 15 poggei on the pools at the Summer Palace at Beijing on the 16th and 6 presumed capensis at
the freshwater pools and marsh at the east end of Koko Nor on the 19th.
On those seen at Beijing, whilst they were preening, white tips were noted to
the inner secondaries and they showed a silvery iris and spot to the base of
the bill on the breeding plumaged birds. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
as ‘capensis probably n Qinghai’. The other form occurring in China, including
Beijing is poggei. Robson describes poggei as having upperwing all dark with narrow whitish trailing edge to
secondaries stating capensis as having much more white on secondaries. BWP states capensis has
more white in secondaries particularly in Asiatic part of range than West
Palearctic form ruficollis.
Great
Crested Grebe Podiceps cristatus
cristatus (as UK) C
We
saw 12 at the freshwater pool at the east end of Koko Nor on the 19th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as ‘breeding Qinghai’.
Black-necked
Grebe Podiceps nigricollis nigricollis (as UK) C
We
saw 8 at the freshwater marsh at the east end of Koko Nor on the 19th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as ‘breeding along the Tatung Ho in (ne)
Qinghai’.
Great
Cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis C
We
saw c.100 at Koko Nor on the 19th and a flock of 7 in flight over
the scrubby slopes west of Heimahe on the 20th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as ‘found virtually throughout China’. HBW states ‘sinensis smaller
and greener (not purple), normally with more white on throat and more
filoplumes on neck’. In addition BWP states ‘sinensis
has smaller bill than UK’s nominate carbo’.
Black-crowned
Night Heron Nycticorax nycticorax
nycticorax (as UK) C
Only
seen at Beijing where 15 were seen at the pools at the Summer Palace on the 16th,
30 were seen in flight over the Sino-Swiss Hotel during the early morning of
the 17th and 2 were again seen in flight there on our return on the
14th.
Cattle
Egret Bubulcus ibis coromandus C
A
single summer-plumaged coromandus was seen with Yak whilst driving from the Banma Forest Station to Banma
town on the 29th and 2 were seen at the wetlands south of Maduo on
the 1st. The distribution recorded by De Schauensee is to the east
and south of Qinghai suggesting the species range is still expanding as noted
by De Schauensee. BWP states that coromandus differs from ibis in buff colour on head spreading to cheeks and throat, ornamental
feathers more golden, bill and tarsus averaging longer, and more of tibia bare
being nicely illustrated in HBW. The OBC Checklist discusses the suggestion
that coromandus be treated as a separate species from ibis.
Chinese
Pond Heron Ardeola bacchus (monotypic) C
We
saw 5 at the Summer Palace at Beijing on the 16th, 2 in flight over
the Sino-Swiss Hotel in Beijing on the 17th, 1 in flight along the
river on the outskirts of Yushu, Qinghai on the 10th and 1 in flight
near the Lama Temple in Beijing on the 13th. The distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as ‘extreme east Qinghai’.
Little
Egret Egretta garzetta garzetta (as UK) C
Singles
were seen at the Summer Palace at Beijing on the 16th, in flight
over the Sino-Swiss Hotel at Beijing on the 17th and at Koko Nor,
Qinghai on the 19th. The distribution recorded by De Schauensee is
to the east and south of Qinghai making any observation there seemingly
extralimital although a straggler is recorded by De Schauensee to the north.
Great
Egret Egretta alba alba (as UK) / modesta C
A
single individual not racially assigned but probably alba was seen at Koko
Nor on the 19th. The distribution recorded by De Schauensee for alba as breeding to
the north of Qinghai and for modesta to the east of Qinghai. BWP states that alba
largest. Robson illustrates modesta with
red legs in breeding season.
Grey
Heron Ardea cinerea jouyi C
We
saw 6 at the freshwater marsh at the eastern end of Koko Nor on the 19th.
The distribution recorded by De Schauensee for jouyi
is ‘virtually
throughout China’. BWP state jouyi is paler on neck and upper wing-coverts than UK’s cinerea.
Black
Stork Ciconia nigra (monotypic) C
A
single first summer individual was seen feeding along a river whilst we were
driving towards the Sichuan border on the 25th being seen again on
our return on the 30th. The distribution recorded by De Schauensee
is as breeding across northern China but he doesn’t specify region by region.
Whooper
Swan Cygnus cygnus (monotypic) C
We
saw a pair at the freshwater pool at the eastern end of Koko Nor on the 19th.
The distribution recorded by De Schauensee includes as breeding at Koko Nor.
Greylag
Goose Anser anser rubrirostris C
We
saw 20 at the freshwater marsh at the eastern end of Koko Nor on the 19th.
The distribution recorded by De Schauensee includes as breeding Qinghai. BWP
states rubrirostris
slightly larger and
generally paler with whitish tones replacing buff, particularly on head and
neck (both appearing uniform), also upperparts (feather-edges grayish-white
form stronger transverse pattern) and flanks. It states forewing even paler,
appearing whitish-grey in some lights. It has
pale grey-brown upperparts, broad light edges to scapulars, feathers of mantle
and wing-coverts, and longer pink bill (not orange).
Bar-headed
Goose Anser indicus (monotypic) C
We saw an estimated 1,500 at Koko Nor on the 19th,
2 roadside on the drive towards the Sichuan border on the 25th, 13
roadside just north of Maduo on the 30th, 10 at the wetlands just
south of Maduo on the 1st, 10 just south of Yushu on the 2nd
and 12 just south of Yushu on the 9th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as breeding ‘through Qinghai’.
Ruddy
Shelduck Tadorna ferruginea (monotypic) C
We saw an estimated 50 at Koko Nor on the 19th,
1 at Heimahe on the 20th, 12 at Koko Nor on the 22nd, 2
at Er La Pass on the 24th, 10 on the drive towards the Sichuan
border on the 25th, 12 just north of Maduo on the 30th,
10 at the wetlands just south of Maduo on the 1st, 15 just south of
Yushu on the 2nd, 1 south of Yushu on the 3rd, 8 just
south of Yushu on the 9th, 50 on the drive north from Yushu on the
10th and 10 north of Huavisha on the 11th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai.
Common
Shelduck Tadorna tadorna (monotypic) C
We saw 2 at Koko Nor on the 19th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai.
Eurasian
Wigeon Anas penelope (monotypic) C
We saw 3 at the freshwater marsh at the east end of
Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
migrant through Qinghai.
Gadwall
Anas strepera (as UK) C
We saw 20 at the freshwater marsh at the east end
of Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
would suggest a likely migrant through Qinghai.
Common
Teal Anas crecca crecca (as UK) C
We saw 4 at the freshwater marsh at the east end of
Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee would suggest
a likely migrant through Qinghai. BWP states a slight clinal variation in size,
becoming larger towards east.
Mallard
Anas platyrhynchos platyrhynchos (as UK) C
We
saw a single drake on a lake at the Summer Palace at Beijing on the 16th
and 10 at the freshwater marsh at the
east end of Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as winters south Qinghai.
Spot-billed
Duck Anas poecilorhyncha zonorhyncha C
After
much searching we finally saw a single individual at the freshwater pool at the
eastern end of Koko Nor on the 19th. The distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as ‘approaching Qinghai’. See Wildfowl for its treatment of zonorhyncha ‘Chinese Spotbill’ in
which its recognized as easily separable in the field lacking any red at the
base of the bill, being considerably browner, with less heavily-spotted breast
and fore-flanks, a blue speculum lacking white patch on inner secondaries,
buffer wash to sides of head, narrow white tertial stripe, and a short dusky
line extending back from base of bill towards cheek suggestive of Pacific Black
Duck.
Northern
Pintail Anas acuta (as UK) C
We
saw 4 at the freshwater marsh at the
east end of Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as migrating throughout most of China.
Northern
Shoveler Anas clypeata (monotypic) C
We
saw 6 at the freshwater marsh at the
east end of Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as migrating throughout most of China.
Red-crested
Pochard Netta rufina (monotypic) C
We
saw 50 at the freshwater pools and marsh at the east end of Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
suggests probably breeds Qinghai.
Common
Pochard Aythya ferina (monotypic) C
We
saw 30 at the freshwater pool at the
east end of Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee suggests probably migrates through Qinghai.
Ferruginous
Duck Aythya nyroca (monotypic) C
We
saw 8 at the freshwater marsh at the
east end of Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee suggests probably breeds Qinghai. This species is listed as Near Threatened by BirdLife International
(2000) Threatened
birds of the world that
states ‘the key threat is the loss of its wetland habitat, of well vegetated
shallow pools, including extensively managed fishponds. Hunting is also a
serious threat.’
Tufted
Duck Aythya fuligula (monotypic) C
We
saw 10 at the freshwater pool at the
east end of Koko Nor on the 19th and a single female on the
reservoir just south of Yushu on the 2nd. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee suggests probably migrates through Qinghai.
Common
Goldeneye Bucephala clangula clangula (as UK) C
We
saw 25 at the freshwater pool at the
east end of Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee suggests probably migrates through Qinghai. BWP suggests clinal
increase in bill length from Europe eastward.
Goosander
Mergus merganser comatus C
Often
encountered in family parties including newly fledged chicks on most large
rivers being seen on ten dates. We saw 2 at the southern shore of Koko Nor on
the 19th, 6 on the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th,
1 near Banma on the 26th, 5 near the Banma Forest Station on the 27th,
10 just east of Banma Town on the 29th, 1 between Banma and Maduo on
the 30th, 8 north of Yushu on the 1st, 6 between Yushu
and Nangjen Forest Station on the 2nd, 3 at Nangjen Forest Station
on the 6th and 3 just north of Yushu on the 10th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee suggests comatus
probably breeds Qinghai. BWP states comatus differs
from UK merganser by shorter, narrower, and more slender bill, and longer wing. Adult
female also differs by paler head and mantle. Wildfowl states comatus rather
larger with finer bill.
Black
Kite Milvus migrans lineatus C
We
saw 2 in the Chaka desert on the 20th, 1 at Gonghe on the 23rd,
10 between Banma Town and Banma Forest Station on the 26th, 2 at
Banma Forest Station on the 28th and 1 there the following day, 1 at
the Nangjan Forest Station on the 2nd and 4 there the following day,
singles near Yushu including 1 appearing to take food from the surface of a
reservoir just to the south of Yushu on the 9th and 10th
and 2 at Gonghe on the 11th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
states lineatus breeds throughout most of China. Raptors states lineatus is
larger than UK migrans being browner on crown (darker than migrans) and underbody (less rufous
than migrans), contrasting creamy-buff belly and crissum (being paler than migrans), large white
patches on underwings (bolder than migrans).
Lammergeier
Gypaetus barbatus barbatus (as Europe) C
This species proved widespread with 3 seen over the
scrubby slopes to the west of Heimahe on the 20th, 1 at Er La Pass
on the 23rd, 3 there on the 24th, 1 stood on a riverbank
on the southern edge of the town just south of Er La Pass on the 25th,
2 between Banma Town and Banma Forest Station on the 26th, 3 between
Banma Town and Maduo on the 30th, 3 south of Yushu (including a pair
sat on a cliff) on the 2nd, 2 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest
Station on the 3rd, 4 at Nangjen Forest Station on the 5th,
3 there on the 6th, 5 at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th,
4 south of Yushu on the 9th and 1 near Er La Pass on the 11th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as resident Qinghai.
Himalayan
Griffon Gyps himalayensis (monotypic) C
Seen on nineteen dates from the 20th to
the 11th with a total of 106 seen with a daily maximum of 15 seen at
Nangjen Forest Station on the 6th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as resident Qinghai.
Northern
Goshawk Accipiter gentilis schvedowi C
A single individual was watched circling above the
‘third valley’ opposite the Nangjen Forest Station on the 5th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai. Raptors states
averages smaller than nominate, shorter-winged, weaker-footed, slate-grey above
with blackish head, densely marked below with thin brown barring. Illustrated
in Robson that shows dark head contrasting with grey mantle/upperwings. Also
retains bold white supercilium.
Eurasian
Sparrowhawk Accipiter nisus melaschistos
C
This striking form was seen on eight dates with 1
seen at the Dongxia Forest near Xining on the 18th, 2 at the Banma
Forest Station on the 26th, 3 there on the 27th and 1
there on the 28th and singles at Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd
and 4th and at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th and 8th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai. Raptors states
slightly larger than UK’s nisus but darker and
more heavily marked; blackish-slate above with blacker crown and face, more
rufous and more heavily and darkly barred below – clearer rufous bars below.
Common
Buzzard Buteo buteo japonicus / reflectus C
We saw 3 japonicus at Dongxia Forest
near Xining on the 18th, based on range presumably japonicus at Banma where we saw 2 o the 26th,
3 on the 27th 3 on the 28th and 1 on the 29th,
and again based on range presumably reflectus at Nangjen where
we saw 3 on the 5th and 2 on the 6th. However dark morph
birds were encountered at Nangjen that do not appear to be described for reflectus in the literature? Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee for japonicus as breeding Qinghai and for reflectus as breeding in the Yushu region of sw Qinghai
wintering at lower altitudes. Birds of the Indian Subcontinent illustrate japonicus pale morph as lacking rufous, with dark brown
belly-patch and small dark carpal patches.
BWP states japonicus
similar to buteo, but paler, especially below, streaked brown on
yellow-white background, and much less rufous throughout than vulpinus. BWP states reflectus as forming part of the vulpinus group but very large and paler rufous. Raptors
states reflectus
as having bold white
primary-patches and rather extensive dark carpals combining with less rounded
wings giving a resemblance to Long-legged Buzzard. Birds of Indian Subcontinent
illustrate reflectus
with rufous-brown
underparts and underwing-coverts and large black carpal patches.
Upland
Buzzard Buteo hemilasius (monotypic) C
Often seen in association with Pika colonies where
the local people were even providing the Upland Buzzards with artificial
breeding poles although telegraph poles seemed to be the most favoured nest
sites. We saw 3 at Koko Nor on the 19th, 4 between Koko Nor and
Gonghe on the 22nd, 1 near the Er La Pass on the 23rd, 40
on the drive towards the Sichuan border on the 25th and 100 on the
return drive on the 30th, 60 between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st,
2 just south of Yushu on both the 2nd and 3rd, 50 between
Yushu and Huaxisha on the 10th and 10 just north of Huaxisha on the
11th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding east
Qinghai.
Golden
Eagle Aquila chrysaetos daphanea C
Both immatures and adults were encountered with 1
seen in the Chaka Desert on the 21st, 1 over scrubby ridges between
Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd, singles at Banma Forest Station on
both the 26th and 27th, 1 seen south of Yushu on the 2nd,
3 were seen on two dates at Nangjen Forest Station, 1 at the Kanda Shan Pass on
the 7th and 1 south of Yushu on the 9th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as likely breeding Qinghai. BWP states daphanea slightly larger than UK chrysaetos, darker, front and center of crown darker and
elongated feathers of nape less ‘golden’. Soars with wings held in an obvious
V.
Eurasian
Kestrel Falco tinnunculus interstinctus C
We saw 1 on the eroded hillsides at Xining on the
17th, 1 at the Dongxia Forest on the 18th, 5 between
Yushu and Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd, 2 in the same area on
the 9th and 1 at the eroded hillsides at Xining on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as likely breeding Qinghai. Raptors
state interstinctus
has richer colours, heavier and coarser markings
than UK tinnunculus,
but some overlap and
intergradation.
Eurasian
Hobby Falco subbuteo subbuteo (as UK) C
We saw 2 at Gonghe on the 23rd, 2 in the
vicinity of the bridge across the river near the Banma Forest Station on the 26th,
1 in the same area on the 28th and singles at Nangjen Forest Station
on the 3rd and the 5th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as breeding in Qinghai adjacent to se Kansu. BWP notes that birds in
western Europe slightly darker than in central Asia that is sometimes separated
as centralasiae.
Saker
Falco cherrug milvipes C
Often seen at Pika colonies with 15 seen on the
drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th, 8 on our return on the 30th,
2 just south of Maduo on the 1st, 5 between Yushu and Huaxisha on
the 10th and 2 just north of Huaxisha on the 11th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding in Qinghai. BWP states that
Central Asiatic milvipes
has upperparts barred
rufous, marks on underparts (flanks/thighs) also tending to bars, especially on
flanks and thighs.
Severtzov's (Chinese) Grouse Bonasia sewerzowi (monotypic) C
At Banma Forest Station we saw a pair on the 27th,
and singles on the 28th and 29th and at Nangjen Forest
Station JFC saw singles on the 4th and 5th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as breeding in south Qinghai. Pheasants treats as two
possibly clinal forms with Qinghai birds then relating to the slightly less
rufous sewerzowi. This species is listed as Near Threatened by
BirdLife International (2000) Threatened birds of the world that states ‘its habitat has been greatly reduced
and fragmented by large-scale forest clearance, and illegal hunting and
egg-collecting may be a problem in parts of its range.’
Verreaux's (Chestnut-throated) Monal Partridge Tetraophasis obscurus
(monotypic) C
We obtained excellent views of a pair that ran
around us in response to tape playback high on a ridge above Banma Forest
Sation on the 27th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
breeding in the Koko Nor region of east Qinghai.
Szechenyi's (Buff-throated) Monal Partridge Tetraophasis szechenyii (monotypic) C
Having heard a pair at Nangjen Forest Station on
the 4th we were pleased to disturb 3 from a ravine there the
following day that gave views as they ran in different directions up the
opposite steep forested bank of the ravine. Distribution recorded by Pheasants as
replacing Verreaux’s west of the Yalung River in south Qinghai.
Tibetan Snowcock Tetraogallus tibetanus przevalskii C
Just a single individual was watched for some time
calling from a ridge above us at Er La Pass on the 23rd. Others were
heard at Kanda Shan Pass on both the 7th and 8th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee for przevalskii
as resident from the Buckhan Boda Shan to the Nan
Shan in north Qinghai. Pheasants describes przevalskii
as rather pale and sandy though less so than
nominate tibetanus.
Przevalski's (Rusty-necklaced) Partridge Alectoris magna (monotypic) C
A confiding pair performed well in a
wadi in the Chaka Desert on the 21st. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as resident in Qinghai from the Zaidam Basin to the headwaters of
the Hwang Ho and the Koko Nor region.
Daurian Partridge Perdix dauurica przewalski (included in suschkini by Clements 2000)
C
We finally scored on our fourth attempt at Gonghe
where a pair were seen in a scrubby field being almost immediately followed by
us seeing another pair with around 5 newly fledged chicks on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident in Qinghai. Pheasants state przewalski has
pale, sandy tones.
Tibetan Partridge Perdix hodgsoniae sifanica C
We saw 2 between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd,
3 on the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th, 2 south of Yushu
on the 2nd, 4 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd,
5 at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th and 4 there the following day.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident in east Qinghai. Pheasants
states sifanica is browner and more rufous than nominate hodgsoniae
and usually smaller.
Blood
Pheasant Ithaginis cruentus michaelis C
We saw a total of 7 adults and 5 newly fledged
chicks in a forested valley above the Banma Forest Station on the 27th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee for michaelis
as the Nan Shan in northeast Qinghai. Pheasants
treat michaelis as forming part of the ‘red-winged group’ (different to Nepal) with
greenish shaft streaks on rump and uppertail-coverts.
White Eared Pheasant Crossoptilon crossoptilon drouynii C
We saw a party of 6 feeding in clearings on a
hillside between Yushu and Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd that we
tentatively assigned to drouynii as their plumage
appeared wholly white except for a black tail. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee for dolani
as south Qinghai known
from Yushu and Lamdo, upper Yangtze and for drouynii
as extreme sw Qinghai on the watersheds between the
upper Yangtze, Mekong and Salween rivers. Pheasants states dolani is pale ashy-grey
above and below, including wings, but foreneck and belly white. Pheasants state
drouynii variable
with some slate-blue on mantle, others pale grey or white above, some have
white basal portions of tail, others have dark tail base. This species is listed as Near Threatened by
BirdLife International (2000) Threatened birds of the world that states ‘it is threatened by hunting for food
and deforestation, but the high-altitude forests that it inhabits are not being
lost at a very rapid rate, and there are recent records from several protected
areas.’
Blue Eared Pheasant Crossoptilon auritum (monotypic) C
A single individual was seen in a clearing above
the Banma Forest Station during the late afternoons of the 26th and
28th. On the second date we climbed to the clearing until we were
within c.30m of the bird. The distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
resident in east Qinghai.
Common
Pheasant Phasanius colchicus strauchi C
We saw 4 on the eroded hillsides at Xining on the
17th, 5 at the Dongxia Forest near Xining on the 18th, 1
at Gonghe on the 22nd and 3 at the eroded hillsides at Xining on the
12th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee for strauchi as east Qinghai east of Koko Nor and the Hwang
Ho; for vlangalii
in the marshes west of
the Zaidam depression in Qinghai. Pheasants treats both strauchi / vlangalii as
part of the ‘grey-rumped Pheasants’. Pheasants describes strauchi as
dark and richly coloured, collar narrow and broken and virtually absent in
some. Pheasants describe vlangalii as dark, relatively rufous above and lacking pale centers to scapulars,
crown quite dark and collar vestigial.
White-breasted Waterhen Amaurornis
phoenicurus phoenicurus C
We saw 1 at the Summer Palace pools at Beijing on
the 16th.
Moorhen Gallinula chloropus
chloropus (as UK) C
We saw a single individual on a small reedy-fringed
pool at Gonghe on both the 22nd and 11th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
likely to include Qinghai. BWP and Rails state clinal variation becoming
smaller in the east including those from China.
Coot
Fulica atra atra (as UK) C
We saw 2 at the freshwater marsh at the eastern end
of Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
breeding in Qinghai.
Black-necked Crane Grus nigricollis (monotypic) C
We saw 7 at Koko Nor on the 19th
including a pair at a nest mound at the eastern end of the lake, 6 including
chicks on the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th, 6 plus 2
chicks whilst driving from Banma to Maduo on the 30th, 4 at the
wetland just south of Maduo on the 1st, 4 and 1 chick at a marsh
south of Yushu on the 2nd, 4 there on the 9th, 6 on the
drive from Yushu to Huaxisha on the 10th and a pair and a chick just
north of Huaxisha on the 11th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as breeding to the Koko Nor region of Qinghai. This species is
listed as Vulnerable by BirdLife International (2000) Threatened birds of the
world that states ‘this
species has a small, declining population (c.5,600 – 6,000 individuals) as a
result of loss and degradation of wetlands, changing agricultural practices and
increased human activity in its breeding and wintering grounds’.
Ibisbill
Ibidorhyncha struthersii (monotypic) C
We saw an adult and 4 chicks and another pair of
adults along a river just west of Banma town on the 25th and an
adult on the drive between Nangjen Forest Station and the Kanda Shan Pass on
the 7th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding in
Qinghai.
Pied
Avocet Recurvirostra avosetta (montypic) C
A single individual was seen
on the freshwater pool at the east end of Koko Nor on the 19th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as not including Qinghai. BWP and
Shorebirds state there is a slight cline of increasing size from Atlantic
across Europe and Asia.
Little
Ringed Plover Charadrius dubius curonicus (as UK) C
We saw 1 at Koko Nor on the 19th and 2
on a river in the Chaka Desert on the 21st. Distribution recorded by
De Schauensee as breeding southeast Qinghai.
Kentish
Plover Charadrius alexandrinus
alexandrinus alexandrinus (as UK) C
We saw 10 at Koko Nor on the 19th and 1
on a river in the Chaka Desert on the 21st. Distribution recorded by
De Schauensee as breeding southeast Qinghai. BWP notes some clinal variation
with increase in wing from southern Europe eastward to central Asia with
eastern males tending to have a more bright cinnamon crown and the female more
often tinged cinnamon on upperparts and sides of chest (occasionally central
chest also).
Mongolian
Plover Charadrius mongolus schaferi (included as part of
atrifrons by De Schauensee) C
We saw 3 at the eastern end of Koko Nor on the 19th,
8 just north of Maduo on the 30th, 30 at the wetland just south of
Maduo on the 1st and the same number there on the 10th
and 8 just north of Huaxisha on the 11th. Distribution recorded by
De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai. BWP states schaferi forms part of ‘atrifrons group’ often having some white on forehead (though
some seen well appeared to lack any white on the forehead), intermediate
between atrifrons
and nominate mongolus. Female schaferi has upperparts intermediate between the pale mongolus and darker atrifrons but often closest to mongolus. BWP states schaferi has relatively short wing, long tarsus, and long
and slender bill. BWP states schaeferi closest to Greater
Sand Plover in proportions, especially to C.l. columbinus. Bill fine and slender, quite long, breast-band
reduced in area, mainly orange and quite pale, border to breast-band absent or
virtually so.
Greater
Sand Plover Charadrius leschenaultii
leschenaultii C
We
tentatively identified 2 at the eastern end of Koko Nor on the 19th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as not including Qinghai. BWP states leschenaultii heavy-billed with strongly curved nail and distinctly angled gonys.
Crown, upper mantle, and chest of leschenaultii
rufous as in columbinus, but remainder of upperparts mostly pale grey-brown and chest-band
narrow, sharply demarcated from white breast and flanks. Strong bill with
curved nail and obvious angled gonys. Upperparts clean lacking cinnamon but may
show narrow rufous fringes. Breast-band narrow at center, deep rufous, hardly
extending onto flanks, quite sharply demarcated, lacks border to breast-band.
Northern
Lapwing Vanellus vanellus (monotypic) C
We saw 2 at the freshwater marsh at the east end of
Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
breeding east Qinghai.
Eurasian Curlew Numenius
arquata orientalis C
We
counted 140 on the pastures along the southern shore of Koko Nor accessible
from Heimahe on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
not including Qinghai but suggests a likely migrant. BWP states orientalis is the eastern extreme of a
cline of increasing bill and tarsus length, less heavy marking, and paler
ground-colour towards the east. BWP also describes orientalis as having white axillaries.
Common
Redshank Tringa tetanus
ussuriensis C
We saw 40 at Koko Nor on the 19th, 12 at
the wetland south of Maduo on the 1st, 10 at a marsh south of Yuishu
on the 2nd, 3 there on the 9th, 25 between Yushu and
Huaxisha on the 10th and 1 just north of Huaxisha on the 11th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai. BWP states ussuriensis has
dark cinnamon upperparts clinally smaller towards east. Shorebirds illustrates ussuriensis
with warm cinnamon mantle.
Wood
Sandpiper Tringa glareola (monotypic) C
We saw 8 at the wetland south of Maduo on the 1st and 20 between Yushu and Huaxisha on the 10th.
Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as not including Qinghai but suggests a likely
migrant.
Green
Sandpiper Tringa ochropus (monotypic) C
We saw 1 along a small river just south of Yushu on
the 9th and 2 on a reddy pool at Gonghe on the 12th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as not including Qinghai but suggests a likely
migrant.
Common
Sandpiper Actitis hypoleucos (monotypic) C
A single individual was seen along a river north of
Yushu on the 10th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
breeding south Qinghai.
Long-tailed
Skua Stercorarius
longicaudus C
A
second-summer seen in flight along the southern shore of Koko Nor accessible
from Heimahe on the 19th was the biggest surprise of the trip. De Schauensee fails to
list this species for China although Skuas and Jaegers indicate a vagrant as
having previously occurred along coastal China.
Great
Black-headed (Pallas’s) Gull Larus
ichthyaetus (monotypic) C
We saw an estimated 450 at Koko Nor on the 19th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai.
Black-headed
Gull Larus ridibundus (monotypic) C
We saw 1 at the eastern end
of Koko Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
not including Qinghai but suggests a likely migrant.
Brown-headed
Gull Larus brunnicephalus (monotypic) C
We saw 30 at the eastern end of Koko Nor on the 19th,
1 on the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th, 6 on the return
drive on the 30th, 2 at the wetland south of Maduo on the 1st
and 5 there on the 10th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
breeding Qinghai.
Common
Tern Sterna hirundo tibetana C
We saw 50 at Koko Nor on the 19th, 3
along rivers in the Chaka Desert on the 21st, 1 at Gonghe on the 22nd,
2 on the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th, 6 on the return
drive on the 30th, 4 at the wetland south of Maduo on the 1st,
3 just south of Yushu on the 2nd, 1 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest
Station on the 3rd, 3 just south of Yushu on the 9th, 10
at the wetland south of Maduo on the 10th and 1 at Gonghe on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai. BWP states slightly
darker grey body (though our impression was that they were noticeably darker
grey than hirundo), wings slightly longer and bill slightly shorter
like black-billed longipennis rather than UK’s hirundo. However black-tipped red bill and leg red in summer as hirundo. Illustrated by Robson.
Whiskered
Tern Chlidonias hybridus javanica C
We saw 6 at the eastern end of Koko Nor on the 19th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as not breeding Qinghai. BWP states javanicus is smaller and distinctly paler than UK’s hybridus, in breeding, chest and all upperparts and
upper wing-coverts light grey (similar to Common Tern), throat pale grey,
indistinctly defined from broad white streak below eye, and belly grades from
medium grey near chest to dark slate-grey near vent. Illustrated by Robson.
Little Tern Sterna
albifrons sinensis C
A surprise was a single
individual tentatively assigned to sinensis at rest amongst a flock of
resting Common and a Whiskered Tern at the eastern end of Koko Nor on the 19th.
Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee doesn’t include Qinghai. BWP states sinensis
is slightly larger than UK’s albifrons with tail more deeply forked,
bill longer and heavier at base.
Pallas's
Sandgrouse Syrrhaptes paradoxus (monotypic) C
DC saw a single male on the 20th and an
estimated 25 the following day all in the Chaka Desert including some fine
views of a flock of c.10 on the ground. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
as breeding Qinghai.
Tibetan Sandgrouse Syrrhaptes
tibetanus (monotypic) P
C
The highlight of the entire trip was a calling pair
that flew into the stony ridge atop Er La Pass on the 24th after c.8
hours searching for them and allowed fine views on the ground. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai.
Blue
Hill Pigeon Columba rupestris rupestris C
We saw 20 at the eroded hillsides at Xining on the
17th, 18 at Koko Nor on the 19th, 1 near Heimahe on the
21st, 2 near the Er La Pass on the 23rd, 4 on the drive
to the Sichuan border on the 25th, 5 between Banma Town and Banma
Forest Station on the 26th, 12 on the return journey on the 29th,
8 between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st, 8 south of Yushu on the 2nd,
40 on the drive to Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd, up to 15 daily
on all four dates at Nangjen Forest Station, 25 at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th,
6 south of Yushu on the 9th, 4 between Yushu and Huaxisha on the 10th
and 10 at the eroded hillsides at Xining on the 12th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai. Pigeons state averages rather darker especially on the body and the
iridescence of the neck slightly more extensive than turkestanica of
Nepal.
Snow
Pigeon Columba leuconota gradaria C
We saw 4 just north of Yushu on the 1st,
10 south of Yushu on the 2nd and 6 in the same area the following
day and 4 at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th and 4 south of Yushu on
the 9th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai.
Pigeons states it differs in having more restricted and less well defined dark
bars on the median and greater coverts and tertials and the area of white on
the base of the outerwebs of the outer tail feathers is reduced than leuconota of Nepal.
Collared
Dove Streptopelia decaocto decaocto (as UK) C
We saw 1 whilst driving between Dongxia
Forest and Xining on the 18th, 1 at an oasis in the Chaka Desert on
the 20th, 10 at Gonghe on the 22nd with 15 seen there on
the 23rd, 6 there on the 11th and 5 there on the 12th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
breeding east Qinghai.
Red
Turtle Dove Streptopelia tranquebarica
humilis C
We saw singles at Gonghe
with a flock of Collared Doves on the 23rd and on its own at the
Nangjen Forest Station on the 4th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as breeding southeast Qinghai.
Oriental
Turtle Dove Streptopelia orientalis orientalis (both orientalis and meena
recorded in UK) C
We saw 2 at the Dongxia Forest on the 18th,
1 at Banma Forest Station on the 26th with 2 seen there on the 28th
and 5 there on the 29th, 1 at Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd,
4 there on both the 4th and 5th and 2 there on the 6th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as likely breeding in Qinghai. Pigeons
state duller than meena with duller
browner neck, nape to mantle colder brown. Wing coverts with narrower and
duller, rufous and grey fringes. Terminal tail band broader and distinctly grey
rather than white.
Spotted Dove Streptopelia chinensis
chinensis C
A single individual was seen at the Summer
Palace in Beijing on the 16th.
Indian Cuckoo Cuculus micropterus micropterus
Singles were heard calling at the Summer
Palace in Beijing on the 16th and at the Sino-Swiss Hotel in Beijing
the following morning.
Common
Cuckoo C. canorus canorus (as UK) / bakeri C
We
saw 1 at the eroded hillsides at Xining on the 17th, 2 at an oasis
in the Chaka Desert on the 20th, 3 at Gonghe on both the 22nd
and 23rd where a hepatic phase bird was seen, 10 on the drive
towards the Sichuan border on the 25th, 2 on the drive from Banma
Forest Station to Banma Town on the 29th, 1 between Banma and Maduo
on the 30th, 6 between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st, 3
between Yushu and Nangjen Forest Reserve on the 3rd, singles at the
Kanda Shan Pass on both the 7th and 8th, 2 between Yushu
and Huaxisha on the 10th, and up to 3 at Gonghe including the
hepatic phase individual on both the 11th and 12th. Based
on range alone it seems likely that we encountered both canorus and
bakeri. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as the Koko Nor region of
east Qinghai for canorus and south Qinghai for bakeri and north
Qinghai for subtelephonus. BWP states bakeri differs from all
other populations in darker grey upperparts close to Oriental Cuckoo. BWP
states subtelephonus has narrow bars on breast also being
slightly smaller-sized than canorus.
Little
Owl Athene noctua plumipes / ludlowi C
We saw 3 plumipes at Koko Nor on the 19th, 1 at an
oasis in the Chaka Desert on the 21st, 3 ludlowi between Yushu and Nangjen Forest Station on
the 3rd and 2 south of Yushu on the 9th and up to 8
presumed plumipes at Gonghe on both the 11th and 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident in Koko Nor in east Qinghai
for plumipes and south Qinghai for ludlowi. Owls states plumipes has toes more densely covered with plumes rather than bristles and ludlowi very
similar to UK vidali but distinctly larger.
Pere David's (Sichuan Wood) Owl Strix (uralensis) davidi (monotypic) C
A single individual was flushed from the spruce
forest near the entrance to the ‘third valley’ opposite the Nangjen Forest
Station on the 5th and flew (mainly glided) c.70m across the valley
before disappearing between Spruces on the far side of the valley.
Unfortunately it couldn’t be relocated despite a before dawn attempt the
following day. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as southeast Qinghai.
Common
Swift Apus apus pekinensis C
We saw 40 at the Summer Palace at Beijing on the 16th,
25 at the eroded hillsides at Xining on the 17th, 1 at Xining on the
18th, 2 at Koko Nor on the 19th, 8 at the Chaka Desert on
the 20th and 10 there the following day, 8 at Gonghe on the 22nd,
30 there on the 11th and 40 there the following morning and 50 at
the Lama Temple in Beijing on the 13th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as breeding in Qinghai. Swifts/BWP state slightly paler (that we
felt was generally only noticeable in very good light) than UK’s apus most apparent on the slightly larger, purer
white and more pronounced throat patch. Forehead also on average slightly paler
and has a narrow line over eye. The upperparts are a little browner and the
underparts do not appear so deeply black. On the wing the coverts are more
clearly fringed and the innerwing appears slightly paler, grayer undertail
coverts, distinctly paler inner primaries, secondaries, and greater
upperwing-coverts. Only slightly darker than Pallid Swift.
Fork-tailed
Swift A. pacificus pacificus (as UK) / kanoi C
We saw 2 at the eroded hillsides at Xining on the
17th, 4 at Koko Nor on the 19th, 2 near Heimahe on the 20th,
8 at a wadi between Gonghe and Er La Pass on the 23rd, 2 near Banma
Town on the 29th, 4 just north of Yushu on the 1st, 2
south of Yushu on the 2nd, 30 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest
Station on the 3rd, 2 at Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th and 6
there the following day, 1 north of Yushu on the 10th and 5 north of
Huaxisha on the 11th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east
Qinghai for pacificus and southeast Qinghai for kanoi. Swifts states kanoi is blacker than pacificus, especially underparts and upperparts, the crown, with smaller throat
and rump patches. Throat is grayer and more heavily streaked (as is rump), the
scaling on the underparts is sometimes less obvious. Less deeply forked tail.
Kingfisher
Alcedo atthis bengalensis C
A
single individual was seen at the Summer Palace at Beijing on the 16th.
Hoopoe
Upopa epops saturata C
We saw 1 at an oasis in the Chaka Desert on the 20th,
5 at Gonghe on the 22nd and 8 there the following day including some
fledged juveniles, 2 at Banma Town on the 25th, 3 on the outskirts
of Banma Town on the 29th, 3 just north of Yushu on the 1st,
3 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd, 2 at Nangjen
Town on the 8th, 3 just north of Yushu on the 10th, 3 at
Gonghe on the 11th and 15 there the following day with a number
mobbing a Little Owl. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee likely to include
Qinghai. BWP states saturata has mantle
slightly grayer and throat to chest less pinkish than UK’s epops.
Wryneck
Jynx torquilla chinensis C
We saw a single individual at Gonghe on the 23rd.
The distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeds north and east Qinghai.
Grey-headed
Woodpecker Picus canus jessoensis / kogo
C
A male jessoensis was seen at the
Summer Palace at Beijing on the 16th, 2 kogo were seen near the bridge across the river at Banma Forest Station on
the 26th and 28th with 3 being seen there on the 29th
and a party of 3 were seen alongside the river at Nangjen Forest Station on the
5th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east and southwest
Qinghai for kogo.
Grey-capped
Pygmy Woodpecker Picoides
canicapillus scintilliceps C
We
saw a pair at the Summer Palace in Beijing on the 16th.
Black
Woodpecker Dryocupus martius khamensis C
A male was watched perched atop a dead tree stump
at Banma Forest Station on the 26th and another was seen in a ravine
opposite the Banma Forest Station on the 29th, 1 was seen at Nangjen
Forest Station on the 4th and 2 were seen there the following day.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east Qinghai. Woodpeckers state has
plumage blacker and more glossy than the Europe’s martius.
Great
Spotted Woodpecker Dendrocopos major japonicus / beicki C
We saw 10 presumed japonicus at the Summer Palace at Beijing on the 16th,
1 beicki between Banma Town and Banma Forest Station
on the 26th and 1 at Gonghe on the 11th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as east Qinghai. Woodpeckers’ states darker than UK’s
nominate and may have some red on breast. Asian subspecies appear sullied on
underparts.
Rufous-bellied Woodpecker Dendrocopos hyperythrus hyperythrus C
We saw 2 between Banma Town and Banma Forest
Station and 1 at the Forest Station itself on the 26th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as not including Qinghai but neighbouring Tibet and
Szechwan.
Three-toed Woodpecker Picoides tridactylus funebris C
A single individual was seen along the ‘first
ravine’ at Nangjen Forest Station on the 4th. Distribution recorded
by De Schauensee as Koko Nor in Qinghai.
Long-billed Calandra (Tibetan) Lark Melanocorypha maxima holdereri C
We saw 20 in the pastures bordering the southern
shore of Koko Nor on the 19th, 2 on scrubby hillsides near Heimahe
on the 20th, 1 at Er La Pass on the 24th, 4 on the drive
to the Sichuan border on the 25th and 3 on the return journey on the
30th, 5 between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st, 1 south of
Yushu on the 2nd and 6 between Yushu and Huaxisha on the 10th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
east and central Qinghai. White trailing edge to secondaries and tip to tail.
Rump can be rufous.
Mongolian Lark Melanocorypha mongolica (monotypic) C
We saw 12 in the fields at the eastern end of Koko
Nor on the 19th some being seen in display flight, 1 in the Chaka
Desert on the 20th and 6 seen there the following day, 1 just south
of Gonghe on the 23rd and 10 in the same area on the 11th.
Unfortunately we also saw 8 in cages in Xining on the 12th where
they are kept as songsters. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east
Qinghai in Koko Nor.
Hume's Short-toed Lark Calandrella acutirostris tibetana C
We saw 20 in fields
bordering Koko Nor on the 19th, 3 near Heimahe on the 20th,
1 at Gonghe on the 22nd, 1 on the drive to the Sichuan border on the
25th, 12 north of Maduo on the 30th and 5 south of Maduo
on the 1st, 3 south of Huaxisha on the 10th and 4 north
of Huaxisha on the 11th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
east Qinghai. Greyer and less heavily streaked upperparts than Greater, with
pinkish uppertail-coverts, dark breast side patch usually apparent, with
grayish-buff breast band. Head pattern less pronounced than Greater with rather
uniform ear-coverts.
Asian Short-toed Lark Calandrella (rufescens) cheleensis beicki /
kukunoorensis C
We saw 8 in the Chaka Desert on the 21st,
2 at Gonghe on the 23rd and 4 there on the 11th and 5
there on the 12th. They had a loud and distinctive song.
Distribution by De Schauensee as east Qinghai for beicki, Koko Nor for kukunoorensis, south Koko Nor to southeast Qinghai for tangutica. Primaries extend beyond tertials. Bill
small, short, stout. Broad gorget of diffuse streaking on breast, diffuse
streaking on uppers.
Crested
Lark Galerida cristata leautungensis C
We saw 3 at Gonghe on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as south Qinghai. Large size, prominent
crest, well streaked breast, broad rounded wings, rufous-buff underwing-coverts
and outer tail feathers.
Oriental
Skylark Alauda gulgula inopinata C
We saw 1 on the approach to
Dongxia Forest on the 18th, 50 at Koko Nor on the 19th, 8
near Heimahe on the 20th, 30 between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd,
2 south of Yushu on the 2nd, 2 at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th,
15 between Huaxisha and Gonghe on the 11th and 3 at Gonghe on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east and south Qinghai. Fine bill,
buffish-white outer tail feathers, indistinct rufous wing panel.
Horned
Lark Eremophila alpestris elwesi C
We saw 30 at Koko Nor on the 19th, 10
near Heimahe on the 20th, 20 in the Chaka Desert on the 21st,
50 between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd, 20 between Gonghe and Er
La Pass on the 23rd, 50 at Er La Pass on the 24th, 10
between Er La Pass and Banma on the 25th, 15 between Banma and Maduo
on the 30th, 25 between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st, 6
south of Yushu on the 2nd, 30 between Yushu and Huaxisha on the 10th
and 25 between Huaxisha and Gonghe on the 11th. Most lacked any
yellow on the throat. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as northwest
Qinghai in south and west Zaidam for przewalskii and
the plateau adjacent to the upper Yangtze in south Qinghai for elwesi.
Pale
(Sand) Martin Riparia (riparia) diluta C
We saw 10 at Koko Nor on the 19th, 10 at
the scrubby hillsides near Heimahe on the 20th, 6 near Heimahe on
the 21st, 8 between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd, 10
between Gonghe and Er La Pass on the 23rd, 1 at Er La Pass on the 24th,
5 on the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th, 10 at Banma on the
26th, 6 at Banma Forest Station on the 27th, 8 between
Banma and Maduo on the 30th and singles near Huaxisha on the 10th
and 11th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as likely to
include Qinghai. Swallows/BWP describes diluta as smaller having pale, grey-brown upperparts and a paler, narrower,
less clear-cut blurred breast-band in comparison with UK’s riparia.
Crag
Martin Hirundo rupestris rupestris (as UK) C
We saw 2 in the Chaka Desert on the 20th
and 10 there the following day, 2 between Banma Town and Banma Forest Station
on the 26th and 15 on the return journey on the 29th, 15
between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st, 5 between Yushu and Nangjen
Forest Station on the 3rd, 1 at Nangjen Forest Station on the 4th,
25 near the Tibet border at Nangjen Forest Station on the 6th, 12 at
the Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th and 1 there the following day, 4 between
Nangjen Town and Yushu on the 9th and 1 at Gonghe on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as likely to include Qinghai.
Barn
Swallow Hirundo rustica gutturalis C
We saw 40 at the Summer Palace at Beijing on the 16th
most of which showed very obvious white flecking to the mantle, 2 at Maduo
Junction on the 30th and 6 there the following morning and 2 at
Huaxisha on the 10th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
breeding Qinghai. BWP states smaller than UK’s rustica with rufous of throat more or less connected
through rufous chest with cream-white belly with black chest-band connected by
a narrow dull black band across the lower chest.
Red-rumped
Swallow Hirundo daurica japonica /
gephyra C
We saw 2 japonica at the Summer
Palace at Beijing on the 16th, 3 at the Sino-Swiss Hotel in Beijing
on the 17th, 6 gephyra just north of
Yushu on the 1st, 10 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest Station on the
3rd and 8 between Nangjen Town and Yushu on the 9th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding east Qinghai for gephyra. BWP suggests form involved is daurica which it states is larger than UK’s rufula, fork slightly deeper, differing in
blue-black central hindneck (collar interrupted), less extensive white or cream
on feather bases of mantle and scapulars, and slightly longer and broader
streaks on breast and belly.
Asian
House Martin Delichon dasypus
cashmiriensis C
We saw 1 between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd,
5 at a wadi between Gonghe and Er La Pass on the 23rd, 2 on the drive
to the Sichuan border on the 25th, 6 at Banma Forest Station on the
28th, 5 just north of Yushu on the 1st, 15 south of Yushu
on the 2nd, 20 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd,
10 at Nangjen Forest Station on the 5th and 2 there the following
day and 2 at Kanda Shan Pass on both the 8th and 9th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding southeast Qinghai. Swallows
states cashmiriensis
often lacks the narrow
extension of the lores to the chin.
Richard's
Pipit Anthus richardi centralasiae /
richardi
(as UK) C
We saw 2 at an oasis in the
Chaka Desert on the 20th and the 21st, 1 at Gonghe on the
22nd with 5 seen there the following morning, 10 seen there on the
11th and 15 on the 12th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as breeding east Qinghai for centralasiae and breeding in the Koko Nor region of east Qinghai for richardi.
Pipits would prefer a monotypic treatment though states that the typical centralasiae are on average paler, grayer
and less heavily streaked above, and larger than richardi
(from
west Siberia). Strong bill with decurved tip to culmen, long legs, hind claw
and tail, pale lores, buffish breast and flanks contrasting with whitish belly,
distinctly streaked breast, sometimes also a few indistinct streaks on rear
flanks, comparatively indistinct wing-bars, especially median coverts with
rather triangular dark centers, diffuse on sides, and rufous-buffish tips.
Plumage generally fresh.
Olive-backed
Pipit Anthus hodgsoni hodgsoni C
We
saw 1 at the fields on the edge of the Dongxia Forest on the 18th
and 3 singing at Banma Forest Station on the 28th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as breeding likely to include Qinghai. Pipits state hodgsoni
differs from UK’s yunnanensis in more heavily streaked central crown
and, especially, mantle and scapulars (similar to Tree Pipit although at close
range the streaks are narrower and paler than in Tree Pipit). It also sometimes
shows slightly paler stripes on the sides of the mantle, further enhancing the
dark stripes. The streaks on the breast are on average bolder and on average
reach further down onto the belly. The flanks are usually heavily streaked, as
in (e.g.) Red-throated Pipit, and thus differ from yunnanensis and Tree
Pipit. The dark patch on the ear-coverts is on average larger and more
prominent than yunnanensis. Smaller on average than yunnanensis with
proportionately longer tail. The primary projection is very short, on average
shorter than yunnanensis.
Rosy
Pipit Anthus roseatus (monotypic) C
We saw 2 at the scrubby
hillsides just west of Heimahe on the 20th, 2 on scrubby hillsides
between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd and 1 at the Kanda Shan Pass
on the 7th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding
Qinghai.
Yellow Wagtail Motacilla
flava (plexa)/macronyx C
A
single male tentatively assigned to macronyx was seen just east of Koko
Nor on the 19th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee doesn’t
include Qinghai though macronyx is closest breeding form whereas the
very similar-looking plexa (thunbergi) breeds no closer than in northern
Siberia.
Citrine
Wagtail Motacilla
citreola calcarata C
We
saw 5 at the eastern end of Koko Nor on the 19th, 2 at Gonghe on the
22nd and 1 there the following morning, 1 south of Yushu on the 2nd
and 2 there the following day, 2 near the Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th,
2 south of Yushu on the 9th and 3 including a recently fledged
juvenile at Gonghe on both the 11th and 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai. Pipits illustrates
male with black upperparts with wingbars merging to form a white panel.
Black-backed
(White) Wagtail Motacilla
lugens (alba) leucopsis / alboides C
We
saw 1 leucopsis at the Sino-Swiss Hotel in Beijing, 1 at Xining on the
17th, 2 at the Dongxia Forest on the 18th, 4 in the Chaka
Desert on the 20th and 3 there the following day, and singles at
Gonghe on the 22nd and 23rd where we saw 6 on our return
on both the 11th and 12th. We saw 3 alboides at
Banma on the 25th, 6 at Banma Forest Station on the 26th,
1 there on the 28th and 29th, 1 south of Yushu on the 2nd,
5 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd, 6 at Nangjen
Forest Station on the 4th with 4 there on the 5th and 5
on the 6th, 3 near Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th and 2 on
the 8th, 5 south of Yushu on the 9th and 6 just north of
Yushu on the 10th. Treated as Black-backed Wagtail by Clements.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding central Qinghai for leucopsis and
Pipits records breeding southern and southeastern Qinghai for alboides.
Pipits state leucopsis males show jet-black upperparts, more extensive white on head than any
other ssp. With white upper and central throat, forehead and sides of head and
neck, white flanks and all-white median and greater coverts forming a broad
white panel. Pipits state alboides has black head except for white forehead and mask surrounding eye.
Long-tailed
Minivet Pericrocotus ethologus ethologus
C
We
saw pairs between Banma Town and Banma Forest Station on the 26th
and at Banma Forest Station on the 27th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as breeding south Qinghai. Robson illustrates ethologus.
White-throated
Dipper Cinclus cinclus przewalskii C
We
saw 1 at a wadi between Gonghe and Er La Pass on the 23rd, 3
including a dark variant south of Yushu on both the 2nd and 3rd,
5 near the Tibet border at Nangjen Forest Station on the 6th,
singles at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th and 8th and 4
south of Yushu on the 9th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
breeding south Qinghai. Robson & Dippers illustrates przewalskii. Dippers
illustrates with wholly black belly. A dark variant has been recorded in China
illustrated in Dippers with ashy brown breast replacing white.
Wren
Troglodytes troglodytes szetschuanus
C
We
saw 1 at Banma Forest Station on the 28th and 2 at Nangjen Forest
Station on the 6th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
breeding Koko Nor in northeast Qinghai for idius
and south Qinghai for szetschuanus.
Wrens states
idius paler and grayer than the olivaceous szetschuanus.
Maroon-backed Accentor Prunella immaculata
(monotypic) C
We
saw 1 in a ravine opposite the Banma Forest Station on the 28th and
2 in the same ravine the following morning and 2 in the ‘third ravine’ at
Nangjen Forest Reserve on the 5th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as breeding south Qinghai.
Rufous-breasted
(-browed) Accentor Prunella strophiata
strophiata C
We
saw 1 at the Dongxia Forest on the 18th, 3 on the scrubby hillsides
west of Heimahe on the 20th, 1 at Nangjen Forest Station on the 4th
and 2 there the following day. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as the
Nan Shan in northeast Qinghai.
Brown Accentor Prunella fulvescens khamensis / dresseri
C
We
saw 5 on the scrubby hillsides west of Heimahe on the 20th, 2 in a
wadi in the Chaka Desert on the 21st, 5 at a wadi between Gonghe and
Er La Pass on the 23rd, 1 south of Yushu on the 2nd, 1 at
Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th, 2 south of Yushu on the 9th
and 3 at Gonghe on the 12th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
as the Nan Shan in northeast Qinghai for nanshanica,
as south Qinghai for khamensis,
central Qinghai for dresseri.
Robin Accentor Prunella
rubeculoides rubeculoides C
We
saw 5 on the scrubby hillsides west of Heimahe on the 20th, 12 in
similar habitat between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd, 8 between
Gonghe and Er La Pass on the 23rd, 2 at Er La Pass on the 24th,
1 on the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th and 1 on the return
journey on the 30th, 1 north of Yushu on the 1st, 10
south of Yushu on the 2nd and 1 there on the 9th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as Qinghai.
Alpine
Accentor Prunella collaris tibetana
C
A
single individual was heard south of Yushu on the 2nd and another
was seen in the same area the following day. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as south Qinghai for tibetana.
Siberian
Rubythroat Luscinia calliope (monotypic) C
We
saw 2 fine males at Dongxia Forest on the 18th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as northeast Qinghai.
Himalayan
Rubythroat Luscinia pectoralis
tschebaiewi C
We
saw 3 males on the scrubby hillsides west of Heimahe on the 20th, 1
male on scrubby hillsides between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd and
a female south of Yushu on the 2nd. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as the Nan Shan in east Qinghai. Robson illustrates tschebaiewi.
Red-flanked
Bluetail Tarsiger cyanurus rufilatus
C
We
saw 4 at Banma Forest Station on the 28th and 2 there the following
day and 3 at the Nangjen Forest Station on the 4th and 2 there on
the 5th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east Qinghai.
Robson illustrates rufilatus stating dark blue upperside, whiter below
and lacking white supercilium of UK’s cyanurus.
Przevalski's (Ala Shan) Redstart Phoenicurus alashanicus (monotypic) C
We
saw a male and then a pair at the scrubby hillsides west of Heimahe on the 20th.
Superb. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east Qinghai. This species is listed as Near Threatened
by BirdLife International (2000) Threatened
birds of the world that states ‘it
appears to be rare, and has presumably been affected by habitat loss in its
breeding range.’
Black
Redstart Phoenicurus ochruros rufiventris C
We
saw 8 at Xining on the 17th, 5 at Koko Nor on the 19th,
20 at Heimahe on the 20th, 10 in the Chaka Desert on the 21st,
150 between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd, 40 between Gonghe and Er
La Pass on the 23rd, 5 at Er La Pass on the 24th, 15 on
the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th and 6 on the return
journey on the 30th, 12 between Maduo and Yushu on the 30th,
8 south of Yushu on the 2nd, 8 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest
Station on the 3rd, 1 south of Yushu on the 9th, 8
between Yushu and Huaxisha on the 10th, 30 between Huaxisha and
Gonghe on the 11th and 25 between Gonghe and Xining on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident Qinghai for rufiventris and the Humboldt range and the Nan Shan in Qinghai for xerophilus. Robson illustrates rufiventris.
Hodgson's
Redstart Phoenicurus hodgsoni (monotypic) C
We
saw 3 at Banma Town on the 25th, 20 between Banma town and Banma
Forest Station on the 26th, 3 at Banma Forest Station on the 28th,
5 between Banma Forest Station and Banma Town on the 29th, 3 at
Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd, 5 there on the 4th and
5th, 8 there on the 6th, 1 at Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th
and 2 the following day and 1 near Nangjen Town on the 9th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east Qinghai.
Blue-fronted
Redstart Phoenicurus frontalis (monotypic) C
We
saw 2 at the scrubby slopes west of Heimahe on the 20th, singles at
Banma Forest Station on both the 27th and 28th, 3 south
of Yushu on the 2nd and 2 there the following morning, 2 at Nangjen
Forest Station on the 5th, 1 at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th
and 2 south of Yushu on the 9th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as the Koko Nor region in east Qinghai.
White-throated Redstart Phoenicurus
schisticeps
(monotypic) C
We
saw 4 at the Dongxia Forest on the 18th, 8 at the Banma Forest
Station on the 26th with 10 seen there on the 27th and 6
on the 28th, 6 at Nangjen Forest Station on the 4th, 3
there on the 5th and 1 near the Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east Qinghai.
Guldenstadt's (White-winged) Redstart Phoenicurus erythrogaster
grandis C
We
saw 1 at the Er La Pass on the 23rd, 8 there the following day, 1 on
the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th and 3 on the return
journey on the 30th and 4 at a high pass just south of Er La Pass on
the 11th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as south Qinghai.
White-capped
River Chat Chaimarrornis leucocephalus (monotypic) C
We
saw 1 at a wadi between Gonghe and Er La Pass on the 23rd, 2 on the
drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th, 5 between Banma Town and
Banma Forest Station on the 26th, 4 at Banma Forest Station on the
27th with 3 seen there on both the 28th and 29th,
5 seen south of Yushu on the 2nd and 1 there the following morning,
8 near the Tibet border at Nangjen Forest Reserve on the 6th, 1 at
the Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th and 12 there on the 8th
and 4 south of Yushu on the 9th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as the Koko Nor region in east Qinghai.
Plumbeous
Redstart Rhyacornis fuliginosus
fuliginosus C
Juveniles were seen along the river at Banma Forest
Station on the 27th and 29th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as resident south-east Qinghai.
White-bellied Redstart Hodgsonius phoenicuroides ichangensis C
An
adult responded to tape playback at Dongxia Forest on the 18th and 2
first-year males were watched singing at Banma Forest Station on the 27th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as the Koko Nor region in east Qinghai.
Stonechat
Saxicola torquata przewalskii (forming part of ‘Siberian’ Stonechat) C
We
saw 4 on the scrubby hillsides west of Heimahe on the 20th, 1 south
of Yushu on the 9th and 3 north of Yushu on the 10th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as Qinghai. Stonechats state it is the
largest and darkest of the Siberian complex similar to continental hibernans.
Breast to vent orange, darker on breast. Black on throat marginally extends
onto upper breast. Small white neck patches. Pure white rump extending onto
sides. Uniform black underwing coverts / axillaries diagnostic of a male.
Female has darker orange underparts than other Siberian forms. Orange uppertail
coverts and small area of white on rump. Mainly black chin and throat.
Isabelline
Wheatear Oenanthe isabellina (monotypic) C
We
saw 10 at Koko Nor on the 19th, 3 in the Chaka Desert on the 20th
and 6 there the following day, 12 between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd,
4 just south of Gonghe on the 23rd, 5 just south of Gonghe on the 11th
and 2 near Gonghe on the 12th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as breeds Qinghai.
Pied
Wheatear Oenanthe pleschanka (monotypic) C
We
saw 12 at the eroded hillsides at Xining on the 17th, a juvenile at
Gonghe on the 11th and 5 at the eroded hillsides at Xining on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeds Qinghai. BWP states wing
length increases towards east.
Desert
Wheatear Oenanthe deserti atrogularis / oreophila C
We
saw 5 in the Chaka Desert on the 20th and 4 there the following day.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as the Koko Nor region of Qinghai for atrogularis
and in Qinghai south of the range of atrogularis for oreophila.
BWP states oreophila similar in colouration to atrogularis but
distinctly larger and with much white on inner webs of flight-feathers, tail
often less extensively black than in other races.
Long-tailed
Thrush Zoothera dixoni (monotypic) C
We
saw a pair at Banma Forest Station on the 27th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee doesn’t include Qinghai but does neighbouring
provinces.
Chestnut Thrush Turdus rubrocanus gouldi C
We saw 5 at Banma Forest
Station on the 26th, 4 on the 27th and singles on the 28th
and 29th mainly relating to males in song from exposed perches.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident east Qinghai. Darker slate
head than western subspecies.
Kessler's Thrush Turdus
kessleri (monotypic) C
We
saw 2 on scrubby hillsides between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd, 7
on the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th, 2 at Banma Forest
Station on the 27th, 5 between Banma Forest Station and Banma Town
on the 29th, 6 between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st, 1
south of Yushu on the 2nd, 30 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest
Station on the 3rd, 6 at Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th and 8
there the following day, 8 south of Yushu on the 9th and 3 north of
Yushu on the 10th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east
Qinghai.
(Southern)
Spotted Bush Warbler Bradypterus
thoracicus przewalskii
P C
A
singing male was seen at the Dongxia Forest on the 18th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding east Qinghai. Illustrated in
Warblers stating paler than thoracicus with upperparts olive-brown
with grey cast. Underparts white with grayish-buff wash to breast and flanks,
spotting on lower throat much reduced, sometimes absent. Song a mechanical
insect-like dry low-pitched buzzing dzzzzzzzzzr,
dzzzzzzzzzr, dzrrrrr… Call a loud tchik
tchik. Also an explosive pwit.
Oriental Great Reed Warbler Acrocephalus
orientalis (monotypic) C
We saw 8 at the Summer Palace pools at Beijing on
the 16th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east Qinghai.
Margellanic Lesser Whitethroat Sylvia (minula) margelanica C
We saw 5 in the Chaka Desert on the 21st,
1 at Gonghe on the 22nd, 2 there the following day, 8 at Gonghe on
the 11th and 5 there on the 12th. Distribution recorded
by De Schauensee as the western Zaidam region for (minula) and as from Zaidam to Kansu for margelanica. Warblers states minula smallest of the ssp. With proportionately shorter bill and shortest p9.
Upperparts paler and sandy-yellow, crown pale grey to buff-grey, dark face mask
often restricted to lores and fore cheek or virtually absent. Underparts extensively
tinged cream. Warblers states margelanica larger, though similar to minula in colour, but wing longer, uppertail-coverts grayer, and central tail
feathers darker. Sylvias suggests treating Margellanic Lesser Whitethroat as
distinct from Desert Lesser Whitethroat due to size. Sylvias photos show margelanica being
slightly browner on mantle than minula. Voice
of margelanica unknown.
Tickell's
Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus offinis (monotypic) C
We saw 15 on the scrubby hillsides west of Heimahe
on the 20th, 15 on scrubby hillsides between Heimahe and Gonghe on
the 22nd, 2 in a wadi between Gonghe and Er La Pass on the 23rd,
6 south of ushu on the 2nd and 4 in the same area the following
morning and 3 there on the 9th and 1 just north of Yushu on the 10th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding Qinghai. Dark greenish to
greenish-brown upperparts with greenish edges to remiges, bright yellow super
concolorous with throat and breast lacking buff tones. Some worn birds paler on
super and underparts. Well-defined eye-stripe. Call chit or sit. Song is a short chip whi-whi-whi-whi.
Greenish
Warbler Phylloscopus trochiloides obscuratus C
We saw 8 at Dongxia Forest on the 18th,
2 at Banma on the 26th, 4 there on the 27th, 6 there on
the 28th and 5 there on the 29th, 1 at Nangjen Forest
Station on the 3rd, 8 there on the 4th, 6 there on the 5th
and 2 there on the 6th with many others heard singing at the
mentioned sites. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding east and
south Qinghai. Warblers state like nominate (darkest form being darker than
UK’s viridanus) but somewhat paler, brighter and greener
above an on edges of flight feathers and tail, but with darker crown.
Supercilium averages whiter. BWP treats obscuratus as a stable intergrade between nominate trochiloides and Two-barred plumbeitarsus. Song a hurried repitition of call or similar notes:
chiree-chiree-chiree-chiree-chee-chee witchu-witchu-witchu-witchu etc. Call fairly high-pitched disyllabic chiree or chir’ee. To us they appeared
very grey-crowned in comparison with autumn Greenish Warblers seen in the UK.
Large-billed
Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus magnirostris (monotypic) C
A single individual reacted to tape playback at
Banma Forest Station on the 27th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as breeding Qinghai. Underparts dirty and streaky. Darker upperparts
than Arctic, more dark on lower mandible, duller legs and feet, crown
darker/grayer than mantle. Song distinctive, sweet, high-pitched, descending si si-si su-su. Call tit-like duu-ti or dir-tee
(second note higher).
Orange-
(Buff-) barred Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus
pulcher pulcher C
We saw 6 at Banma Forest Station on the 27th,
4 at Nangjen Forest Station on both the 4th and 5th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding east Qinghai. When worn
wing-bar narrow buff, yellowish rump, extensive white outertail. Very obvious
song a high-pitched twitter, either preceded by or ending with a drawn-out
trill. Call is a short sharp thin swit or sit.
Lemon-rumped
Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus chloronotus (monotypic) C
At Banma Forest Station we saw 2 on the 26th,
8 on the 27th, 4 on the 28th and 3 on the 29th
and at Nangjen Forest Station we saw 3 on all of the 4th, 5th
and 6th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding south
Qinghai and in Warblers as northwestern Qinghai where it intergrades with
Pallas’s. Recently split from Pallas’s Warbler with BWP stating Lemon-rumped
less green and yellow on head lacking golden-coloured face and
grayer-greenish-olive upperparts and less white (more dirty grayish-yellow) on
underparts. Supercilium in front of and above eye very pale yellowish, looking
off-white or pale buffish, bot golden-yellow as Pallas’s. Coronal stripes
usually less distinct. Slightly larger than Pallas’s. Small dark bill. No white on tail. Song is of two types (1) a drawn out thin
rattle followed by rapid, evenly pitched notes: tsirrrrrrrrrrrr-tsi-tsi-tsi-tsi-tsi-tsi-tsi-tsi-tsi-tsi…;
(2) variable endless
stuttering notes, alternating in pitch: tsi tsi-tsi tsi-tsi tsu-tsu tsi-tsi tsu-tsu tsi-tsi
tsi-tsi tsi-tsi-tsi tsirrp tsi-tsi tsu-tsu… Call high-pitched almost disyllabic twit or tuit.
Gansu Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus kansuensis (monotypic) C
We
saw 10 and heard another 10 singing at the Dongxia Forest on the 18th.
Warblers includes mentions that various authors have treated this proposed form
as a synonym of Lemon-rumped or Pallas’s but that its song is very different
and thus it may warrant specific status.
Hume's
Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus humei mandelli
C
We saw 8 and heard another 20 singing at the
Dongxia Forest on the 18th and heard others singing at Banma on the
26th and 28th and at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th.
Distribution recorded by Warblers as eastern Qinghai. Warblers states mandelli is darker and browner on upperparts than UK’s
humei and has a darker crown with faint median crown
stripe (more distinct than humei) with underparts
yellower and with a dirty yellowish-white supercilium. Sides of crown are
darker than mantle. Wing-bar(s) dirty yellowish-white. Lacks pale rump and no
white in tail. Underparts dirty yellowish-white. Call a strikingly disyllabic tjis-ip rather than humei’s whit-hoo
or visu-visu and flat chwee. Upperparts darker olive-green than those of humei.
Yellow-streaked
Warbler Phylloscopus armandii armandti
C
We saw 2 at Dongxia Forest on the 18th,
at Banma Forest Station 3 on the 26th, 1 on the 27th, 3
on the 28th and 1 on the 29th and 2 at Nangjen Forest
Station o the 4th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
breeding in the Koko Nor and Zaidam regions of Qinghai. Sings with short rapid
husky slurred undulating phrases, introduced by a series of zick notes. Call a
sharp bunting-like zick or tzic. Like a small Radde’s Warbler with diffuse
buffish fore-supercilium. Pale legs.
Dusky
Warbler Phylloscopus fuscatus fuscatus (as UK) / weigoldi C
We saw 8 on the scrubby hillsides west of Heimahe
on the 20th and 4 on the scrubby hillsides between Heimahe and
Gonghe on the 22nd. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
breeding east of Koko Nor in east Qinghai for larger fuscatus and in Qinghai west of Koko Nor for weigoldi. BWP states weigoldi has upperparts darker brown than fuscatus, supercilium, cheek, ear-coverts, throat,
breast, and underwing-coverts more grayish-white and with only a slight
isabelline wash, belly with slight cream tinge, not yellow as in fuscatus. Illustrated in Warblers. Call chett…chett. Warblers state Qinghai birds sometimes
treated as P.f. robustus as larger.
Goldcrest
Regulus regulus sikkimensis C
We saw 2 at Dongxia Forest on the 18th,
singles at Banma Forest Station on the 27th and 29th and
4 at Nangjen Forest Station on the 4th and 2 there on the 5th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding northeast Qinghai. Warblers
state greener above than UK’s regulus.
White-browed (Stoliczka's) (Severtzov’s) Tit Warbler Leptopoecile
sophiae major / obscura / sophiae C
We saw pairs in response to tape playback on the
scrubby hillsides between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd and south
of Yushu on the 2nd. Superb. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
as breeding east to the south Nan Shan in Qinghai for major, in south east Qinghai for obscura and in the Nan Shan and Koko Nor in Qinghai
above the altitudes for major for sophiae. Warbler’s states major paler and duller
overall than nominate with bluish-pink belly, extending to breast. Warblers state obscura darker than
nominate, with purple extending over entire underparts. Rump purer bluish, less
violet-blue.
Crested Tit Warbler Leptopoecile elegans (monotypic) C
We obtained superb views of 5 at Banma
Forest Station on the 28th and 3 there the following morning and of
a pair at Nangjen Forest Station on the 4th. Superb. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as north to Koko Nor and the Nan Shan in east
Qinghai.
Sooty (Siberian) (Dark-sided) Flycatcher Muscicapa sibirica rothschildi C
We saw singles at Nangjen Forest Station on both
the 4th and 6th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
as breeding Qinghai. Robson illustrates rothschildi and states it has smudgy grayish-brown breast
and flanks with variable white line down abdomen.
Slaty-backed
Flycatcher Ficedula hodgsonii (monotypic) C
At Banma Forest Station we saw 1 on the 26th,
5 on the 27th and singles on the 28th and 29th
and at Nangjen Forest Reserve we saw 4 on the 4th, 3 on the 5th
and 4 on the 6th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeding
south Qinghai.
Spot-breasted
(Rusty-cheeked) Scimitar-Babbler Pomatorhinus
erythrocnemis gravivox C
At Nangjen Forest Reserve we saw 1 on the 4th
and 2 the following day. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as not
including Qinghai but gravivox from neighbouring
south Kansu.
Kozlov's (Tibetan) Babax Babax koslowi koslowi C
We saw 3 at Nangjen Forest Station on
the 5th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as the tributaries
of the upper Mekong in south Qinghai.
Pere David's (Plain) Laughingthrush Garrulax davidi davidi C
We saw 1 at Dongxia Forest on the 18th
and saw 2 between Banma Town and Banma Forest Station on the 26th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as the Koko Nor and Nan Shan regions in
east Qinghai.
Giant Laughingthrush Garrulax maximus C
At Banma Forest Station we saw 4 on the 26th,
2 on the 27th, 3 on the 28th and 2 on the 29th
and at Nangjen Forest Reserve we saw 1 on the 3rd, 3 on the 4th
and 3 on the 6th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as not
including Qinghai but from neighbouring south Kansu.
Elliot's Laughingthrush Garrulax elliotii przewalskii C
At Banma Forest Station we
saw 12 on the 26th, 15 on the 27th, 6 on the 28th
and 5 on the 29th, at Nangjen Forest Station we saw 1 on the 3rd,
10 on the 4th, 7 on the 5th and 4 o the 6th
and 6 were seen at the Kanda Shan Pass on both the 7th and 8th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east Qinghai.
Chinese Fulvetta Alcippe striaticollis (monotypic) C
At Banma Forest Station we saw 1 on the 27th
and 2 on the 29th and at Nangjen Forest Station we saw 5 on the 4th
and 4 on the 5th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
southeast Qinghai.
White-browed Tit Parus superciliosus (monotypic) C
We saw 6 including a nesting pair on the scrubby
hillsides between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd, 2 at a gorge south
of Yushu on the 9th and JFC saw 1 just north of Yushu on the 10th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
resident Qinghai including Koko Nor and Nan Shan regions.
Songar Tit Parus songarus affinis / weigoldicus C
We saw 10 at Dongxia Forest on the 18th,
at Banma Forest Station we saw 3 on the 26th and 2 the following day
and at Nangjen Forest Station we saw 3 on the 4th, 3 on the 5th
and 1 on the 6th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east
Qinghai for affinis and south Qinghai for weigoldicus. Tits states in comparison to weigoldicus,
affinis has cap slightly paler and browner (mid
brown with a slight pinkish cast), bib browner (dark brown), upperparts paler
(dark brown) and flanks slightly paler.
Grey
Crested Tit Parus dichrous dichroides
C
We saw 3 at Banma Forest Station on the 29th
and 4 at Nangjen Forest Station on the 4th. Distribution recorded by
De Schauensee as southeast and south Qinghai. Illustrated in Tits which states
no contrast between the throat and breast, but unlike all other forms shows a
marked contrast between the grey cap and crest and dark drab-grey upperparts
(rather than uniformly grayish).
Rufous-vented
Tit (Sikkim Black Tit) Parus rubidiventris beavani C
We saw 6 at the Dongxia Forest on the 18th,
at Banma Forest Station we saw 2 on the 27th, 4 on the 28th
and 3 on the 29th and at Nangjen Forest Station we saw 3 on the 4th
and 1 on the 5th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east
Qinghai. Tits states the birds from northeast Qinghai have been named whistleri and average very slightly paler on the mantle
and uppertail-coverts, with a paler and more rufous belly. Overall beavani is characterized by upperparts tinged blue,
cheek and nuchal patches faintly tinged buff.
Great
Tit Parus major minor C
We saw 2 at Dongxia Forest on the 18th
and at Banma 2 on the 26th, and singles on the following three days.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as the Koko Nor region of east Qinghai
for minor
and north to Yushu in
south Qinghai for subtibetanus.
Tits treats both forms as part of the minor group. Tits states subtibetanus large,
with extensive white in tail, upperparts rather duller than minor with border of upper mantle not so
yellow-olive and lower mantle more grayish-olive.
Chinese (Snowy-browed) Nuthatch Sitta villosa bangsi C
We saw 2 in response to tape playback at Dongxia
Forest on the 18th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as the
Koko Nor region and east Qinghai. Tits illustrate bangsi
and states that it has underparts orange-cinnamon.
Przevalski's (White-cheeked) Nuthatch Sitta leucopsis przewalskii C
We saw 3 in the Dongxia Forest on the 18th
and a pair tending a nest cavity at Nangjen Forest Station on the 4th.
Superb. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident Qinghai. Tits
illustrate przewalskii with cheeks washed orange-buff, underparts rich cinnamon (wearing
paler). Lacks dark eye-stripe of Chinese Nuthatch but care needed when seen
from below.
Wallcreeper
Tichodroma muraria nepalensis C
We saw 1 at the scrubby hillsides west of Heimahe
on the 20th, 1 in a wadi between Gonghe and Er La Pass on the 23rd
and 2 at a gorge south of Yushu on the 3rd. Distribution recorded by
De Schauensee as breeds south Qinghai. Tits states in comparison with UK’s muraria upperparts slightly darker and more
blue-grey, crown often washed pale drab or brown in winter, belly sometimes
darker grey or blackish, pale spots on tail and primaries average larger, pink
tinge on base of tail feathers more frequent, and centers of lesser coverts
pale grey (not white). Wing averages longer but bill averages shorter.
Common
Treecreeper Certhia familiaris bianchii
C
We saw 2 at Dongxia Forest on the 18th
and at Banma Forest Station we saw 1 on the 27th, 4 on the 28th
and 1 on the 29th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as east
Qinghai. Tits treat bianchii as part of the
rather distinct Sino-Himalayan races including mandellii seen in Nepal. Upperparts darker and duller than
UK’s britannica,
rump slightly more
orange-buff, belly, flanks and undertail-coverts duller, washed dull buff.
Brown
Shrike Lanius cristatus lucionensis C
A single male was seen at the Sino-Swiss Hotel in
Beijing on the 17th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee includes
Beijing. Illustrated in Shrikes. Shrikes state lucionensis has upperparts much grayer, only rump and
uppertail-coverts are tinged rufous. Forecrown pale grey (not pure white),
grading into pale ashy on top of crown.
Isabelline
(Rufous-tailed) Shrike Lanius isabellinus tsaidamensis C
We saw a family party of 3
and another single adult male in the Chaka Desert on the 21st.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as north Qinghai in the Zaidam Badin and
the Koko Nor region. Shrikes state tsaidamensis very
similar to isabellinus but slightly paler, also
markedly larger with wing-length of males up to 102mm (88-94 in isabellinus). Shrikes describe similar isabellinus as
having sandy-grey upperparts from crown to lower back with forehead and
supercilium tinged isabelline. Face pattern poorly defined with dark brown on
lores limited to a small spot in front of eyes. Tail dull cinnamon. Small
primary patch. Females have pale lores and brown ear-patches and rarely show a
primary patch.
Grey-backed
Shrike Lanius tephronotus tephronotus C
We saw 1 at Xining on the 17th,
3 at Dongxia Forest on the 18th, 2 in the Chaka Desert on the 21st,
1 near Koko Nor on the 22nd, 2 on the drive to the Sichuan border on
the 25th, 8 between Banma Town and Banma Forest Station on the 26th,
at Banma Forest Station 3 on the 27th, 1 on the 28th and
4 on the 29th, 2 between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st, 2
south of Yushu on the 2nd, 7 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest
station on the 3rd, at Nangjen Forest Station 4 on both the 4th
and 5th, 2 on the 6th and 3 on the 7th, 10 at
the Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th, 5 south of Yushu on the 9th,
2 north of Yushu on the 10th and at Gonghe 5 on the 11th
and 3 the following day. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as Koko Nor
region of north Qinghai.
Tibetan Grey Shrike Lanius
(sphenocercus) giganteus C
We
saw a superb family party of 4 at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as Koko Nor region of east Qinghai for
Chinese sphenocercus and east Qinghai for the high-mountain Tibetan giganteus. Shrikes
notes Vaurie speculating whether they are separate species in Tibet and its
Birds (1972). Chinese like a large Great Grey Shrike with prominent white
supercilium, large white patches in wings, and long, graduated tail. White
underparts. Tibetan even larger with darker upperparts, less white in plumage,
no white supercilium and underparts rather lavender-grey.
Black
Drongo Dicrurus macrocercus cathoecus C
A single individual was seen
in flight at a high pass just south of Er La Pass on the 11th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee does not include Qinghai.
Sichuan (Grey) Jay Perisoreus internigrans (monotypic) C
We saw a party of 3 at Banma
Forest Station on the 28th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
as southeast Qinghai in the western Min Shan. This species is listed as Vulnerable by BirdLife
International (2000) Threatened birds of the
world that states ‘it
has a small, declining, severely fragmented population as a result of extensive
deforestation throughout its range’.
Azure-winged
Magpie Cyanopica cyanus interposita /
swinhoei C
We saw 40 in Beijing and at
the Summer Palace on the 16th, 20 at the Sino-Swiss Hotel in Beijing
on the 17th, 2 on the outskirts of Banma Town on the 29th
and back at Beijing 4 on the 13th and 8 on the 14th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as Beijing for interposita, Koko Nor in
Qinghai for kansuensis and southeast Qinghai for swinhoei. They all differ from European cooki in having white tips
to the central tail feathers and by being larger. Crows describes swinhoei as darker and browner than interposita
with kansuensis being very grey
above and very pale below also having small bills.
Common
(/ Tibetan) Magpie Pica pica sericea / bottanensis C
At Beijing we saw 20 on the
16th, 10 on the 17th and 1 on the 14th,
otherwise we saw 2 at Gonghe on the 23rd, 4 between Banma and Banma
Forest Station on the 26th and 1 on the return drive on the 29th,
3 seen between Yushu and Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd, 4 at
Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th and 5 there on the 8th and 2
at Gonghe on the 12th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
Koko Nor region for Common Magpie sericea and southwest Qinghai for Tibetan Magpie bottanensis.
Crows
states sericea much as UK nominate but with relatively longer wing and shorter tail,
gloss on wings and tail more purple blue and bottanensis the largest form
but with tail relatively the shortest, colour as sericea.
Henderson's (Mongolian) Ground Jay Podoces hendersoni (monotypic) C
We saw a pair and then a
single individual in the Chaka Desert on the 21st. Superb.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as Zaidam in north Qinghai.
Hume's (Tibetan) Ground-pecker Pseudopodoces humilis (monotypic) C
We saw 10 at Koko Nor
including at nest burrows on the 19th, 10 near Heimahe on the 20th,
4 near Heimahe on the 21st, 25 between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd,
30 between Gonghe and Er La Pass on the 23rd, 6 at the Er La Pass on
the 24th, 10 on the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th,
5 on the outskirts of Banma Town on the 29th, 15 between Banma and
Maduo on the 30th, 8 between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st,
20 south of Yushu on the 2nd, 15 between Yushu and Nangjen Forest
Statio on the 3rd, 10 at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th
and 8th, 2 south of Yushu on the 9th, 30 between Yushu
and Huaxisha on the 10th, 10 between Huaxisha and Gonghe on the 11th
and 1 at a Pass between Gonghe and Xining on the 12th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as Qinghai.
Yellow-billed
Chough Pyrrhocorax graculus digitatus C
We saw 1 south of Yushu on
the 2nd and a flock of 15 at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident Qinghai. Crows states
differs from Europe’s nominate in being larger and having stronger feet.
Red-billed
Chough Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax
himalayanus C
This species proved
widespread with a total of 151 recorded over twenty-one days in Qinghai with a
daily maximum of 30 being seen at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident southwest Qinghai. Crows
states the largest race and with tail proportionately longer than western
forms. Plumage gloss blue or bluish-purple.
Daurian Jackdaw Corvus dauuricus (monotypic) C
We saw 2 between Xining and Koko Nor on the 19th,
5 between Banma Town and Banma Forest Station on the 26th, 1 at
Banma Forest Station on the 27th, 15 between Yushu and Nangjen
Forest Station on the 3rd, 3 near Nangjen Town on the 7th
and 2 there the following day and 3 between Gonghe and Xining on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeds east Qinghai.
Rook
Corvus frugilegus pastinator C
We saw 6 roadside between
Dongxia Forest and Xining on the 18th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as breeds east Qinghai. Crows states pastinator is on average
smaller having face feathered on lores and throat but has bare whitish bill
base as UK’s nominate.
Carrion
Crow Corvus corone orientalis C
We saw 4 at the Dongxia
Forest on the 18th, JFC saw 1 near Heimahe on the 20th, 6
between Banma Town and Banma Forest Station on the 26th, 4 near
Yushu on the 1st and 1 there the following day. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as breeds northeast Qinghai. Crows states larger than
UK’s corone giving the impression that it is also relatively broader
winged and longer tailed.
Large-billed
Crow Corvus macrorhynchos tibetosinensis
C
At Banma Forest Station we
saw 15 on the 26th, 8 on the 28th and 6 on the 29th
and at Nangjen Forest Station we saw 5 on the 4th, and singles on
the 5th and 6th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
as resident Qinghai. Crows states large, the blackest and most glossy race with
bases of neck feathers varying from dark grey to whitish.
Raven
Corvus corax tibetanus C
We saw 5 between Banma and
Maduo on the 30th, 10 between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st
and 1 just south of Yushu on the 2nd and 1 there on the 9th
and 3 between Yushu and Huaxisha on the 10th. Distribution recorded
by De Schauensee as a breeder Qinghai. Crows states the largest and most glossy
race, with longest throat hackles, bill large. Bases of neck feathers grey.
White-cheeked Starling Sturnus cineraceus (monotypic) C
We saw 20 at the Summer Palace
at Beijing on the 16th and 5 at the Sino-Swiss Hotel in Beijing on
the 17th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as including the
Koko Nor region of east Qinghai.
Crested Myna Acridotheres cristatellus cristatellus C
We saw 3 at the Summer Palace in Beijing on the 16th.
Tree
Sparrow Passer montanus dilutus / kansuensis / tibetanus C
This species proved
widespread with a total of 358 noted over twenty-two dates only being absent at
Nangjen Forest Station. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident
north Qinghai for dilutus, east and south of Koko Nor for kansuensis and
south and southwest Qinghai above 2725m (9000feet) for tibetanus. Sparrows state dilutus is the palest
(paler than UK’s montanus) with pale sandy-brown upprparts (except head),
and some show a grayer-sandy tone to rump. Race tibetanus is similar to dilutus but slightly darker, and is the largest of all the races. Sparrows
doesn’t recognize kansuensis.
Rock
Sparrow Petronia petronia brevirostris
C
We saw 4 at Koko Nor on the
19th, 8 in the Chaka Desert Desert on both the 20th and
21st, 2 at Gonghe on the 23rd, 6 at Gonghe on the 11th
and 5 there the following day. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
resident Qinghai. Sparrows state brevirostris has less clear-cut or less
well-defined markings on head and mantle, and a short thick bill.
Blanford's (Plain-backed) Snowfinch Pyrgilauda blanfordi barbata /
blanfordi C
We saw a pair at their nest
burrow in the Chaka Desert on both the 20th and 21st and
singles just south of Gonghe on the 23rd and on the drive to the
Sichuan border on the 25th and 2 just north of Huaxisha on the 11th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident northeast Qinghai from south
of Koko Nor, east of Zaidam, to the Nan Shan for barbata, resident
Qinghai from the Buckhan Boda Shan and headwaters of the Yangtze southwest for blanfordi and west of Zaidam for ventorum.
Sparrows states barbata is grayer on upperparts and lacks the ginger tinge while ventorum is even paler grey above, with a tinge of yellow on sides of nape.
Black horns distinctive.
Rufous-necked Snowfinch Pyrgilauda ruficollis ruficollis C
We saw 6 at the scrubby
hillsides west of Heimahe on the 20th, 4 at er La Pass on the 23rd
and 5 there the following day, 10 on the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th
and 12 on the return journey on the 30th, 4 between Maduo and Yushu
on the 1st and 2 just south of Yushu on the 2nd, 1 south
of Yushu on the 9th, 30 between Yushu and Huaxisha on the 10th
and 15 north of Huaxisha on the 11th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as resident Qinghai from the northwest Nan Shan southwestward for isabellina and resident in Qinghai east and north of the range of isabellina from Koko Nor southward, east of the Zaidam depression for ruficollis. Sparrows states isabellina
is paler or grayish on upperparts
and tinged buffish-yellow (isabelline). Lacks Blanford’s black horns. Juv.
Blanford’s have whiter face and grayer chin, plain scapulars/mantle.
Pere David's (Small) Snowfinch Pyrgilauda davidiana davidiana C
We saw 3 including a pair
tending a nest burrow just east of Koko Nor on the 19th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident in the region south and east
of Koko Nor. Small, black forehead, lores & throat. Juv. lacks supercilium.
White-rumped (Mandelli’s) Snowfinch Pyrgilauda taczanowskii (monotypic) C
Always associated with Pika
colonies clearly using their burrows for nesting. We saw 1 nesr Er La Pass on
the 23rd, 2 at Er La Pass on the 24th, 25 on the drive to
the Sichuan border on the 25th and 30 on the return drive on the 30th,
8 between Yushu and Huaxisha on the 10th and 8 just north of
Huaxisha on the 11th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
resident north Qinghai in the Nan Shan, and southwest through southwest
Qinghai. The only white-rumped Snowfinch.
Tibetan (Adams’s) Snowfinch Montifringilla adamsii adamsi / xerophila C
We saw 1 on the scrubby
hillsides west of Heimahe on the 20th, 1 between Heimahe and Gonghe
on the 22nd, 3 between Gonghe and Er La Pass on the 23rd,
6 south of Yushu on the 2nd and 4 there on the 9th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident Qinghai from the region east
of Koko Nor in east Qinghai for adamsi and from the Humboldt Range of the
northwestern Nan Shan south to the Buckhan Boda Shan for xerophila. Sparrows states xerophila is generally paler and with streaks on
mantle and back less distinct than adamsi. Smaller than Eurasian Snowfinch, less
white in the wing, duller underparts, sandy-buff in outer –tails and all-black
bill.
Eurasian
(White-winged) Snowfinch Montifringilla
nivalis henrici C
We saw 10 at Er La Pass on
the 24th, 7 on the drive to the Sichuan border on the 25th
and 3 on the return journey on the 30th, 4 between Maduo and Yushu
on the 1st and 20 at a high pass just south of Er La Pass on the 11th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident central Qinghai. Sparrows states henrici
is
the darkest race, with upperparts (including crown) earth-brown with dark
rust-brown centers to mantle and back, and the underparts are much grayer
except for flanks, which are grey-brown. White secondaries.
Oriental (Grey-capped) Greenfinch Carduelis sinica sinica C
We saw 2 at the Dongxia Forest on the 18th,
2 in the town at Gonghe and 2 at the farmland on the edge of Gonghe on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as southeast Qinghai.
Eurasian
Siskin Carduelis spinus (monotypic) C
We saw a single male at the
Dongxia Forest on the 18th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
doesn’t include Qinghai.
Tibetan
Siskin Carduelis thibetana (monotypic) C
We saw a single male at
Nangjan Forest Station on the 4th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee probably includes Qinghai. Male unstreaked and lacks black cap.
Lacks bright yellow band on greater coverts.
Twite
Carduelis flavirostris miniakensis / montanella C
We saw 6 at Koko Nor on the
19th, 30 west of Heimahe on the 20th, 6 near Heimahe on
the 21st, 35 between Heimahe and Gonghe on the 22nd, 12
between Gonghe and the Er La Pass on the 23rd, 1 near Maduo on the
30th, 2 between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st, 6 just south
of Yushu on the 2nd, 6 at Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th, 1
south of Yushu on the 9th, 1 just south of the Er La Pass on the 11th
and 5 drinking at the Gonghe farmland on the 12th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee as the south Nan Shan in east Qinghai for miniakensis
and
along the mountains north of the Zaidam depression to the eastern end of the
Nan Shan for montanella. Sparrows states miniakensis
has
pale buff edges to brown streaks on upperparts, broad white flashes on edges of
primaries, and the male’s rump is white or pale pink with
montanella (illustrated) very pale buff (palest of all races) on
upperparts and white or whitish below, intensity of pink on rump varies from
whitish-pink to pale buff or tinged brown to reddish-pink.
Red
Crossbill Loxia curvirostra curvirostra / himalayensis
C
We saw 60 at Nangjen Forest
Station on the 4th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
recorded Qinghai for curvirostra and resident ne
Qinghai southwest to the Yushu region for himalayensis. Finches state that
in curvirostra there is an eastward cline to paler or brighter and larger birds in
Siberia. Finches states the darkest race is himalayensis, with adult males
dark cherry-red or brownish-red and females also brown or dark brown tinged
with olive. Robson illustrates himalayensis.
Plain
(Hodgson’s) Mountain Finch Leucosticte
nemoricola nemoricola C
We saw 15 at the scrubby
hillsides west of Heimahe on the 20th, 6 between Heimahe and Gonghe
on the 22nd, 2 at Er La Pass on the 23rd and 1 there the
following day, and 10 south of Yushu on the 2nd. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee breeding east Qinghai. In the hand nominate
axillaries yellow not grey. Streaked mantle, pale supercilium.
Brandt's Mountain Finch Leucosticte brandti haematopygia C
We saw 5 at the Er La Pass
on the 23rd and 12 there the following day, 4 at Huaxisha on the 25th
and 6 there on the 30th, 2 between Maduo and Yushu on the 1st,
4 south of Yushu on the 2nd and 2 at Huaxisha on the 10th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident from the high mountains of
south Qinghai for haematopygia and the west Nan Shan in Qinghai for pallidor. Finches states summer haematopygia
(illustrated in Finches) has
blackish-brown forehead (blackest) to nape, mantle and scapulars are distinctly
darker with dark brown streaks continuing to upper back, lores and chin are
nearly as black as forehead, and cheeks and ear-coverts to sides of neck are
black or deep or dull brown. Race pallidor
(similar to nominate) has
upper mantle dull or dark brown and grey-tinged, lower mantle and upper back
grey, washed pale-buff or yellowish having extensive black on crown to
hindcrown, brown or dark brown upper nape, and variably dark brown to black
lores and brown cheeks and ear-coverts, the chin and throat are grey or pale
buff. Both ssp. lack pink tips to lesser
coverts being replaced with plain grey.
Desert
Finch Rhodospiza obsoleta (monotypic) C
A male was seen at the
Gonghe farmland on the 11th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee
as resident northeast Qinghai. According to BWP very slightly longer-winged in
China not warranting subspecific treatment.
Mongolian Trumpeter Finch Bucanetes mongolicus (monotypic) C
We saw 6 at an oasis in the
Chaka Desert on the 20th and 4 there the following day and 4
drinking at a puddle at the Gonghe farmland on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeds east Qinghai west through the
Nan Shan. BWP notes larger in China than western birds and western birds paler
than eastern so perhaps worthy of recognition as a separate ssp. Desert Finch
has black bill and much more deeply notched tail.
Common
Rosefinch Carpodacus erythrinus roseatus C
We saw 10 between Banma Town
and the Banma Forest Station on the 26th, 1 south of Yushu on the 2nd,
up to 3 daily on all four dates at Nangjen Forest Station and 1 south of Yushu
on the 9th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeds east
and south Qinghai. Illustrated in Finches & Robson with male extensively
darker red extending onto flanks and belly, deeper in tone that UK’s nominate.
Females are also much darker and more heavily streaked.
Beautiful
Rosefinch Carpodacus pulcherrimus
argyrophrys C
We saw pairs at the scrubby
hillsides west of Heimahe on the 20th and between Heimahe and Gonghe
on the 23rd. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident at
Koko Nor, east Qinghai. Finches notes most racial variation is in depth or
intensity or colour in the plumage (of limited use in the field).
Pink-rumped (Stresemann’s) Rosefinch Carpodacus eos
(monotypic) C
At
Banma Forest Station we saw 20 on the 26th, 5 on the 27th,
8 on the 28th and 4 on the 29th and at Nangjen Forest
Station we saw 4 on the 3rd, 10 on the 4th, 5 on the 5th
and 15 on the 6th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident
to the region near Yushu in south Qinghai. Very similar to Beautiful but
slightly smaller and shorter-tailed, found at higher altitudes, generally
darker with deep crimson underparts and pale pink supercilium, lacks brown
flanks. Female identical to Beautiful.
Sinai (Pale) Rosefinch Carpodacus synoicus beicki / stoliczkae
C
We saw a male and 4 females
on the eroded hillsides at Xining on the 17th and 2 males and 4
females there on the 12th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as
resident in the Sining Ho region in east Qinghai for beicki and the Koko Nor
region in Qinghai for stoliczkae. Finches illustrates beicki with unstreaked slightly darker plain pale grey-brown upperparts from
hindcrown and nape, pink restricted to breast not including belly and having a
paler pink rump than Sinai’s nominate where less extensive than in other races
and does not reach sandy-brown uppertail-coverts. Male stoliczkae is sandy on upperparts with pink on underparts paler and less
extensive.
Three-banded Rosefinch Carpodacus trifasciatus (monotypic) C
At Banma we saw 1 on the 28th
and 4 the following day and at Nangjen we saw 2 on the 4th and 9 on
the 6th. Superb. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee doesn’t
include Qinghai but does neighbouring sw Kansu. A large, well-marked species.
White edges to tertials.
White-browed
Rosefinch Carpodacus thura dubius / deserticolor / femininus C
We saw 3 at the Dongxia
Forest on the 18th, at Banma we saw 4 on the 26th, 8 on
the 27th, 6 on the 28th and 4 on the 29th and
at Nangjen Forest Station we saw 5 on the 4th, 4 on the 5th
and 8 on the 6th. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as the
Tatung Shan in east Qinghai for dubius, resident east of dubius in
the Nan Shan south of Koko Nor for deserticolor and in extreme sw
Qinghai for femininus. Finches states male dubius are
generally light brown on upperparts, streaked fairly heavily with dark brown,
ear-coverts are crimson (not dark brown as nominate) and meet supercilium, and
dark eye-stripe is reduced or absent. Female dubius has chin, throat and
breast base colour is white or buffish-white and streaked heavily with dark or
blackish-brown. Male femininus is very similar to dubius but
deeply purple-pink with heavier streaks on underparts. Female femininus
(illustrated
in Finches) like dubius but has paler supercilium. Finches doesn’t
describe deserticolor. Male has white-tipped supercilium. Large size.
Pale tips to median and greater coverts. Female has rump bright yellow.
Eastern Great (Streaked) Rosefinch Carpodacus rubicilloides
rubicilloides C
JFC saw 3 between Heimahe
and Gonghe on the 22nd, we saw 8 at a wadi between Gonghe and Er La
Pass on the 23rd and 3 south of Yushu on the 2nd.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident from the Nan Shan south to
the Yushu region. Darker than severtzowi Caucasian Great Rosefinch.
(Caucasian) Great Rosefinch Carpodacus rubicilla severtzowi C
We saw 3 males at a wadi
between Gonghe and Er La Pass on the 23rd and a male singing from a
cliff between Banma and Maduo on the 30th. Distribution recorded by
De Schauensee as resident in the Koko Nor region and around Yushu. Illustrated
by Finches being much paler than nominate. It was a useful comparison to see
both species of Great Rosefinch in the same Wadi.
Red-breasted
(-fronted) Rosefinch Carpodacus puniceus longirostris C
We saw 10 south of Yushu on
the 2nd, 6 in the same area on the 3rd and 5 there on the
9th including some singing males. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as resident Koko Nor in east Qinghai. Finches states longirostris
(illustrated
in Finches) is the largest and palest or brightest or most intensely red or crimson
of the races with less broadly streaked underparts, and has on average a
slightly longer bill, some males show a very wide band of red on forehead and
over eyes, but this is not a constant feature. Females sometimes have yellow or
olive-yellow on rump.
Roborovski's (Tibetan) Rosefinch Kozlowia roborowskii (monotypic) C
We saw 10 at Er La Pass on
the 23rd and 4 there the following day. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee as resident central Qinghai around the headwaters of the Yangtze.
Large, very long-wings, yellow bill.
Taxonomic position unclear.
Crimson-browed Finch (Red-headed Rosefinch) Pinicola subhimachalus (monotypic) C
We saw 2 pairs along the
‘third valley’ at Nangjen Forest Station on the 5th. Distribution
recorded by De Schauensee doesn’t include Qinghai.
Long-tailed Rosefinch Uragus sibiricus lepidus C
We saw a male and two
female-types between Banma Town and Banma on the 26th and a male
above Banma Forest Station on the 27th. Distribution recorded by De
Schauensee doesn’t include Qinghai but lepidus approaches closely in
Kansu. Illustrated by Finches, being darker with shorter tail than nominate,
dark grey hindcrown to mantle and scapulars, wingbars less extensive and white
in outer tail reduced to outer two feathers, female warm brown with dark
streaks to head and upperparts. From Przevalski's
Rosefinch by short stubby bill, square-ended tail and see that species for
other diffs.
Przevalski's Rosefinch Urocynchramus pylzowi (monotypic) C
We saw 6 including a couple
of displaying males on the scrubby hillsides just west of Heimahe on the 20th.
Superb. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident from the Sining Ho
and Koko Nor regions to the Nan Shan. Included within Buntings by Clements 2000
but not by Finches. From Long-tailed by
graduated tail (in flight), lacks double white wingbar, lacks pink forehead,
supercilium, lower mandible pale pink.
Grey-headed (Beavan’s) Bullfinch Pyrrhula erythaca erythaca C
We saw 3 between Banma Town
and Banma Forest Station on the 26th, 8 at Banma Forest Station on
the 27th and 14 at Nangjen Forest Station towards the Tibet border
on the 6th. Distribution recorded by Finches as east Qinghai.
White-winged
Grosbeak Mycerobas carnipes carnipes
C
We saw 1 between Yushu and
Nangjen Forest Station on the 3rd, 1 at Nangjen Forest Station at
the Tibet border on the 6th and 4 at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 8th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as northeast Qinghai. Juv. like fem. But
browner with pale edges forming crescents on head and mantle.
Black-faced
Bunting Emberiza spodocephala sordida C
We saw 3 singing males at
the Gonghe farmland on the 23rd and 1 there on our return on the 12th.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as breeds south Qinghai for sordida. Illustrated
by Buntings, being markedly different from UK’s nominate, having base colour of
head greenish, and underparts often more yellow and the streaking on the flanks
blacker. Slightly larger than UK’s nominate. Rump unstreaked grey-brown
separate females from Pine.
Kozlov's (Tibetan) Bunting Emberiza koslowi (monotypic) C
We saw a pair just south of Yushu on the 2nd
and a male at the Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th. Distribution recorded
by De Schauensee as resident in sw Qinghai in the dry, tributary valleys of the
upper Yangtze and Mekong and in the Yushu area. This species is listed as Near
Threatened by BirdLife International (2000) Threatened birds of the world that
states ‘it appears to be genuinely rather scarce and localised’ but that ‘it
does not appear to be immediately threatened by habitat loss.’
Godlewski's Rock Bunting Emberiza
godlewskii godlewskii
/ khamensis C
We
saw 5 on the eroded hillsides at Xining on the 17th, 1 on the drive
to the Sichuan border on the 25th, 5 between Banma Town and Banma
Forest Station on the 26th, 2 at Banma on the 28th and 4
on the 29th, 1 north of Yushu on the 1st, 1 south of
Yushu on the 2nd, up to 5 daily on all four days at Nangjen Forest
Station, up to 3 seen at Kanda Shan Pass on the 7th and 8th,
4 seen south of Yushu on the 9th, 3 seen between Yushu and Huaxisha
on the 10th and 2 seen at the eroded hillsides at Xining on the 12th.
Often considered conspecific with Rock Bunting as by De Schauensee.
Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as the Koko Nor region in Qinghai and
west to the region near the headwaters of the Yangtze and the Mekong for godlewskii and
resident from south Qinghai to Szechwan for khamensis.
Buntings describes khamensis
as somewhat darker than the nominate form and more
heavily streaked on the mantle.
Meadow Bunting Emberiza cioides ciodes C
We saw 5 at the eroded
hillsides at Xining on the 17th and 5 there on our return visit on
the 12th. Superb. Distribution recorded by De Schauensee as resident
southeast Qinghai. Illustrated by Buntings. Juv’s virtually inseparable from
Godlewski’s though the rump is on average less prominently streaked in
Godlewski’s than in Meadow.
References used:
De
Schauensee, R. M. (1984) The Birds of China. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Cramp,
S. and Simmons, K.E.L., eds. (1977) The birds of the Western
Palearctic, 1. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Cramp,
S. and Simmons, K.E.L., eds. (1980) The birds of the Western
Palearctic, 2. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Cramp,
S. and Simmons, K.E.L., eds. (1983) The birds of the Western
Palearctic, 3. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Cramp,
S., ed. (1985) The birds of the Western Palearctic, 4. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Cramp,
S., ed. (1988) The birds of the Western Palearctic, 5. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Cramp,
S., ed. (1992) The birds of the Western Palearctic, 6. Oxford:
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Cramp,
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Cramp,
S. and Perrins, C.M., eds. (1994) The birds of the Western Palearctic, 8. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Cramp,
S. and Perrins, C.M., eds. (1994) The birds of the Western Palearctic, 9. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Robson,
C. (2000) A Field Guide to the Birds of South-east Asia. London: New Holland Publishers (UK) Ltd.
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Hoyo, J., Elliott, A. and Sargatal, J., eds. (1992-2004) Handbook of the
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Duckworth, J.W., (1996) An Annotated
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