Drought prevails in Namibia
March 14, 2013BIG STORIES about little things – Namib sunrise
March 20, 2013The summer of 2013 in Namibia has so far been mostly hot and dry and this was expected to affect the bird counts in several ways, Holger Kolberg from the Ministry of Environment and Tourism reported last week.
Kolberg wrote that the summer wetland count brought up two serious concerns.
Blue Cranes seem to have disappeared from the Etosha area with only one pair with chicks counted. Kolberg stated that as to the whereabouts of the Blue Cranes, which are usually present in Etosha at this time of the year, no one seems to know where they have gone.
Another concern raised by the latest wetland count, is the glaring absence of birds of prey. They were conspicuously absent at several of the inland wetlands where raptors are usually counted, especially the African Fish Eagle.
Kolberg said that in this case the lack of birds of prey in the count could be linked the the severe pressures and declining numbers world-wide. They are slow breeders and sensitive to disturbance and I think this is what is happening here. There are more and more people with the result that there is less space for the birds and they probably also breed less.
Two places share the highest number of species recorded (43 species): Shamvura on the Okavango and the Walvis Bay Ramsar site.
The usual crop of rarities was reported: A Red-chested Flufftail from the Kayova area on the Okavango, Terek Sandpiper at Grosse Bucht, Lüderitz, American Golden Plover at Walvis Bay and Eurasian Oystercatcher at Walvis Bay and Sandwich Harbour. The Red-necked Phalaropes and partially leucistic Common Redshank at Walvis Bay and the Mile 4 Saltworks respectively count as stock birds these days.