As I approached Fauske I stopped at the bay at Røvika and
had flocks of Red-breasted Merganser and Goldeneye just as a week ago but a
female Pintail was new and over the wooded hillside behind me a pair of
Rough-legged Buzzards were hunting and angrily chasing off Ravens so most
likely had a nest nearby. I was a bit disappointed there were no flocks of
scoter or Red-necked Grebes and continued to my next stop hoping that the King
Eider would still be present. I checked out the 20 or so Eiders but none had
blue blood and then looked at the small group of Velvet Scoter that were
present (seemingly the same birds that I had also looked at a week ago). I saw
a couple of 2cy and adult male Velvet Scoters and then came to a sleeping adult
male with its bill hidden but a very large white eye patch reminding me of an
old aunts horned spectacles. I immediately got very excited and as I cranked up
the magnification on the scope it briefly took its head out and there was a bloody
great black knob on its bill (I could see straight through the nostril) plus
the bill was reddish instead of yellow. This wasn’t a Velvet Scoter this was
either a Stejneger’s or a White-winged Scoter (knoppsjøorre)!!! There is only
one accepted record (of a 2cy female) plus another well documented record of a
female in Finnmark this summer but surprisingly this bird was the first adult
male. But which (sub)species was it? I did my best to get photos and video but
the quality was nothing special due to distance and appalling light. I had no
literature with me but on my phone was able to see a copy of the plate from
Martin Garners “Birding Frontiers” and with the head and bill shape there could
be little doubt this was of the East Asian form Stejnegeri. The photos don’t really show the bill colour very well
but I saw through the scope that pink over yellow pattern that Garner
describes. The head and bill shape though comes through well enough in the
pictures.
I could hardly believe my good fortune. Both last week and
today I had planned to go through the scoters to find something good but there
were no large flocks (can be over 1000 birds here later in the summer) so what
are the chances that I should find such a rarity amongst the 5 closest of no
more than 20 Velvet Scoters that I saw in the bay. But I do think I deserved a
bit of luck ;-)
look at that knob with a hole in it! Stejneger's Scoter (knoppsjøorre) with Velvet Scoter (sjøorre) |
this picture shows the bill colour best with the paler lower edge to upper mandible visible |
Gratulerer med fantastisk flott observasjon, Simon!
ReplyDeleteTar turen opp til Klungset i morgen - håper jeg har litt flaks jeg også :-)