Dominican bird highlights

Erica and I had the great pleasure of joining an awesome bunch of people down in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic during the second week of January for the wedding of my good friend Brad.  We’ve been back for a while now but I am still way behind on emails and of course blog posts (I still have a half-written “summary of 2012” post to finish…).  Anyways, here’s a few of the pictorial highlights..

We stayed at the Bavaro Princess All Suites hotel, which seemed pretty nice to us…Erica and I had been to one all inclusive before (in Cuba in 2006) and this one was much nicer.  The area around Punta Cana definitely had a more tropical feel than the area we were in in Cuba.  The hotel had pretty good grounds for birding which was good because we didn’t really get off the resort too much for birds since we had lots of important stuff to do with the wedding 😉

Palmchat – the National bird of Dominican Republic

This was pretty much the first photo I took. I was literally standing in the drop-off area of the hotel waiting to get taken to our room.  This is a Palmchat, an endemic family to Hispaniola and the national bird of the DR. It is also pretty much the most common bird everywhere we went…

We were kept very entertained by a territorial Bananaquit that sang right off our room
A couple Black-crowned Night-Herons hunted the ponds at….night!

In addition to the Night-Herons there was another flying creature hunting fish at the resort each night- Greater Bulldog Bats! I wasn’t able to get a photo, but google them because they are pretty awesome! They were huge (about crow-sized) bats that hunt fish!! There’s a wicked video I found here (I think it might be narrated by Oprah??She must be really hurting for work).

The only amphibian we saw was this Marine Toad, an introduced Central and South American species (thanks Jeremy!).

 

Hispaniolan Woodpecker was another very common endemic

 

I was pleasantly surprised to have a small flock of White-cheeked Pintail each day at one of the hotel’s ponds

 

We saw a bunch of odes…this one may be a Perithemis species, very similar to our Eastern Amberwing

 

Lots of butterflies most days. This is a Gulf Fritillary (or something similar) and was pretty common

 

Broad-billed Tody

Given our location and prospective birding potential, Broad-billed Tody was my most-wanted endemic so I was quite happy to find this individual.

 

The hotel grounds had a few migrant warblers including Prairie Warbler

 

And Yellow-throated Warbler.

Other North American migrants that we saw (but I didn’t photograph) on the grounds were Common Yellowthroat, Northern Waterthrush (common in mangroves), Black-and-white Warbler, and Black-throated Blue Warbler.

Vervain Hummingbird was 1 of 2 hummingbird species on the grounds

 

My number two species, Hispaniolan Lizard-Cuckoo

 

Check out that tail!

 

Northern Parula was also pretty common

 

Full view of the Hispaniolan Lizard-Cuckoo

 

Antillean Slider was common in the ponds and mangroves.

If you are looking for a good resource for Caribbean herps, check out Caribherp – there is a ton of information there.  Aside from the Marine Toad the the Antillean Sliders we saw lots of small lizards that I haven’t tried to ID yet plus a very cool observation of a tree snake species catching a lizard one afternoon on the Paseo Ecological.  We also found a dead hatchling sea turtle one day on the beach.

Hispaniolan Woodpecker close-up

 

Hispaniolan Woodpecker again

 

Tricolored Heron was common in the mangroves, along with Green Heron and Least Bittern (single)

 

Another look at Palmchat

 

Cape May Warbler was the most common warbler on the grounds

 

Red-legged Thrush carrying food

 

Gray Kingbirds were everywhere but nice to see!
Livin it up!

 

The trail into the “nature area” at the hotel
Brad and Erin, the happy couple!

It was a pretty awesome trip! On top of all the birds and other great sightings going with a big group was a lot of fun!  I also should mention an interesting story that happened during our trip to Del Este National Park on a guided tour.  After the tour our guide wanted me to talk to another guide about my camera.  It turned out he was a Dominican spider expert named Tony Tosto whose blog I had stumbled upon before the trip! He was pretty excited to hear that I had found his blog and I was excited to meet him.  So check out his blog, it has some awesome spider shots!

Of course, we ebirded the whole trip and I ended up with 60 species (about what I expected), of which 18 were lifers (higher than I expected).  I took full advantage of the ability to embed photos and videos – check out my favourite illustrated checklist here.

 source http://mikeburrell.blogspot.com/2013/01/dominican-bird-highlights.html

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