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Jilin sightings (2 Viewers)

asterisktom

Active member
Malaysia
Various Jilin City sightings (updated)
It was suggested that I should start a new thread for this fairly under-reported region of China. It made sense to me. So I just took my previous post and placed it here in this new thread, corrected and updated.

I thought it might be worthwhile to list a few noteworthy birds that I have seen in the last few weeks here, in various parts in the Jilin City area, and also Changchun. All sightings below are from Jilin or outskirts except for the last ones (AWM and ... a big bat! Both seen in Changchun)

Naumann's Thrush, Turdus naumanni January 26
White-tailed Sea Eagle, Haliaeetus albicilla 白尾海雕. January 27
White-backed Woodpecker, Dendrocopos leucotos 白背啄木鸟 March 27
Daurian Redstart, Phoenicurus auroreus 北红尾鸲 March 29
Orange-flanked Bush Robin, Tarsiger cyanurus 红胁蓝尾鸲 April 1
Eurasian Teal, Anas crecca 绿翅鸭 April 11
Little Ringed Plover, Charadrius dubius 金眶鸻 April 17
Grey Wagtail, Motacilla cinerea melanope 灰鹡鸰 April 17
White wagtail, Motacilla alba 白鹡鸰 April 17
Grey-backed Thrush, Turdus hortulorum. 灰背鸫 April 24
Blue-and-White Flycatcher, Cyanoptila cyanomelana. 白腹蓝姬鹟 April 29
Azure-winged Magpie, Cyanopica cyanus. 灰喜鹊 May 3. Nanhu Park, Changchun.

Also in this park we saw a large, furry bat. This was like 11 in the morning.
Pictures of these last sightings (the flycatcher and bat) will be uploaded later. The magpie pictures were not that good. Also I plan to upload a few more pictures of that mystery warbler, but in a separate post.

I need to go back over my thrush pictures and see if I don't indeed have some Eye-browed Thrushes in there as well.
 

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More on our mystery warbler

Here are the photos of that warbler. I noticed on some of them a whitish crown on top. Surely that narrows it down to - what? - a leaf warbler?
 

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Hi *Tom, nice to see you starting your own thread - it will be quite interesting, being a rather underwatched area I'm sure!

I think I've heard that the AW Magpies have been enlarging their territory. Do you have them in Jilin, or have you just seen them in Changchun? I heard from a Beijing birder (Xiao Ming) that they were intentionally imported into Beijing from the south - some time ago but don't remember the timing. It seems to me that I've seen more here in QHD the last year or two than the previous years, but that is a bit unscientific, and not a large sample size.

By the way, you may want to post your mysterious warbler on the ID forum (here) - that tends to draw people who may not be located in Asia, but who have a strong background and interest in identifying Asian birds. You may get a quicker response there depending on who's around. (Some experts are also on migration right now :-O)
 
Hi *Tom, nice to see you starting your own thread - it will be quite interesting, being a rather underwatched area I'm sure!

I think I've heard that the AW Magpies have been enlarging their territory. Do you have them in Jilin, or have you just seen them in Changchun? I heard from a Beijing birder (Xiao Ming) that they were intentionally imported into Beijing from the south - some time ago but don't remember the timing. It seems to me that I've seen more here in QHD the last year or two than the previous years, but that is a bit unscientific, and not a large sample size.

By the way, you may want to post your mysterious warbler on the ID forum (here) - that tends to draw people who may not be located in Asia, but who have a strong background and interest in identifying Asian birds. You may get a quicker response there depending on who's around. (Some experts are also on migration right now :-O)

Thanks for the info on the warbler, Gretchen. I will take a look at that site in a bit.

No, I've not seen any Azure-wings here in Jilin City. I only saw them that one time in Changchun. (My first time in Changchun, not counting train trips through, so they may be common there.)

I know this is a bird forum, but I still want to share that bat photo. Or should I just show it in a different forum here?
 
No problem to put up a few non-bird photos! If you want people with a special interest in bats to see the photo or help you with i.d., you can also put it up in the "bats" subforum (under "Nature in General", near the bottom of the forum list) - since mostly just those interested in Asia make it so this corner of the forum.

Interesting on the magpies - they are a good looking magpie species, but seem more aggressive than their bigger cousins from my casual observations.
 
Show whatever you like Tom - I do!

You did not exactly start at the easy end of the scale with this warbler, but from the last pic The pale fringes to the tertials suggest it may be a Yellow-browed Warbler in very poor light.

Looking forward to hearing more .

Cheers
Mike
 
Are these Yellow-browed Warblers?

I am so behind in my posting and uploading in my Flickr site. It doesn't help that only one out of ten pictures actually shows up after I upload them. (I am hoping that that heavy-handedness on the part of the gov't will change soon to how it was just a couple weeks ago.)

Anyway, here are some pictures I took this morning. To my thinking they seem to be the Yellow-browed.
1. Wingbars seem to fit.
2. Slight yellow on the brows.
3. Hume's seems more out of range here in Jilin.

Thoughts?
 

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Short bird (and etc.) report from Jilin, May 1st through the 13th

All these were seen in Jilin City, unless they were seen in Changchun on May 4th. I managed to squeeze in some bird-watching in this busy time, hoping to get some migrants passing through. My wife and I even managed a day trip to Changchun, where we saw the bat (last post). Other sightings are:

Eurasian Kestrel, Beishan Park, May 1,
Brambling, May 2, (another old friend from my Germany days, years ago).
Yellow-browed Warbler, seen almost every day.
Mystery bird (Bunting?), Nanhu Park, Changchun, May 4,
Azure-winged Magpies, several. One seen "anting", perhaps. Nanhu Park,
Mystery Swallows or Martins (not Barn Swallows), Songhua River, May 9,
Yellow-browed Bunting, Beishan Park, May 10,
Shrike 1 and 2, The first from our window in the morning, the second in a park later. Maybe the same species? May 11,
Yellow-rumped Flycatcher, Beishan Park, May 13.

Also, as you can see from the uploads, I was able to see two beautiful butterflies. After a long, drab winter, it is wonderful to see this place come to life!

Any help on IDing either the buntings or the swallows would be great. And the shrikes, too.

Tom in Jilin
 

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Here are additional photos from these two weeks' observations here in Jilin:
 

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Last thre pictures

I hope it is OK to send these last three pictures. The first is of the common but interesting wagtail. The other two are of butterflies.

Tom in Jilin
 

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The other two are of butterflies.

I believe the RH shot to be a Dragon Swallowtail Sericinus montela, a complex of many sub-species. Here is an interesting link: http://www.tolweb.org/Sericinus_montela/65396

The middle pic is, I think, Pieris erutae. Various members of the Aporia family (Black-veined Whites) are similar, but these have more sharply-defined veining.

I used an excellent little book, the cover of which is pictured below.
 

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Tom in Jilin,

The swallows/martins above look like Eurasian Tree Sparrows in flight but not completely sure.

The Bunting is a Yellow-browed.

The shrikes are all Brown Shrikes

The wagtail is White Wagtail ssp leucopsis

Tom in Dalian.
 
Tom in Jilin,

The swallows/martins above look like Eurasian Tree Sparrows in flight but not completely sure.

The Bunting is a Yellow-browed.

The shrikes are all Brown Shrikes

The wagtail is White Wagtail ssp leucopsis

Tom in Dalian.

LOL! I like the way two Tom's quote each other 3:)
 
I believe the RH shot to be a Dragon Swallowtail Sericinus montela, a complex of many sub-species. Here is an interesting link: http://www.tolweb.org/Sericinus_montela/65396

The middle pic is, I think, Pieris erutae. Various members of the Aporia family (Black-veined Whites) are similar, but these have more sharply-defined veining.

I used an excellent little book, the cover of which is pictured below.

Hmm. These butterflies sound even more complicated than the warblers when it comes to ID. Thanks for the info.

Yesterday I went to Beishan Park here in Jilin and saw, along with some interesting birds, a small longwing-type of black-and-white butterfly, lighting on a cigarette butt (no pun intended!). I will show the pics (a few birds also) after I com home from today's park venture.
 
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