From: Simon Ball <sball@africaonline.co.ke>
Date: 2009-07-29 19:05
Subject: Re: [KENYABIRDSNET] Common Sandpipers

- A fortnight ago -July 12th , I recorded Common Sandpiper on Mara River near Karen Blixen Camp, nth MaraRiver bridge.
 
 
Verreaux's eagle & Grey Headed helmet shrikes seen in Nakuru Nat Park on 25th July
 
Cheers
Simon Ball
----- Original Message -----
From: Graeme Backhurst
To: kenyabirdsnet@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, July 29, 2009 4:19 PM
Subject: [KENYABIRDSNET] Common Sandpipers

 

Further to James Ndungu's, Brian Finch's and Marlene Reid's remarks on Common Sandpipers.

Although I've never seen this species in East Africa in June (i.e., overwintering), I have always thought of it as a very early returning migrant and believed this to be well-known and accepted. Individuals certainly arrive in Kenya in July: I find my first "autumn" record is of one bird on 8 July at Naivasha in 1972 but most of my July records are from 20th onwards.

Britton (Birds of East Africa, 1980) and Zimmerman et al. (Birds of Kenya and northern Tanzania, 1996), for arrival dates say, 

". . . being especially numerous from late July to early September.",

and

"common and widespread from mid-July . . .",  respectively. 

Urban et al. (The Birds of Africa vol 2, 1986) also note, "1st adults penetrate south of the equator by mid-July", so the species' early arrival is well documented. 

Further, Chapin (Birds of the Belgian Congo, vol 2, 1939) writes (of the Belgian Congo, now DRC), "The astonishingly early arrival of birds from the north has often led to the assumption that they have bred near the equator." He goes on to give July (from 21st) and August records down to 7° S. His remarks make it quite clear, though, that he does not think much of the claims that it has bred in tropical Africa, "Of its nesting in tropical Africa I am still skeptical. The van Somerens have published a photograph taken in Uganda of a bird supposedly sitting on its nest, and Colonel Meinertzhagen, too, reported young common sandpipers with their parents on the Kagiado River in Kenya Colony." Well, now we all know about Col Meinertzhagen and his records . . .

Many northbound Common Sandpipers caught for ringing in early May carried a lot of fat.

Best wishes,

Graeme Backhurst