Showing posts with label Northern Ecuador. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Northern Ecuador. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Playa de Oro: February 13-16, 2010

The Choco lowlands are fast disappearing in Ecuador as logging and mining interests have overwhelmed private conservation efforts. Even public reserves such as the Cotocachi-Cayapas National Park are severely threatened by illegal logging, hunting, and colonizing due to poor management and a lack of resources. Only three major sites in the northwestern province of Esmeraldas remain, and these are generally remote and difficult to access for independent birders: Rio Canande Reserve managed by the Jocotoco Foundation; Bilsa Biological Reserve, run by Fundacion Jatun Sacha; and Playa de Oro Reserve, operated by the small Afro-Ecuadorian community of Playa de Oro. All three reserves offer huge tracts of humid lowland and foothill forest with many of the region's best endemic species on display, including the Banded Ground-Cuckoo, Long-Wattled Umbrellabird, Rufous-Crowned Antpitta, and Blue-Whiskered Tanager; however, the 10,400 hectare Playa de Oro Reserve is unique for being the only one that is community owned and operated.

Indeed, birding Playa de Oro is a truly unique experience, as it offers perhaps the most difficult but rewarding birding in the entire country. The challenges are many: arranging a visit takes considerable preparation as there are no means of communicating directly with the lodge; accessing the reserve requires first multiple trips by bus or an arduous and expensive journey by car, and then an expensive ride upriver in a motorized canoe; walking the trails can be extremely wet, muddy, and confusing as insects hound you incessantly while birds move rapidly more than forty meters overhead; and the lodge itself, although comfortable, is basic with few of the conveniences found at high-end lodges in the eastern lowlands. There are no canopy towers, knowledgeable guides, or dry cabinets, and almost 90% of the birding, as Scott Olmstead notes in his informative trip report from 2008, is first done by ear (DuĊĦan Brinkhuizen echoes the sentiment in his own excellent 2009 trip report). This is experts-only, Indiana Jones-style birding, one might say, where the rewards are barely enough to cover the expenses of the trip.

What are the rewards then, I reconsider, as I sit here writing this while still covered in hundreds of chigger bites? Canopy flocks contain Scarlet-and-White, Blue-Whiskered, Rufous-Winged, Emerald, and Golden-Chested Tanagers, as well as Rufous Mourner, Scarlet-Breasted Dacnis, Slate-Throated Gnatcatcher, Lita and Choco Woodpeckers, and Orange-Fronted and Five-Colored Barbets. Antswarms attract Bicolored, Spotted, Immaculate, and Ocellated Antbirds as well as Spot-Crowned Antvireo, Song Wren, and Tawny-Faced Gnatwren. Understory flocks boast Broad-Billed Sapayoa, Lemon-Spectacled Tanager, Green Manakin, Pacific Flatbill, Checker-Throated Antwren, and Black-Striped and Northern Barred-Woodcreepers. And the forest floor is home to Berlepsch's Tinamou, Banded Ground-Cuckoo, Tawny-Faced Quail, Black-Headed Antthrush, Rufous-Crowned and Streak-Chested Antpittas. While you might go for hours on an individual day without seeing or hearing any of these or other outstanding birds, their promise should sustain you through the various hardships involved in a visit (see Choco lowlands expert Olaf Jahn's extensive bird list for the reserve, courtesy of Andean Birding).

I recently dragged Aimee out to this remote destination for four days with several promises of my own, to tour a new area of Ecuador, to enjoy some good coastal food, and to see a few Choco restricted-ranged species, perhaps even the Long-Wattled Umbrellabird, with which she's mildly obsessed. We first drove down the Ibarra-San Lorenzo Road early on Saturday morning, passing through Lita and Alto Tambo along the way, which are remote birding sites in their own right, and then hooked back up the Rio Santiago on a dirt road to the village of Selva Alegre. For better security we left our car at a village further upriver, and then traveled by boat to El Tigrillo Lodge along with one other tourist with whom we divided the $50 charge. After installing ourselves in our rustic room, which gratefully contained a mosquito net, we sat down to a delicious lunch as the humidity started to rise. We were soaked in sweat before we started birding our first trail, La Paila Trail, which leads upriver starting behind the lodge. We picked up Song Wren, Immaculate Antbird, and Northern Barred-Woodcreeper before it started to pour, and the rest of the rainy afternoon was spent birding from the covered balcony of the lodge. The woodland area right around the lodge ended up being quite productive as canopy and understory flocks frequently passed through. On different occasions I recorded Red-Legged Honeycreeper, Lemon-Spectacled Tanager, Red-Rumped Woodpecker, White-Bearded Manakin, Purple-Chested Hummingbird, and Choco Poorwill from the same spot on the balcony.

The following morning we traveled fifteen minutes by motorized canoe upriver to the Cascada Trail. The boatman gave us instructions about the trail and we agreed to meet back at the river six hours later, as Aimee and I set off alone into towering humid forest. As the trail climbs steeply, we got good looks at a pair of Spotted Antbirds, several Lemon-Spectacled Tanagers, lekking Red-Capped Manakins, and a singing Dagua Thrush. The trail then continues along relatively flat ground passing by several magnificent trees. A few canopy flocks were heard overhead, but I could only pick out Rufous-Winged and Scarlet-and-White Tanagers, as I craned my neck upwards for ten minutes in hopes of finally seeing a Golden-Chested Tanager. After scaring, and getting scared by, some noisy Rufous-Headed Chachalacas, we spotted a large group of Stripe-Billed Aracaris in a bare tree in the distance. I encouraged Aimee to search the group perhaps for the umbrellabird, but it went unobserved. Returning from the picturesque waterfall, we made our way back along the same trail, locking on to a pair of Broad-Billed Sapayoas that were trilling softly to each other while moving with an understory flock. This subtle but unique bird is perhaps the top target species at the reserve as it's very rare at other sites in the northwestern lowlands. As we neared the river I pointed out a Spotted Antbird right out in the open, just as Aimee exclaimed that I was standing in the middle of an antswarm. We gaped around in amazement as waves of ants climbed over our rubber boots and started biting us, leaving us with little inclination to look or listen for other antbirds that might be attending the swarm.

Having stumbled into one of the great natural spectacles of the neotropics, I decided to remain at the swarm for a while and then walk back to the lodge on foot via the recently constructed ridge trail that connects the Cascada Trail with the Penon del Santo Trail. Bitten but smitten with our excursion, Aimee returned to the lodge for lunch and a nap. The swarm had moved a few meters off the trail, but many more birds were in attendance, including a large group of Bicolored Antbirds, a Song Wren, and several Tawny-Faced Gnatwrens. I waited for an hour on the off chance that an Ocellated Antbird, Rufous-Crowned Antpitta, or Banded Ground-Cuckoo might join the swarm but without any luck. Continuing on the new ridge trail as it started to rain, I encountered another understory flock with Lemon-Spectacled Tanager and Broad-Billed Sapayoa. Shortly afterwards, I found another antswarm just off the trail with a family group of Ocellated Antbirds in attendance. Easily the star antbird of the northwestern lowlands, the gorgeously patterned Ocellated Antbird typically dominates antswarms, presiding at the front and having the first chance to snatch up arthropods fleeing the leaf litter from marauding ants. I was disappointed Aimee wasn't with me to observe these charismatic birds, but managed to take a few blurry photographs for her enjoyment. An hour before completing the journey back to the lodge, I flushed a Tawny-Faced Quail from the undergrowth and quickly chased after it to get amazing looks at this striking bird. Flushing several more on the following day, I noticed that the bird doesn't usually fly far and is fairly easy to follow as it perches on a low branch.

Julio the boatman took me back across the river to the lodge, and I rested for a while on the balcony with Aimee. Despite the light rain, at dusk we heard a pair of Choco Poorwill's calling right nearby, so I got out the spotlight to track them down. I managed to locate one as it flew overhead into a tree in response to playback and then returned to the balcony of the lodge to spotlight it at eye level. That night it rained so hard I dreamed I was submerged in water, swimming through the forest as I looked for birds; in fact, later on in the week a state of emergency would be declared in the province due to the torrential rains. On the following morning, Aimee and I made the reverse journey that I had completed the previous afternoon, birding the Penon del Santo Trail, the new ridge trail, and the lower part of the cascade trail. There's an outstanding mirador along the ridge trail that offers incredible views of the canopy below and the forest on the other side of the river, and I was hoping we'd arrive there in time to observe a few mixed canopy flocks. Approaching the mirador we didn't see much, though, encountering little more than a pair of Cinnamon Woodpeckers and a mixed understory flock with Broad-Billed Sapayoa and Black-Striped Woodcreeper. I managed to track down a Double-Toothed Kite that I spotted shifting perches overhead, and we also located a diminutive Golden-Crowned Spadebill after much difficulty, but the morning was disappointingly quiet overall. Even stumbling upon a pair of Blue-Whiskered Tanagers singing in the understory was more frustrating than rewarding as I failed to get Aimee on to the birds before they moved on. By the time we arrived at the mirador, the sun was blazing high above and we were exhausted by the journey. My hopes of watching a Golden-Chested Tanager from above were squelched as we moved on to complete the morning's excursion.

Meeting up on the Cascada Trail with the other tourist who was staying at the lodge and her guide, I decided to push on ahead in search of birds as Aimee lingered behind to chat with them as we all made our way slowly down to the river. Far above in the canopy I located a pair of Guayaquil Woodpeckers bickering with each other, pointing them out to the group as they moved past. After getting Aimee on to the birds, I noticed she was missing her walking stick, which she had left a few minutes back up the steep trail at the tree swing the guides had made from some lianas. Offering to get it for her, I hustled uphill and found the stick upright in the mud just where she had left it. Turning to go, I heard an unusual plaintive bird call from the undergrowth just behind the tree that sounded familiar only because I had listened to it dozens of times on tape. Quickly and quietly I made my way towards the source as I spun the wheel of my iPod to the Streak-Chested Antpitta. This boldly patterned antpitta is only found in Ecuador in the far northwestern lowlands and is much more frequently seen than heard according to the field guide, so I held my breath and nervously searched for the calling bird before it fled deep into a nearby ravine. Positioning myself behind a tree, I peered around it while playing a recording of the call, briefly catching the bird through my binoculars as it flitted its wings with its back turned towards me. Another brief playback of the call had the bird turned towards me and fully out in the open for five seconds as it fluffed its breast feathers and returned fire. Five minutes later, I was blabbering to Aimee about this remarkable encounter, which seemed the very pinnacle of luck and skill as this was the only instance that I would hear the antpitta during our four-day visit and wouldn't even have happened had not Aimee forgotten her stick and I had done my homework.

In the afternoon I headed back out on the trails behind the lodge as it threatened to rain. In an understory flock I finally found a pair of Pacific Flatbills as well as a single Green Manakin tagging quietly along. Along with the Sapayoa, these three birds are easily confused by sight and should be closely studied in advance by visiting birders. Passing by the resident Tawny-Faced and Lemon-Spectacled Tanager flock at the beginning of the Pueblo Trail, I shortly came across a treefall, surprising a female Stub-Tailed Antbird at her territory. A short burst of playback brought the male on the scene as he slowly circled the territory calling loudly at each stop. This Choco endemic isn't as fun to observe as the Ocellated Antbird, for example, but it prefers edge habitat and open treefalls and is usually seen out in the open, making it easy to observe at least. Heading further up the trail, I finally decided to turn around after flushing a Ruddy Quail-Dove, sadly not the Olive-Backed Quail-Dove I had been hoping for. It soon started to pour again, and I returned to the lodge for the rest of the afternoon and evening.

Although we had carved out a few hours on the following morning for birding before we made the return journey back to Quito, the rain had continued all throughout the night to the following mid-morning, making the prospect of birding the trails unpleasant and unproductive. Having seen ten new species on the trip and a good number of Choco restricted-range species, I decided to chill on the balcony instead and enjoy the mixed flocks that were braving the wet weather through my scope. Indeed, the Rio Santiago had risen dramatically over the last few days, and we would later have to wait in our car at a small river crossing for several hours as the water level diminished enough for us to drive safely across. Throughout our stay at Playa de Oro, I kept remarking to Aimee that I was so glad I had waited to visit the reserve until I had several years of experience birding in Ecuador and enough knowledge to successfully track down difficult species on my own. With a guide, or with much lower expectations, a novice birder in the neotropics could definitely have an amazing time here, but for me the trip was truly a consummation of all my previous effort and observation.

Notable birds seen: Little Tinamou, Neotropic Cormorant, Little Blue Heron, Turkey Vulture, Double-Toothed Kite, Tawny-Faced Quail, Spotted Sandpiper, Ruddy Quail-Dove, Maroon-Tailed Parakeet, Rose-Faced Parrot, Mealy Amazon, Choco Poorwill, Bronzy Hermit, Band-Tailed Barbthroat, White-Whiskered Hermit, White-Necked Jacobin, Green Thorntail, Purple-Chested Hummingbird, Ringed Kingfisher, Green Kingfisher, Broad-Billed Motmot, Rufous Motmot, White-Whiskered Puffbird, Stripe-Billed Aracari, Chestnut-Mandibled Toucan, Red-Rumped Woodpecker, Guayaquil Woodpecker, Cinnamon Woodpecker, Western Woodhaunter, Buff-Throated Foliage-Gleaner, Northern Barred-Woodcreeper, Black-Striped Woodcreeper, Spot-Crowned Antvireo, Pacific Antwren, Checker-Throated Antwren, Spotted Antbird, Immaculate Antbird, Stub-Tailed Antbird, Bicolored Antbird, Ocellated Antbird, Black-Headed Antthrush, Streak-Chested Antpitta, Olive-Striped Flycatcher, Pacific Flatbill, Golden-Crowned Spadebill, Sulphur-Rumped Flycatcher, Gray-Capped Flycatcher, Rufous Piha, Red-Capped Manakin, Blue-Crowned Manakin, Green Manakin, Broad-Billed Sapayoa, Dagua Thrush, Stripe-Throated Wren, Song Wren, Southern Nightengale-Wren, Tawny-Faced Gnatwren, Slate-Throated Gnatcatcher, Choco Warbler, Red-Legged Honeycreeper, Yellow-Tufted Dacnis, Scarlet-and-White Tanager, Golden-Hooded Tanager, Blue-Whiskered Tanager, Rufous-Winged Tanager, Lemon-Specatacled Tanager, Ochre-Breasted Tanager, Dusky-Faced Tanager.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Bosque Humedal de Yalare: February 13, 2010

Bosque Humedal de Yalare is a confusing and informal site in the far northwestern lowlands, offering swampy humid forest and woodland to be birded mostly from the roadside. Very few birders make it out to this degraded and dangerous corner of Ecuador despite the avifaunistic attractions, including Black-Chested Puffbird, Five-Colored Barbet, Slaty-Tailed Trogon, and Brown Wood-Rail. On our recent trip to Playa de Oro, Aimee and I stopped for an hour to explore the area, although it was already late in the morning and bird activity had dropped off for the day. We noted good roadside forest and woodland starting at about 16km from San Lorenzo to Borbon but decided to try birding a side road that branches off to the left from the village of Yalare. Following Roger Ahlman's map and directions for the site in his well-known country report, we ended up several kilometers down this side road in decent but patchy forest that was owned and managed by a plywood company. I fruitlessly played tape for the trogon and the puffbird and searched a small pond for any sign of the wood-rail without any luck. A solitary Yellow-Margined Flatbill and a male and female pair of Red-Legged Honeycreepers were the highlights of our short visit here, which would pale in comparison with our rich and varied experience in the majestic Playa de Oro Reserve. Ultimately, on another visit to the region I'd like to spend a full morning birding this site from a base at nearby Tundaloma Lodge.

Notable birds seen: Plumbeous Kite, Double-Toothed Kite, Black-Cheeked Woodpecker, Long-Tailed Tyrant, Yellow-Margined Flatbill, Black-Crowned Tityra, Red-Legged Honeycreeper.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

La Bonita Road: January 17, 2010

The road running down the eastern slope of the Andes along the northern border with Colombia starts from the Panamerican Highway in the town of Julio Andrade, which is just south of Tulcan. This paved road first winds through an extensive agriculture zone, gradually descending to the town of El Carmelo, where it ends. Just before the town a packed dirt road branches off to the right, first towards the town of Santa Barbara and then La Bonita; eventually, this road reaches the eastern lowlands and access to the city of Lago Agrio is possible. Most of the temperate and subtropical forest along the road at higher altitudes has been cleared, but there are several deep forested ravines that harbor remarkably diverse mixed flocks, including some outstanding eastern slope specialties, such as the Red-Hooded and White-Capped Tangaers and Gray-Breasted Mountain-Toucan. Supposedly, the road is more forested the farther you descend, with the Colombian side to the north still being in a pristine state.

If you're looking for good eastern slope temperate and subtropical forest, then there are definitely better, and easier, birding sites closer to Quito, including the Papallacta region, Las Caucheras Road, and the Guacamayos. Birders visit the La Bonita Road in extreme northern Ecuador to experience something new and perhaps exotic as there is a decent possibility for rare eastern slope birds or Colombian endemics in this area, including the Chestnut-Crested Cotinga and Bicolored Antpitta. The avifauna at the site is also interesting for the birder based in Ecuador as some of the more common birds, such as the Spectacled Whitestart and Capped Conebill, bear unique variations not seen elsewhere in the country. As I was already in the region to visit Cerro Mongus, I decided to drive further north for a couple of hours to check out this little-birded road, following in the footsteps of the incomparable Roger Ahlman in his outstanding country report from 2003.

Despite its intimidating location along the border, the road feels quite safe as there is a sizable military presence in the towns and almost no car or bus traffic. Like other eastern slope sites, the weather is unpredictable and frequently poor, and this morning it was very wet with extremely low visibility, offering almost no chance for me to scan the forested ravines from above for mixed flocks. As I pulled up at 8:00am to the Bicolored Antpitta site, which is detailed in Roger's country report, I heard the bird calling in a dense stream bed just off the road, it's simple one-note whistle clearly identifiable. While it didn't respond to playback or call again that morning, a fine Slaty-Backed Chat-Tyrant appeared nearby. Due to poor weather I turned back a few hours, or five kilometers, later, having only picked up a few birds in roadside flocks with nothing unusual seen. Returning to the antpitta site, I walked the road for a while, coming around the bend and finding myself at eye level with a glorious Red-Hooded Tanager. A small group of them were moving rather lethargically with a huge mixed flock, which provided a solid hour's worth of birding. At one point the weather even cleared and the sun came out for a few minutes, offering the chance to take a few photographs. After the flock finally passed, a solitary Gray-Breasted Mountain-Toucan crossed the road just overhead, pausing to check me out before moving on.

Having seen my target bird, the Red-Hooded Tanager, near midday, I was anxious to start the long journey back to Quito in order to return to work on Monday. As I rounded a corner towards the last forested ravine, I spotted a massive raptor perched on a distant treetop. Hitting the breaks on my car and quickly lining the bird up in my binoculars, I recognized immediately that it was a Black-and-Chestnut Eagle, its pointed crest obvious even at a distance of over a kilometer. In spectacular fashion, the eagle took flight three times as it approached me from perch to perch passing just above the ravine. Finally, it soared high above a ridge and into the mist, leaving me floored by its incredible size and obvious dominion over the forest. Indeed, this rare temperate forest eagle had eluded me for years, making me speculate whether I hadn't actually seen it before confusing it for some other raptor as it soared high overhead. Trust me, then, when I say there's no mistaking the Black-and-Chestnut Eagle.

Update: This morning I received this warden message from the U.S. embassy in Quito:

The U.S. Embassy in Quito advises American citizens visiting or resident in Ecuador to exercise caution when traveling to the northern border region of Ecuador, to include areas in the provinces of Sucumbios, Orellana and Carchi, northern Esmeraldas, and southern Esmeraldas, south of Atacames. U.S. Government personnel are under strict limitations with respect to travel in these areas due to the spread of organized crime, drug trafficking, small arms trafficking, and incursions by various Colombian narco-terrorist organizations.

Local media reports indicate that on January 18, members of the Ecuadorian Armed Forces engaged in an exchange of gunfire with three individuals on the Opuno River in the Sucumbios Province of Ecuador, on the border with Colombia. The exchange of gunfire reportedly resulted in the deaths of the individuals. Local press also indicated that on the same day, an Ecuadorian Military detachment was fired upon by unknown individuals. It is suspected that the second incident was a reprisal for the earlier engagement.

Notable birds seen: Black-and-Chestnut Eagle, Andean Guan, Tourmaline Sunangel, Masked Trogon, Golden-Headed Quetzal, Grey-Breasted Mountain-Toucan, Pearled Treerunner, Streak-Necked Flycatcher, Black-Capped Tyrannulet, Slaty-Backed Chat-Tyrant, Barred Becard, Rufous-Breasted Chat-Tyrant, White-Crested Elaenia, Black Phoebe, Red-Crested Cotinga, Spectacled Whitestart, Citrine Warbler, Masked Flowerpiercer, White-Sided Flowerpiercer, Blue-and-Black Tanager, Grass-Green Tanager, Red-Hooded Tanager, Hooded Mountain-Tanager, Lacrimose Mountain-Tanager, Slaty Brush-Finch, Rufous-Naped Brush-Finch, Northern Mountain-Cacique.

Cerro Mongus: January 16, 2010

Cerro Mongus is a punishing birding site located in far northern Ecuador: it's cold, wet, muddy, and very remote. Until recently, it was one of two places in the country where the exquisite Crescent-Faced Antpitta could be seen reliably, although the bird was recently discovered in the Papallacta region, which is just an hour's drive from Quito. The remaining attraction at Cerro Mongus, then, is the rare and local Chestnut-Bellied Cotinga, which has only been found at a few scattered sites at treeline along the eastern slope of the Andes. Beyond the allure of seeing a few scarce eastern slope specialties, such as the Masked Mountain-Tanager, there is little reason for birders to make their way out here, unless of course they're making their fourth birding trip to Ecuador or are looking to expand their country list.

More than a little temerity is required to access the site and a 4x4 is absolutely necessary if you want to minimize the amount of time you're hiking uphill and not birding. First, you make the four-hour drive north along the Panamerican Highway from Quito to Ambuqui in the Chota Valley, staying in one of the many water park hotels in town (I stayed at the Oasis Hotel, which was recommended by other birders and offered decent rooms and food). Leaving at 4am the following morning, you drive up to the distant village of Impueran on a cobblestone road, climbing way up to 3000m out of the arid interandean valley. There are various forks in the road and many other villages where you can potentially lose your way, so it's best to get directions in Ambuqui and scout out the drive on the previous afternoon before trying it for the first time in the dark. From Impueran, depending on the conditions of the dirt road, you can drive up to the forest edge, and from there it is another thirty minutes' strenuous climb to treeline. Again, Roger Ahlman covers the logistics to the site well in his country report from 2003, which I used without much trouble.

The paramo in this region of the highlands is dominated by the unique frailejone plant, which is a genus of hardy, and hairy, subshrubs that produce a massive daisy-like perennial flower. These frailejones can grow several meters tall and rise out of the paramo grass in an eery zombie-like way. The dense temperate and elfin forest at the site clings to the steep hillsides, and access to the interior is limited except for a level trail along a canal. In addition to the trail leading up to treeline, I birded along this canal for most of the day, scanning the forest below whenever the fog parted in search of the Chestnut-Bellied Cotinga. Much like the Red-Crested Cotinga, which seems quite common here, the Chestnut-Bellied Cotinga perches stolidly on the thick treetops sometimes sallying out but mostly remaining motionless. Given the low visibility throughout the day and the general rarity of the bird, it wasn't surprising that I missed it, nor have many other visitors seen it recently either. A few local farmers told me about some researchers coming up here to Mondragon, as they call it, with mist nets without capturing any of the cotingas.

As I had seen the Crescent-Faced Antpitta a few months ago at Papallacta, I didn't waste any time looking for it here, which might have been a mistake given that it's a pretty great consolation bird. I did enjoy several mixed flocks in which the impressive but shy Masked Mountain-Tanager was numerous with sometimes groups of three or four birds foraging with Scarlet-Bellied Mountain-Tanagers and Black-Backed Bush-Tanagers. The Black-Chested Mountain-Tanager also appeared in one flock during the early morning, perching out in the rain for several minutes much like the Red-Crested Cotinga. Along the canal trail there are three open clearings that Roger describes as landslides; these are good places for scanning for the cotinga, and they also attract the excellent Rainbow-Bearded Thornbill, which is a powerfully built-hummingbird that seems to prefer open shrubby areas in temperate and elfin forest. The male is quite aptly named!

The other sections of the canal trail pass through dense elfin forest and are good places to try for various antpittas, including the Crescent-Faced, Rufous, and Undulated Antpittas, the latter two which could be heard calling throughout the day. Lower down on the trail, which passes through some patches of temperate forest, there was some decent bird activity as well, including Barred Fruiteater, and the hummingbirds were especially active throughout the day. Most notably the Purple-Backed Thornbill and Black-Thighed Puffleg were seen well at the start of the trail, the latter being one of the northern specialties possible at the site. I've heard that this first forested patch is good for Flamulated Treehunter as well. Interestingly enough, given the inclement weather at the site, one of the best birds of the day was probably the Short-Eared Owl I drove past on the way up to Impueran.

Notable birds seen: Carunculated Caracara, Andean Guan, Short-Eared Owl, Band-Winged Nightjar, Sapphire-Vented Puffleg, Golden-Breasted Puffleg, Tyrian Metaltail, Purple-Backed Thornbill, Black-Thighed Puffleg, Great Sapphirewing, Barred Fruiteater, Red-Crested Cotinga, Rufous-Breasted Chat-Tyrant, White-Throated Tyrannulet, Grass Wren, Masked Flowerpiercer, Glossy Flowerpiercer, Blue-and-Black Tanager, Masked Mountain-Tanager, Black-Chested Mountain-Tanager, Scarlet-Bellied Mountain-Tanager, Black-Backed Bush-Tanager, Plain-Colored Seedeater.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Yaguarcocha: January 17, 2010

Yaguarcocha is a relatively large highlands lake located just north along the Panamerican Highway past the regional capital of Ibarra. Bordered in places by marsh habitat, it's a good site for ducks and grebes as well as shorebirds and rails. Supposedly, it was also once the site of a brutal massacre in which the Inca invaders slaughtered thousands of the indigenous Cara people, hence its name, which means "lake of blood" in Quichua. Now, it's simply a pleasant place for the people of Ibarra to get away from the city and enjoy nature, as well as the delicious platos tipicos which are served by the hundreds in the town on the far side of the lake (the yaguarlocro is particularly good).

I stopped by Yaguarcocha Sunday afternoon to stretch my legs while returning from my recent trip to northern Ecuador, which included a visit to Cerro Mongus and La Bonita Road along the Colombian border. Stopping at a few places along the shore as I drove around the lake, I noted a large number of Andean Coot and Pied-Billed Grebe as well as a few unusual records, including Laughing Gull and Black-Necked Stilt. The latter seems suprising enough that I'm posting a record shot below in which the distinctive orange achote flowers of the interandean valley can be seen in foreground. The lake is also a popular spot for Neotropic Cormorants, which were perched by the dozen in the pine trees that were being buffeted by the wind on the border of the lake, presumably to dry out.

The hills to the north of the lake are blanketed in very arid scrub habitat and might be good for interandean species such as the Scrub Tanager, Giant Hummingbird, and Southern Yellow Grosbeak. An early morning search through the marsh habitat should also yield Ecuadorian Rail and perhaps even Subtropical Doradito. I spotted the Tropical Mockingbird here and at other places in the Chota Valley further to the north, which seems to be spreading south through the highlands according to the information in the field guide. Recently it was even spotted in Quito at the Cumbaya Reservoir.

Notable birds seen: Pied-Billed Grebe, Andean Coot, Black-Necked Stilt, Andean Gull, Laughing Gull, Vermilion Flycatcher, Tropical Mockingbird.