2. Pallid Honeyguide, Ashy Flycatcher and White-chinned Prinia - all
present in woodlands just outside the northeast side of Ruma NP at
Kamato Gate. Brown-backed Woodpecker again in Acacias at the
northwest Ruma NP gate, which is Nyatoto Gate. Fawn-breasted Waxbills in numbers throughout the park.
Nyakweri Forest, Lolgorien, and surrounding area:
Least
Honeyguide, Sharpe's Starling and abundant Little Greenbul and Buff-throated Apalis in this
area. Blue-mantled Crested Flycatcher was initially found in this area in 2015 by Tyler Davis and Duncan Butchart, and was seen in three different forest
patches on this trip. It is very local and uncommon, and closely tied
to small areas within forest where heavy lianas and vines extend down
from the mid-storey to the understorey. A recording was made (
http://www.xeno-canto.org/395871)
but the bird is shy and restless, and very hard to photograph here.
More remains to be found in these forests and an audio recording made in
March suggests Icterine Greenbul may occur. As elsewhere, forest
here is being decimated for charcoal as land is parceled off and
cleared.
Half of Nyakweri Forest, comprising some 10 square miles, has been cleared since 2014.
Kakamega Forest:1. The usual suspects mostly present but a single Green-backed Woodpecker seen well in the KFS compound was unexpected. Birds seemingly getting rarer in this forest: Yellow-bellied Wattle-eye, Brown-eared Woodpecker, Pale-breasted Illadopsis, Dusky Crested-Flycatcher.
2. Rampant cutting of trees throughout the forest, close to
roadsides and in the Zimmerman Grid too. Red-faced Crombec singing in
the Rondo grounds, among some other non forest species that have invaded
recently.
Endebess area:A Purple Starling was the highlight here. Brown and Black-throated
Wattle-eyes present in the same compound was also interesting. Despite
some dedicated searching of still extant and adequately mature Acacia
woodlands, not a whisper of Spotted Creeper in this area or northwards
towards Suam.
Kayarkwat area:1. Interesting birds were rufocinctus Kenya
Sparrow right on the Uganda border 12km northeast of Suam (are there
really Shelley's Sparrow in this and Kongelai area?), two Southern
Ground Hornbills calling at dawn at Kanyarkwat, as well as the Sahelian version
of African Scops Owl with the slow and stuttered call (this type also
occurs in the Kerio Valley). Brown-backed Woodpecker, Little Rock Thrush and several Chestnut-crowned Sparrow Weaver also in this area. We were unable to find any of the rarer specialties of this region (Foxy
Cisticola, White-breasted Cuckooshrike, Ring-necked Francolin,
Green-backed Eremomela etc.) despite searching rocky/grassed and wooded slopes @ 1800m.
2. Kanyarkwat is apparently quite safe now and there is still plenty of good habitat out of town to the north 3-5kms, though this will probably be cleared before long. There is extensive charcoal production in the area, with bags stacked up at the roadside and a steady stream of boda bodas transporting it to markets.
Kapenguria:1. Virtually no indigenous habitat left in this area and not much to see.
2. Pallid Honeyguide singing at the Marich Pass Field Studies Centre and a handful of Bronze-tailed Starling in the Marich Pass.
3.
Excellent lower montane birding at 1950m along the Kabolet River
flowing from the western side of Kapcherop Forest in the Cherenganis.
Nothing unexpected but high richness and abundance of forest birds. Grey-winged Robin, Abyssinian Crimsonwing, Sharpe's Starling, Black-billed Weaver all easily found
Kerio Valley/Tugen Hills:1. Boran Cisticola very vocal at Kolol Viewpoint below Tambach.
2. A quick roadside stop at some extant forest east of Kabarnet turned up unexpected Red-headed
Bluebill and Least Honeyguide, but not the sought after Plain Greenbul,
which also occurs in these forests. Photos and audio of the honeyguide here:
http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist/S41009333
Other notes:
Southern
Citril - this seems to be the citril of the northwest. Grey-faced birds (brittoni) seen at
the following locations: Webuye, Moi's Bridge, Lugari, Endebess, Madende
Creek, Kapenguria, Kabolet River, Iten, Kessup down almost to the floor
of the Kerio. In previous trips I've seen it at Kakamega, Mumias, Chemelil and the top of Londiani. No black-faced birds were seen anywhere in this region,
though they have been reported from the Nandi Hills many years ago.
Audio recording of Southern Citril here:
http://www.xeno-canto.org/396039
Western
Citril - the only type in western Homa Bay County where occurs in the
Gwassi and Gembe Hills, the Ruri Hills and locally around the eastern
periphery of Ruma NP down to
1250m. Reports from Mbita probably also this sp. The range extends eastwards to at least midway between Migori and Lolgorien (
http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist/S35415537), with African Citril in areas 20km north of Migori (in far east Homa Bay County) and on the escarpment in the western Mara.
Spotted
Creeper - reportedly seen two years ago close to Kapenguria but habitat
is severely diminished throughout this area. Best places to look are
probably the partly cleared edges of Kapcherop Forest, where Acacia seem
to have been left alone in places, or along the eastern and northern
edges of Elgon where there is still a fair amount of riverine Acacia
habitat locally. Probably still extant but only just.
Ring-necked
Francolin - how this bird occurred 3km south of Kanyarkwat in the 90's
where it was last reported I don't know. Habitat looks to have been
converted here long ago and it is all farm fields now. No-one I played
the call to in the Kanyarkwat area recognized it and apparently Maurice Sinyereri
has never seen it there despite plenty of observation. Perhaps it normally occurs
even further northwest from this area on the mid-elevation table-lands nearer the
Uganda border, but is surely otherwise lost from Kenya.
Palaearctic Migrants - Bank Swallow and Whinchat locally abundant in the Lake Vic basin but with the exception of Barn Swallow, Eurasian Bee-eater and Willow Warbler, migrants were otherwise thin on the ground. A handful of wheatears and tree pipits near Mt Elgon, only small numbers of Yellow Wagtail and Eurasian Roller throughout, one Red-tailed Shrike, one Eurasian Oriole, singles of Blackcap, Eurasian Reed, Eastern Olivaceous and Garden Warblers. Single Lesser Spotted Eagles in the Gembe Hills and the Cherengani foothills and a handful of hobbies for falcons. No White Storks again....
There
is still some good birding in Kenya but it's very sad to see the continued impoverishment of so many people in rural areas and the widespread clearance of
land, particularly that which is clearly marginal for farming.
Thanks to David, Tyler and Simon for great company in the field.