Saturday 25 January 1986

Blue Rock Thrush on Paga Hill, Port Moresby. First record for the Australian Region east o f the Moluccas

At 18:00 on 7 January 1986 while watching a party of c.30 Red-rumped Swallows Hirundo daurica feeding over the eucalypt savanna on the eastern slopes of Paga Hill in port Moresby, RKH noticed a bird fly across an open space and perch on a building under construction below use. He thought it might be a Blue Rock Thrush Monticola solitarius and pointed it out to BWF who confirmed the identification.
The bird was observed without binoculars for about five minutes in fading light and the following notes were made. It was considerably larger than a  Pied Chat Saxicola caprata available for direct comparison and held itself in a typical thrush-like stance. Upon landing it flicked its tail slowly downwards, a movement often repeated while perched. Plumage details were difficult to determine in the fading light, but it was thought to be uniform blue-grey with darker primaries, a dark bill na dark legs. It eventually flew into the half completed building and was lost from sight.
We returned to the area at 06:00 the following morning, armed with binoculars. BWF spotted the bird almost immediately and we watched it for nearly an hour in good light. The dull image of the previous evening had changed overnight into a resplendent adult male of the chestnut bellied race M.s.philippensis. It was seen daily up to 19 January 1986 and appeared to range widely, although it was often found around the houses in the early morning and late afternoon. It was subsequently seen by 13 other observers.
The following description is taken from notes made at the time. The bird was shaped like a thrush, with a moderately long tail, often held pointing downwards and flicked agitatedly. Head to chest and entire upperparts were blue-grey, primaries and central retrices were darker. The wing coverts had small dark centres and whitish crescent shaped tips. The feathers across the back, bordering the wings and across the upper breast similarly had whitish crescent shaped tips. The underparts from chest to vent were a uniform, deep chestnut-orange, sharply contrasting with the blue-grey of the chest. The feathering at the base of the legs was blue. The bill was slender and quite long for a thrush and uniform blackish. The legs were also uniformly dark. The iris was large, prominent and dark.
 
There are ten species of rock thrush Monticola, five of which are confined to Africa (Howard & Moore 1984) and are not considered further here. The remaining five species are distributed across Eurasia. One reaches no further east than north India. Four species can be found in south-east Asia (King et al 1984) and all are at least partially migratory. The chestnut-bellied race of Blue Rock Thrush M.s.philippensis winters further south and east than any other species, reaching the Philippines and Indonesia. The Blue Rock Thrush is the only one of these four to have a blue breast and, in non-breeding plumage, to have scaly markings across the mantle and on the breast (King et al 1984, Viney & Phillips 1983). Both these features were noted on the bird at Paga Hill. This is the first record of this species in Papua New Guinea and in the Australia region (east of the Moluccas).
Howard, R. & A.Moore. 1984. A complete checklist of the birds of the world. Papermac.
King, B., M.Woodcock, E.C.Dickinson. 1984. A field guide to the  birds of south-east Asia. Collins.
Viney, C. & K.Phillips. 1983. New Colour Guide to Hong Kong Birds. J.R.Lee.
First published in Muruk 2(2): 64-65 co-authored with B.W.Finch

Friday 17 January 1986

A Week in West New Britain 9 – 16 January 1986

For our week in West New Britain we were based at the Hoskins Hotel, close to Hoskins airfield at the eastern end of the sealed road which round Kimbe Bay to just beyond Kimbe in the west. Along much of this road the land has been given over to plantation crops, mostly oil palm. Birds were relatively few among the palms although we did see Eastern Black-capped Lory, White-necked Coucal and Slaty-backed Goshawk. Around the villages Olive-backed and Black Sunbirds were common, Black Myzomela, New Britain Black Mannikin, Metallic Starling, New Britain Friarbird and Moustached Tree-Swift were also seen. A flock of seven Little Curlew which were feeding among the houses at Dami Reasearch Station, should have been sseing out the northern winter in Australia. A roosting flight of Blyth’s Hornbills heading west over Dami was seenmost evenings, with 79 being the most recorded. Inland and beyond the end of the sealed road the rain forest eventually gave way to rain forest and it was here we spent most of our bird-watching time. On our first day we went east along the coast road towards Lavege where we found a guide to take us to the hot springs. On the half hour walk we saw Red-knobbed Imperial Pigeon, Eclectus Parrot and Spangled Drongo. Near the hot springs we saw the nest holes dug by megapodes, using the ground warmed by geothermal activity to incubate their eggs, but sadly there was no sign of the birds. On subsequent days we went inland, first along the road to Bargua where we saw Pacific Baza, White-rumped Swiftlet and the New Britain subspecies of Dwarf Kingfisher which has a red bill. Next we explored the highway that will eventually link west to east New Britain. The best bird-watching was along the shores of Lake Lalili, made accessible by logging tracks. Here we saw Common Kingfisher, Comb-crested Jacana, Pied Cuckoo-Dove, Blue-eyed Cockatoo and Black Bittern. The highlight of the week was our first experience of snorkelling on a coral reef. We were taken to Ema Reef, 10 miles out in Kimbe Bay. The underwater scenery and colours were out of this world and fish-watching could be as pleasurable as bird-watching. En route to and from the reef we saw Common, Swift (Crested) and Little Terns, Lesser Frigatebird and Brown Boobies.

Our thanks to Max Benjamin of Walindi for the snorkelling and special thanks to Bob Prior for his time and hospitality.

Species List:
Lesser Frigatebird, Little Pied Cormorant, Brown Booby, Black Bittern, Pacific Baza, Slaty-backed Goshawk, Brahminy Kite, Spotted Whistling Duck, Pale-vented Bush-hen, Comb-crested Jacana, Pacific Golden Plover, Little Curlew, Common Sandpiper, Swinhoe’s Snipe, Common Tern, Swift (Crested) Tern, Brown Noddy, Brown Cuckoo-Dove, Pied Cuckoo-Dove, Red-knobbed Fruit-Dove, Pied Imperial Pigeon, Eastern Black-capped Lory, Coconut Lorikeet, Red-flanked Lorikeet, Blue-eyed Cockatoo, Eclectus Parrot, White-necked Coucal, Moustached Tree-Swift, Uniform Swiftlet, White-rumped Swiftlet, Dwarf Kingfisher, Common Kingfisher, Blyth’s Hornbill, Pacific Swallow, White-bellied Cuckoo-Shrike, Varied Triller, Northern Fantail, Willie Wagtail, Shining Flycatcher, Olive-backed Sunbird, Black Sunbird, Papuan Black Myzomela, New Britain Friarbird, Metallic Starling, Spangled Drongo, New Britain Black Mannikin, Yellow-faced Myna, Torresian Crow.

First Published in PNGBS Newsletter 219: 4 – 6, co-authored with Jenny H. Bott