Alex Berryman

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Alex Berryman

Alex Berryman

@AlexJB497

Conservation biologist, Ornithologist (specialising in Asia) • Science Team, BirdLife International • Managing Editor, BirdingASIA • 🏳️‍🌈 he/him.

Cambridge, England Katılım Kasım 2011
836 Takip Edilen3.7K Takipçiler
Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
@kokayart Without doubt the most depressing paper I've worked on (so far!). Do you sell prints of that top-left illustration?
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Szabolcs Kókay
Szabolcs Kókay@kokayart·
Yesterday came the news about the decision to declare Slender-billed Curlew extinct. It's my ultimate favourite bird, so it is quite tough to face this realization. You can read more about it here: vogelbescherming.nl/.../dbb230d1-5…... Here are some of my illusrtations and paintings.
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Hans van Gasteren
Hans van Gasteren@hvangasteren·
Hi UK, here they come! Huge start of bird migration from the Waddensea westwards. Currently an bird migration traffic rate of 9000 birds per km per hour. Enjoy 😉
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
@Alexander_Lees But they move southwards and winter much farther E. Personally I find it remarkable they've made it to the WP at all!
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Alex Lees
Alex Lees@Alexander_Lees·
Skulking in a coastal shrubbery near you? They are highly migratory, breed further west than Pallas's Warbler but are unrecorded in the Western Palearctic since 1955 macaulaylibrary.org/asset/68717211
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
Short answer: I suspect very few.
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
Saturday morning, UK-relevant reflection on this note @BirdtourAsia and I wrote at the end of last year: Notwithstanding its flimsy taxonomic status as a species, how many of eBird's 904 (only 25 appended with recordings) Scottish Crossbill records are legit?
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Alex Berryman@AlexJB497

A fun note in BirdingASIA, written with @BirdtourAsia. I had intended to write a fuller thread, but internet on the LNER service to Edinburgh is desperately poor, and I can't be bothered. But a brief summary of what we did and why it (very) vaguely matters.

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Stuart Butchart
Stuart Butchart@stubutchart·
New paper shows impact of war in Ukraine on migrating Greater Spotted Eagles: birds made large deviations from traditional migratory routes & shorter stopovers in Ukraine, leading to longer journeys and later arrival at nesting grounds rarebirdalert.co.uk/v2/Content/End…
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
Fun day moping around the Cairngorms with dramatic scenery, pleasant weather and some fat snowball-like birds for company.
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
I've skipped a lot in the above, especially regarding ID, so encourage all those interested to download and read the full 'note', which ended up spiralling into 5,000 words of (fun) tediousness. researchgate.net/publication/37…
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
As a final point of consideration: we publish an appendix of other species pairs/groups in South-East Asia which are extremely difficult/impossible to ID in the field, some of which have a surprising (=, IMO, erroneous) number of records currently accepted in eBird etc.
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
But there is no reason Plume-toed can't reach and fly around these higher elevations, so records should only be accepted (in our view) if birds are photographed at nest. In all, of the 766 records in eBird today, I'd say only a handful are admissible
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
But birds that have sporadically nested around Timpohon Gate (and higher) look to be Bornean, and indeed look really quite different to definite Plume-toed lower down the slope.
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
A fun note in BirdingASIA, written with @BirdtourAsia. I had intended to write a fuller thread, but internet on the LNER service to Edinburgh is desperately poor, and I can't be bothered. But a brief summary of what we did and why it (very) vaguely matters.
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
So what does this mean for registered records? Some bad news! All the Crocker birds look to us to be Plume-toed, as do all lower-elevation birds on Kinabalu. Lots of records to be scrapped.
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
Oft-mentioned differences in gloss shade are, in the field, probably useless. We also find possible bioacoustic differences, but the sample size is so small that we are cautious in them being overinterpreted until more data are collected.
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
Yes! Well, almost certainly yes. In addition to being considerably smaller (difficult to determine in the field), Bornean Swiftlet is duller, best shown by a comparative lack of contrast between the face and crown, and is also subtly different in breast pattern (details in paper)
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
Almost all these records are from various elevations of Mt Kinabalu, and increasingly the Crocker Range. We reviewed the five specimens of Bornean Swiftlet (all from Kinabalu) and compared to those of Plume-toed. So can Bornean be identified?
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
Literature often claims Bornean Swiftlet to be inseparable from Bornean pops of Plume-toed Swiftlet (with which it overlaps), but despite this there is an intriguing number of accepted records of Bornean Swiftlet on eBird/ML
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Alex Berryman
Alex Berryman@AlexJB497·
Citizen science is awesome! And, with the review systems in place on platforms like @Team_eBird, is pretty accurate. But with some taxonomic groups, it is inevitable there are problems. We highlight this using one of the trickiest: Bornean Swiftlet Collocalia dodgei.
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