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Saturday, 5 May 2018

25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN, CAPE TOWN - BLUE CRANE (Anthropoides paradiseus)



25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN, CAPE TOWN - BLACK CROWNED NIGHT HERON (Nycticorax nycticorax)





25-3-2018 CENTRAL GARDENS, CAPE TOWN - HADADA IBIS (Bostrychia hagedash)




24-4-2018 JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - SOUTHERN FISCAL SHRIKE (lanius collaris)





24-4-2018 JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - RED HEADED FINCH (FEMALE) (Erythrocephala ssp dissita)



24-4-2018 JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - LAUGHING DOVE (Streptopelia senegalensis)

24-4-2018 JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - HOUSE SPARROW (FEMALE) (Passer domesticus)

24-4-2018 JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - GREY GO AWAY BIRD (Corythaixoides concolor)





24-4-2018 JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - CAPE SPARROW (MALE) (Passer melanurus)

24-3-2018 WATERFRONT, CAPE TOWN - CAPE CORMORANT (Phalacrocorax capensis)

21-4-2018 OKAVANGO DELTA, BOTSWANA - VERVET MONKEY (Chlorocebus pygerythrus)




23-4-2018 OKAVANGO DELTA, BOTSWANA - TROPICAL BRUSHFÒOT BUTTERFLY (Byblia anvatura ssp acheloia


23-4-2018 OKAVANGO DELTA, BOTSWANA - COMMON WARTHOG (Phacochoerus Africus)



21-4-2018 OKAVANGO DELTA, BOTSWANA - ARROW MARKED BABBLER (Turdoides jardineii ssp. tamalakanei)


23-4-2018 OKAVANGO DELTA, BOTSWANA - AFRICAN STRIPED SKINK (Trachylepis striata)


The African striped skink (Trachylepis striata), commonly called the striped skink, is a species of lizard in the skink family (Scincidae). The species is widespread in East Africa and Southern Africa. It is not a close relation to the Australian striped skink, Ctenotus taeniolatus.

T. striata is brown or bronze-coloured with two yellowish stripes that run lengthwise on either side of the spine. Both sexes grow to a total length (including tail) of 25 cm (9.8 in).[2] Their tails are often missing due to predators.


23-3-2018 MUIZENBERG, CAPE TOWN - SOUTHERN FISCAL SHRIKE (Lanius collaris)



4-5-2018 MONTE CORONA, VALENCIA - ZOROPSIS SPIDER (Zoropsis spinimana)


4-5-2018 ULAL DE BOLDOVI, VALENCIA - GULL BILLED TERN (Gelochelidon nilotica)


Juvenile Sandwich terns have a short bill, and are frequently mistaken for gull-billed tern where the latter species is uncommon, such as North Sea coasts.

It breeds in warmer parts of the world in southern Europe, temperate and eastern Asia, both coasts of North America, eastern South America. This bird has a number of geographical races, differing mainly in size and minor plumage details.

All forms show a post-breeding dispersal, but the northern breeders are most migratory, wintering south to Africa, the Caribbean and northern South America, southern Asia and New Zealand.

The gull-billed tern is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies.


The gull-billed tern breeds in colonies on lakes, marshes and coasts (including bays and earthen levees). It nests in a ground scrape and lays two to five eggs. While widely distributed in freshwater areas in Eurasia, it is associated almost solely with saltwater, coastal areas in North America.

This is a somewhat atypical tern, in appearance like a Sterna tern, but with feeding habits more like the Chlidonias marsh terns, black tern and white-winged tern. It does not normally plunge dive for fish like the other white terns, and has a broader diet than most other terns. It largely feeds on insects taken in flight, and also often hunts over wet fields and even in brushy areas, to take amphibians and small mammals. It is also an opportunistic feeder, and has been observed to pick up and feed on dead dragonflies from the road.


Gull-billed Terns are graceful fliers that swoop above saltmarshes and beaches. They're pale silvery gray and white, with a shallowly forked tail, heavy bill, and (in summer) a neat black cap. The heavy bill is a key to its diet, which is broader than a typical tern's and does not center on fish. They forage in the air for insects, seize crabs and lizards from the ground, pluck fish from the water surface (without diving into the water), steal food from other birds, and even prey on chicks of other species.


Unlike most terns, Gull-billed Terns have a broad diet and do not depend on fish. Instead they commonly feed on insects, small crabs, and other prey snatched from the ground, air, or even bushes. They are also known to eat small chicks of other tern species.
Although mostly restricted to saltwater habitats in North America, Gull-billed Terns are found in a variety of freshwater habitats across Eurasia.
The oldest recorded Gull-billed Tern lived to be at least 20 years old and was found, and banded, in California.


The Gull-Billed Tern prefers inland waters although it is also present in coastal areas. To nest, it uses sandy islets of lagoons and reservoirs, marshes and salt flats. With regards to feeding this bird benefits from crops, olive groves, pastures, flooded areas and inland dry environments.

Summer species present in Malaga during the breeding period. It breeds in colonies at the end of April and makes an annual laying of 2 eggs. Nest on the ground. This tern feeds on insects, both terrestrial and flying, which hunts in flight at ground level. It also captures amphibians, fish, crustaceans and even micromammals or small birds.


23-3-2018 BOULDERS BAY, CAPE TOWN - HAIRY GOLDEN ORB WEAVING SPIDER (nephila fenestrata)



23-3-2018 BOULDERS BAY, SOUTH AFRICA - CAPE WAGTAIL (Motacilla capensis ssp capensis)