About Me

My photo
Live for today but work for everyone's tomorrow! Any views expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of any organisation/institution I am affiliated with.

Sunday 6 October 2024

Peru - gone birding!

 Here's the challenge: take just one day in Peru (after the IWC meeting there) and capture good images of as much of the local wildlife as possible. The day is overcast and quite cool.

So here we go! First a pause in a ittle flush of green in the desert to the south of Lima.

The first habitat explored - farmland along a river with the towering dunes of the dessert beyond. 

A  lovely little streaked saltator 


And again!

And here is an ani. There are bird species in the tropics that we have no equivalent of in Europe ans this little character is one. A member of the cuckoo family this highly gregaripus species builds a communal nest and then they care for the eggs and nestlings as a group!

The grove-billed ani.

And again.

Vermillion flycatcher (male and I am guessing immature)

Vermillion flycatcher (female) 

A beautiful male vermillion flycatcher

Then we move on to a lagoonal area set a little bit back from the sea and near the town of Chilca



I am not absolutely confident on the iD of this bird but I think it is a Puna Ibis. 


A little detail of this coastal wetland.

A black-necked stilt - the white patch over the eye helps to confirm the iD.

And again.

An egret!

Pelicans flying by close offshore.

Black-necked stilt and sandpiper







A black crowned night heron.... lurking!

More pelicans go by.

Ibis on a stick.


Then we leave the wetland and head to the seaside town and fishing port of Pucusana.... and out to sea in a small boat!

First a view from the shore.

A beautiful Inca tern - a near threatened species


Inca terns and neotropic cormorants


The longer the moustache of the Inca tern, the healthier the bird.

Juvenile Inca tern.

A very friendly young Peruvian pelican


Landing the day's catch in the port.

South American sealion - a big male hauled out at someone's gate.


Close up of female South American sealion

Red-legged cormorant out at sea

Humboldt penguins seen off shore - a 'vulnerable' species.


The guano-streaked cliffs bear witness to the local concentrations of seabirds



Humboldt penguins - adult and young - at the base of the cliffs

Local fisherman close inshore - they may have been fishing for octopus.

Peruvian penguin roost




Neotropic cormorants

And finally.... the last stop of the day .... a visit to another coastal wetland and adjacent shore, just south of Lima at Laguna Marvilla.

A little encouragement to leave the birds alone.

Wimbrels.... but not the European one!

An Andean gull

A juvenile Belcher's gull

Snowy egret has a bad hair day among the gulls and  moorhens.




Black vulture

A passing flock of vultures.

An 'I really don't know what this bird is' bird.

A multicoloured rush tyrant (incredible name for a bird that is only around 4cm long)

A line of oystercatchers at the sea's edge

Snowy egret has a paddle whilst a whimbrel watches

And here, finally, is a little snippet of film of that Peruvian Pelican roost - as seen from the boat.


With thanks to Vincent, Peter and Alejandro. 

No comments:

Post a Comment