Also in Chiriqui province, but in the lowlands of the Burica Peninsula, the "Baird's Team" recorded its namesake
Baird's Trogon and
Golden-naped Woodpecker; while Boris Sanjur and company of the
BioCRECOBIAN - UNACHI Team, photographed the third record for Panama of
Eurasian Collared-Dove, close to David City; at Cerro Algodon in the Ngöbe-Buglé Comarca, Pedro Jiménez recorded the only
Yellowish Pipit of the day, the first record in more than 20 years for western Panama, also for the BioCRECOBIAN - UNACHI Team. In central Panama,
Team Heliconia recorded
Coiba Spinetail in, where else, Coiba Island (the only
World record); Josue Ortega and company of
The Naturalist Guide Panama reported
Lanceolated Monklet and
White-crowned Manakin in Santa Fe National Park, Veraguas province; while
Ariel Aguirre et al found the
Yellow-throated Chlorospingus at the forests above El Cope town, represented here by an endemic form considered by BirdLife as a distinct species (
Orange-throated Chlorospingus) and Daniel Gonzáles, of the
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Bird Collection (STRIBC) Team, contributed with the only record of
Rose-throated Becard... the first confirmed nesting record for the Azuero Peninsula as you can see in this
video.
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American White Pelican (file photo from Panama City, Panama) |
At least four different
American White Pelicans were recorded, a pair seen by two teams in Las Macanas marsh in Herrera province (the team leaded by Edgardo Márquez of The Naturalist Guide Panama and the team leaded by Hector Escudero of Grupo Ecoturístico Las Macanas) and another pair by the team leaded by Karla Aparicio of
Fundación Naturaleza y Ciencia 507 in Punta Chame, Panama Oeste province; also at Las Macanas marsh, and also of the Fundación Naturaleza y Ciencia 507, Gumercindo Pimentel photographed two (of five)
Fulvous Whistling-Ducks. The team leaded by Fernando Guardia and Arianne Magallón photographed the resident
Inca Doves in Agua Fría town, close to Penonomé in Coclé province. At the foothills of Panama Oeste province, Faustino Sánchez, of the
Canopy Family Team, recorded the only
Snowcap of the day.
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Herring Gull, First cycle. (file photo from Panama City, Panama) |
From the former Canal Area to the east, we had great participation, including several groups along the shores of the Panama Canal and around Panama City, with the Playeros PTY Team of the
Sociedad Audubon de Panama recording six unique species along the coast (including
Herring Gull), leaded by Rosabel Miró and Esther Carty who also managed to accept volunteers with no experience to promote the event, as well as local authorities, including the vice-major of the city! They even had time to educate on birds and to check identifications with personnel of the city council and the
Biomuseo. Other teams that accepted non-experienced volunteers to promote the event were the
ANCON Team in Panama City, the ADOPTA -
Cruz Roja Team in Altos de Campana National Park, the BioCRECOBIAN - UNACHI in David City, among others. To the east of the city, the
APAVE Team reported a late
Sora, that responded to playback in former La Jagua marsh. Two
ADOPTA Teams recorded unique species not only for Panama, but for the
World!
Ivan Hoyos saw a
Spiny-faced Antshrike in Cerro Azul while the team leaded by Jorge Garzón found the
Tacarcuna Chlorospingus at the higher slopes of Cerro Chucantí. Wilson Félix, of Fundación Naturaleza y Ciencia 507 reported the juvenile
Harpy Eagle in Chagres National Park, one of the study birds of the foundation. For the first time, José Pérez recorded the species of the Pearl Islands for the GBD, managing to get the best photo I had seen of a male
White-fringed Antwren from there!
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White-fringed Antwren, male, by José Pérez. Isla Viveros, Pearl Islands, Panama. May 5th, 2018. Photo courtesy José Pérez |
The Darién province was full of specialties. The lowlands produced stunning species like
Crested Eagle and
Slender-billed Kite near Pijibasal, by the team leaded by Hayro Cunampio; a recent addition to the Panama list, the
Bare-faced Ibis, was relocated by the
Ecotour Darién Team near the discovery area. This species was reported for the first time during one of the scouting trips for this GBD! Several teams birded the Darien highlands:
Mario Ocaña,
Ismael "Nando" Quiroz and
Isaac Pizarro worked from Rancho Frío to Pirre ridge, while two ADOPTA Teams (with
Euclides "Kilo" Campos, Alexis Guevara and
Mauricio Hoyos) birded at the mythical Cana airstrip and the Alturas de Nique range. They reported a myriad of rare and range-restricted species, including
Choco Tinamou,
Pirre and
Tooth-billed Hummingbirds,
Greenish Puffleg,
Wing-banded Antbird,
Sharp-tailed Streamcreeper,
Sharpbill,
Golden-crowned Flycatcher,
Varied Solitaire,
Green-naped Tanager,
Swallow Tanager,
Pirre Chlorospingus and
Yellow-green Grosbeak to name a few.
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"Situation Rooms". Above: At the Ecological Police in Gamboa, May 6th, 2018. Below: At Metropolitan Natural Park, May 7th, 2018. Photos courtesy Guido Berguido |
After the day of the count, the work for the members of the coordinating committee started seriously, and several "situation rooms" were set up where sightings were verified, recorded bird songs were identified and photographs of birds that were not identified in the field were reviewed. As an ebird reviewer, I also spent many hours requesting documentation of dubious records and verifying the provenance and quality of the lists that were sent... and as member of the Sociedad Audubon de Panamá, I joined others members at our own "situation room" gathering data of the count and also listening to recorded calls sent by the general public through a WhatsApp number specifically enabled for that purpose (and to receive information about the status of the habitats visited... more about that later). The efforts paid off! At least four species were added to the national total after identifying them in photos (
Pectoral Sandpiper,
Gray Hawk) or audios (
Canebrake Wren,
Melodious Blackbird) provided by observers in the field that were unable to identify them at site.
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Sociedad Audubon de Panama's "situation room". Panama City, May7th, 2018 (that is my eBird reviewer-face for the I-don't-think-so records). Photo courtesy Rosabel Miró |
The logistic for the Global Big Day was no less impressive... just look at the transportation means that were used to arrive or leave the counting sites and during the Global Big Day. By all means the Panamanian birders reached every corner of the country... invaluable volunteer hours and kilometers traveled on foot and other means were not in vain!
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From upper left corner and clockwise: Canopy Family's "HawkEagle Truck" in Pipeline Road, Gamboa. May 5th, 2018 (photo courtesy Carlos Bethancourt); Volunteer-filled truck on route to Pirre, Darién. May 4th, 2018 (photo courtesy Hayro Cunampio); Biking and birding in Garnaderita, Atalaya. May 5th, 2018 (photo courtesy Lesley Sánchez); Adopta Team's horseback riding back from Cerro Chucantí. May 6th, 2018 (photo courtesy Zabdy Samudio) |
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From upper left corner and clockwise: Heliconia Team at open sea on route from Coiba Island. May 5th, 2018 (photo courtesy Team Heliconia). Exchanging airplanes on route to Piñas Bay. Garachiné, May 4th, 2018 (photo by Jan Cubilla). Fundación Naturalez y Ciencia 507 at Punta Chame. May 5th, 2018 (photo courtesy Karla Aparicio). ADOPTA Team at Cana airstrip. May 6th, 2018 (photo courtesy Guido Berguido). |
The birds were amazing, but the participation was great too! About 1300 checklists submitted placed us # 5 worldwide in participation. The vast majority of the birders sent their data through the eBird accounts of their teams instead of opening their own accounts, something we plan to improve for the next event. All the participants count; however, I would like to highlight that groups of high school students, who benefited from Cornell's "
Detectives de Aves Internacional" curriculum which
Katherine Araúz has been with in Panama for a while, also participated. Children are the hope of the future! And about the habitat status data, well... we are still collecting it; however, it was clear that many participants did not want to be mere passive observers and some decided to leave their counting areas better than they found them!
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Left: Team of university students of UNACHI and UTP with thrash collected after birding. La Barqueta. Photo courtesy Luis Saldaña. Right: Team IAN Consulting-GEMAS picking up thrash in Volcano Lakes. Photo courtesy IAN Consulting. Both photos on May 5th, 2018 |
As you can see, this was a GREAT Global Big Day for Panama! We still have to do better and with more time next year, need to solve some minor differences and polish some details, but the experience gained in these seven weeks of preparation is priceless! I also gained tons of experience during this GBD... if you want to know how it was for me, keep tuned and follow this link: ...
my Global Big Day!
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Press conference announcing the Panama's 2018 GBD results (with pizza!), simultaneously transmitted to several provinces in Panama. From left to right: Karen Ávila (Fundación Avifauna Eugene Eisenmann), Guido Berguido (Asociación Adopta el Bosque Panamá), Rolando Jordan (Asociación Panameña de Aventura y Excursionismo), Karla Aparicio (Fundación Naturaleza y Ciencia 507), Rosabel Miró (Sociedad Audubon de Panamá). Panama City, May 11th, 2018 |
What a beautiful woman is Karen Ávila from Fundación Avifauna!
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