Since I started ringing Just over 10 years ago I have been
ringing at the Umzumbe River Floodplain, in fact my first session as a
qualified ringer was at this location and has been a firm favorite ever since.
The floodplain is a large area surrounded by hills on all sides except for the
southern side which is bordered by the Umzumbe River, I have on occasion used 2
shelve Taiwanese nets on the river to catch waders, the hills on the other
sides are planted with sugar cane except for one section which consists of
indigenous coastal forest/bush. Most people will tell you that sugar cane is
not a good habitat for birds, however my ringing success here has proven
otherwise. Wherever possible I try to use the drainage streams as fly through
zones for the birds, and this has proven successful, but nets erected between
cane fields is also very productive.
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The Floodplain showing my ringing sites |
In total to date I have ringed 4474 birds of 117 species,
this is not including birds ringed by visiting ringers, this figure would
easily add another 300 to 400 birds to the list. My ringing site for the
massive Barn Swallow Roost is actually on the floodplain although it is about
900m from the roosting spot at the reedbed, so this does account for a large number
of the total birds ringed, with 2108 Barn Swallows being ringed here to date,
it has however accounted for 2 recaptures, one a bird ringed in England and
another was a bird I ringed on the Floodplain and recaptured just short of 2
years later.
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Male Yellow Weaver |
The next most common bird is the Yellow Weaver with 274
birds being ringed here, and a host of recaptures including the 2 longevity
records for the species. As can be expected the most common birds are
definitely Weavers with Spectacled being the third most ringed at 190 birds,
both adults and immatures are caught this can prove interesting when people
battle to identify the immature birds, with Village, Thickbilled, and Cape also
being caught, along with Fantailed Widowbird (145). Something that would not be
expected here would be the Darkbacked (Forest) Weaver but a few have been
caught here in the middle of the sugarcane.
Cape White-eyes also feature strongly coming in ranked as
the fifth most ringed with 125 birds being caught. Another very common bird is
the Sombre Greenbul with 89 birds being ringed ranging from very young birds
just having left the nest to adults. Four species of Robins have been caught,
surprisingly the most common is the Cape Robinchat with 65 birds being caught
followed by the Redcapped (Natal) Robinchat with 54 birds, the other 2 species
are Brown Scrubrobin and Whitebrowed Scrubrobin in that order.
This habitat is possibly the best place on the KZN South
Coast for Warblers with no less than 11 species being ringed, recently local
birders have been joining in at this location and are now honing their Warbler
ID skills, they are all finding it much easier in the field now than before.
The Warbler list is as follows
African Reed (African Marsh) Warbler 73
Little Rush (African Sedge) Warbler 55
Great Reed Warbler 41
Marsh (European Marsh) Warbler 27
Lesser Swamp (Cape Reed) Warbler 21
Darkcapped (Yellow) Warbler
9
Eurasian Reed Warbler 5
Sedge (European) Warbler 4
Willow Warbler 3
Knysna Warbler 1
Garden Warbler 1
As you can see it is “Warbler Heaven” and anyone interested
in learning more about these little birds are welcome to join the ringing
sessions at this location, November to January are the best times but anytime
from October to March can be productive. In addition to the Warblers other
LBJ”s include Rufouswinged Cisticola (58 birds), Tawnyflanked Prinia (10
birds), Neddicky (6 birds), Rattling Cisticola (3 birds), Croaking Cisticola (3
birds), Redfaced Cisticola (2 birds), Le Veillants Cisticola (2 birds),
Plainbacked Pipit (2 birds), Grassveld Pipit (1 bird) and Buffy Pipit (1 bird).
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Little Bittern |
Unfortunately some of the other species have only produced 1
or 2 birds but these are wonderful to see and they are known to be in the area
at all times it is just that we don’t always get them in the net, these include
Little Bittern, Redbacked Shrike, Redfaced Mousebird, Blackthroasted
Wattle-eye, Southern Tchagra, Fiscal Flycatcher, Little Swift, Eurasian
Nightjar, Fierynecked Nightjar, Water Thick-knee, Harlequin Quail (KZN Rarity),
Greenshank, Common Sandpiper, Wood Sandpiper, Threebanded Plover, Blacksmith
Plover, Spotted Thrush (in winter at the forest edge), Grey Waxbill,
Orangebreasted Waxbill, Little bee-eater, Malachite Kingfisher, Pygmy
Kingfisher and Redheaded Quelea to name a few.
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Orangebreasted Waxbill |
In addition to this the area can produce some great birding
with Crowned Cranes being seen early on most mornings, Redchested Flufftails
can be heard, Greater Flamingo can rarely be seen on the river, waterfowl are
often seen flying overhead as are raptors in the form of African Fish Eagle,
Longcrested Eagle, Black Sparrowhawk and African Goshawk.
In closing here’s to the next 10 years of ringing at this
site and an open invitation to anybody to join the ringing sessions at this,
one of the special birding spots on the coast.
A full listing of birds that I have ringed at the site
Little
Bittern 1 Bar-throated
Apalis 1
African
Goshawk
1 Green-backed Camaroptera 28
Natal
Spurfowl 2 Neddicky 6
Harlequin
Quail 1 Rufous-winged Cisticola 58
Ringed
Plover 1 Rattling Cisticola 3
Three-banded
Plover 9 Red-faced
Cisticola 2
Blacksmith
Lapwing 4 Le
Vaillant's Cisticola 2
Little Stint 2 Croaking Cisticola 3
Common
Sandpiper
2 Lazy Cisticola 1
Common
Greenshank 2 Tawny-flanked
Prinia 10
Wood
Sandpiper 6 African Dusky Flycatcher 3
Red-eyed
Dove 1 Black Flycatcher 1
Water
Thick-knee 1 Fiscal Flycatcher 1
Tambourine
Dove 30 Dark-capped
Yellow Warbler 9
Diederik
Cuckoo 2 Black-throated Wattle-eye 1
Burchell's
Coucal
9 African Paradise-Flycatcher 3
European
Nightjar 1 Cape Wagtail 9
Little Swift
1 African Pipit 1
Speckled
Mousebird 27 Plain-backed
Pipit 2
Red-faced
Mousebird 8 Buffy
Pipit 1
Pied
Kingfisher 1 Olive Thrush 7
Malachite
Kingfisher 33 Yellow-throated
Longclaw 5
African
Pygmy-Kingfisher 12 Common
Fiscal 3
Brown-hooded
Kingfisher 2 Red-backed
Shrike 3
Little
Bee-eater 23 Southern Boubou 7
Black-collared
Barbet 3 Southern
Tchagra 1
Yellow-rumped Tinkerbird 23 Olive
Bush-Shrike 11
Lesser
Honeyguide 5 Orange-breasted Bush-Shrike 4
Cardinal
Woodpecker 1 Black-bellied
Starling 4
Rufous-naped
Lark
1 White-bellied Sunbird
19
White-throated
Swallow 6 Grey
Sunbird 57
Barn
(European) Swallow 2108 Olive
Sunbird 65
Lesser
Striped-Swallow 40 Collared
Sunbird 11
Brown-throated Martin
5 Amethyst Sunbird
13
Black
Saw-wing 9 Cape White-eye 125
Black
Cuckooshrike 10 Dark-backed Weaver
4
Fork-tailed
Drongo
1 Spectacled Weaver 190
Square-tailed
Drongo 1 Lesser
Masked Weaver 3
Black-headed
Oriole 1 Village
Weaver 104
Dark-capped
Bulbul 74 Cape
Weaver 21
Terrestrial
Brownbul 10 Yellow
Weaver 274
Sombre
Greenbul 89 Southern Masked-Weaver 1
Spotted
Ground-Thrush 3 Thick-billed
Weaver 15
African
Stonechat 28 Red-billed Quelea 7
Natal
Robin-Chat 54 Red-headed Quelea
8
Cape
Robin-Chat 65 Southern Red Bishop 23
Brown
Scrub-Robin
7 Red-collared Widowbird 26
White-browed
Scrub-Robin 6 Fan-tailed
Widowbird 145
Garden
Warbler 1 Magpie (Pied) Mannikin
1
Willow
Warbler 3 Bronze Mannikin 26
Great
Reed-Warbler 41 Red-backed
Mannikin 6
Lesser Swamp
Warbler 21 African
(Blue-billed) Firefinch 34
African
Reed-Warbler 73 Red-billed
Firefinch 1
European
Marsh Warbler 27 Orange-breasted
Waxbill 6
Eurasian
Reed-Warbler 5 Grey
Waxbill 10
Eurasian
Sedge Warbler 4 Common
Waxbill 48
Little Rush
Warbler 55 Pin-tailed
Whydah 4
Knysna
Warbler 1 Yellow-fronted Canary 63
Brimstone
(Bully) Canary 10