Sunday, April 19, 2020

Bulletin 351 - South Africa 2020 #5 - waterfowl, seal

I was enthralled with my first visit to Africa in November 2018 and so I scheduled another trip with the same guide Casper Badenhorst. As we had done the eastern part of the country from Durban to Kruger NP, we went to the Capetown area and the famous fynbos habitat.

There are a number of African endemic ducks and geese. I saw several on the first trip, and found a few more here.

Of course as we have seen, some of them will be named cape something. The 20" Cape Shoveler (Anas smithii) is a mottled gray brown duck with large blue wing patches and the typical large shoveler bill. The male here has a yellow eye. This was a lifer.

Cape Shoveler - male
The 18" Cape Teal (Anas capensis) is a gray mottled duck with a red bill.

Cape Teal
The next 3 species were all life birds for me. The 25" female South African Shelduck (Tadorna cana) is a brown duck with a gray neck and white face - an easy ID. I never saw a male. He would have a totally gray head and neck. The name shelduck is strange, so I investigated and these are a group of a half dozen large ducks that are intermediate between ducks and goose.

South African Shelduck - female
The 20" male Southern Pochard (Netta erythrophthalma) is a very dark duck with a blue bill.

Southern Pochard - male
Lastly is the 20" male Maccoa Duck (Oxyura maccoa). He is similar to the Ruddy Duck in America. The male has the stiff tail, ruddy body and blue bill, but has an all black head.

Maccoa Duck - male
The 2 geese we saw were not lifers. The 30" Egyptian Goose (Alopochen aegyptica) can be found beside any puddle in Africa. What was uncommon about this bird was he was swimming in the ocean! Even the guide was surprised although the guide book says they may be found in 'sheltered bays'.

Egyptian Goose - in ocean
The 40" Spur-winged Goose (Plectropterus gambensis) is a huge black goose with a red bill and is an easy ID. These are my best photos of this species.

Spur-winged Goose
And standing on land one can see his red legs as well.

Spur-winged Goose
The Greater Flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) also gave me my best photos in that same wetland. Here is nice close up of face to show yellow eye and bicolored bill.

Greater Flamingo
There was also a large flock of African Sacred Ibis (Threskiornis aethiopics). This is a white bodied ibis with a bare black neck, head and bill is an easy ID. This is also my best photo of the species.

African Sacred Ibis
The only marine mammal I saw on the trip was the Cape Fur Seal (Arctocephalus pusillus). It is a huge seal with males weighing up to 650 pounds. The adults are brown and, like the California Sea lions, they love to sleep on docks in the harbor, so one can walk right up to them.


Cape Fur Seal
The pups are black.


Cape Fur Seal - pup
I put the different bird/mammal families in single folders for easy viewing

I have photos of 72 of the 165 s
pecies of  ducks and geese

I have photos of 3 of the 6 species of flamingos

I have photos of 11 of the 35 species of  ibis and spoonbills

I have photos of 3 of the 16 species of fur seals

Happy birding and photography,

David McDonald

dkmmdpa@gmail.com

photos copyright 2006 - 2020 David McDonald

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