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 birding...

Gibraltar   (visit this page on fatfisherman.com)
 







Mediterranean Gull Larus melanocephalus ©Sue & Andy Tranter http://www.suesbirdphotos.co.uk/

The famous Rock of Gibraltar is a limestone promontory, some five km long and 1 km wide. The summit ridge, rising to 426m, offers superb if vertiginous views over the westernmost Mediterranean, the Costa del Sol and, especially, the Strait of Gibraltar itself. The Moroccan shore is only 20 km away and views often extend to the Rif Mountains beyond.

The strategic position of Gibraltar is the root of its ornithological fame. Migration of soaring birds, i.e. storks and raptors, occurs year-round in some form and numbers can be spectacular in the peak seasons of March-May and August-October, almost invariably during periods of westerly winds. The principal species are Honey Buzzards and Black Kites, which both produce daily counts of thousands at peak times. Significant but lesser concentrations occur of Egyptian and Griffon Vultures, Short-toed Eagles, Marsh, Hen and Montagu`s Harriers, Sparrowhawks, Common Buzzards, Booted Eagles and Ospreys, among others, as well as White and Black Storks.

Migration of seabirds is also an all-year phenomenon and features important numbers of Cory`s and Balearic Shearwaters, Northern Gannets, Great Skuas, Mediterranean, Little, Black-headed, Lesser Black-backed and Audouin`s Gulls and Sandwich Terns. Many other seabirds occur regularly, including Lesser Crested Terns (October/mid-November).

The local list, of some 310 species, grows annually. A recent addition was Indigo Bunting (April 2004). The list includes a particularly comprehensive contingent of passerines, most of them migrants grounded on the Rock by inclement weather, often during the frequent bouts of strong easterly winds which produce the famous levanter cloud over the summit. A diversity of vagrant species enlivens the birding scene; recent examples have included Long-legged Buzzard, Lesser Spotted Eagle, Lanner, Allen’s Gallinule and Mountain Chiffchaff.

Resident and breeding species are few but Gibraltar has one of only two colonies of Shags in the westernmost Mediterranean and is the only mainland site in Europe for Barbary Partridges. Other local breeders include Peregrines, Lesser Kestrels, Common, Pallid and Alpine Swifts, Blue Rock Thrushes and, since their recolonisation in 2004, a pair of Eagle Owls. The thousands of Yellow-legged Gulls are an unmissable feature; they even nest on rooftops and in the pine trees of the Botanic Garden.

  top sites

 

Key places to visit....

Key places to visit in Gibraltar are the bird observatory and ringing station at Jews’ Gate (run by the Gibraltar Ornithological and Natural History Society - see their web-site); the Summit Ridge, Botanic Garden, North Front Cemetery and Europa Point. Gibraltar is within day-trip distance of the Eastern bank of the Guadalquivir river (Brazo del Este, Bonanza salt pans, Algaida pine woods); the Serrania de Ronda, the Guadalhorce estuary at Malaga, the cork forests of the Cadiz sierras (Parque Natural de los Alcornocales) and the Costa de la Luz.

  contributor

 

EFJ Garcia
erngarcia@btinternet.com

  numbers

 
Number of bird species: 310

  useful reading

 

Gibraltar Bird Report

Published by GONHS. The 2004 report is currently available, price ?4.25 including postage within EU: UK cheques accepted

Guia de Aves del Estrecho de Gibraltas - Field Guide to the Birds of the Strait of Gibraltar: Parque Natural "Los Alcornocales" y Comarca de "La Janda" - "Los Alcornocales" Natural Park and "La Janda"

David Barros and David Rios 328 pages, col photos, col illus, figs, tabs, maps. Orni Tour s.l new print expected December 2007
ISBN: 8460745457
Buy this book from NHBS.com

Where to Watch Birds in Southern and Western Spain

- Andalucia, Extremadura and Gibraltar Ernest Garcia and Andrew Paterson Series: WHERE TO WATCH BIRDS IN BRITAIN AND EUROPE: HELM SERIES 358 pages, 30 illus, 99 maps. Christopher Helm third edition due 2008
ISBN: 9780713683158
Buy this book from NHBS.com

  useful information

 

BirdLife


Gibraltar Ornithological and Natural History Society (GONHS) is the BirdLife Partner

News...


The GONHS website offers regularly-updated news of local records: http://www.gonhs.org

Proact


Coordinator: none (why not apply?) see http://www.proact-campaigns.net/coordinators
Members: None yet!
Join us at http://www.proact-campaigns.net/team

  clubs

 

Gibraltar Ornithological and Natural History Society

http://www.gonhs.org/
Field Centre, Jews Gate, Upper Rock Nature Reserve, P0 Box 843. + 350 72639; info@gonhs.org
The Gibraltar Ornithological and Natural History Society (GONHS) was founded in 1976. Its aims are to foster the study and protection of wildlife and the natural environment in the area of the Straits of Gibraltar. The website gives details of membership, publications, Gibraltar wildlife, ringing, accommodation at the Bird Observatory and Field Centre etc...

  observatories

 

Strait of Gibraltar Bird Observatory

http://www.gonhs.org/StraitofGibraltarBirdObservatory.htm
Strait of Gibraltar bird Observatory, Jews’ Gate, Gibraltar. Run by GONHS. The observatory controls ringing and observation of birds in Gibraltar, the latter including daily counts of diurnal migrants. Visitors and helpers are always welcome. The Jews’ Gate observatory itself offers inexpensive hostel-type accommodation to resident ringers. It is located at a strategic point on the southwestern slopes of the Rock, giving commanding views over the Strait and Bay of Gibraltar. A second observatory at Europa Point is used for seabird observation...

  reserves

 

Gibraltar Botanic Gardens

http://www.gibraltargardens.gi/
Six hectares of subtropical vegetation, with notable collections of aloes and other succulents. Wildlife includes resident and migrant birds and butterflies, the latter featuring a colony of Monarchs...

Upper Rock Nature Reserve.

http://www.gibraltar.com/upper_rock_nature_reserve.aspx
Includes most of ‘green Gibraltar’ and serves as a refuge for flora and fauna, including the infamous Barbary Macaques (‘apes’).

  trip reports

 

Travelling Birder
http://www.travellingbirder.com
The Travellingbirder.com birding trip report search engine guides you to 7,000+ birding trip reports on the Internet. You can search for trip reports from a specific country and time of year. Not all these reports are in English. So, if you can’t find the trip report you want on this Fatbirder page… give them a try!

1998 [September] - Ken Tucker

http://www.camacdonald.com/birding/tripreports/Gibraltar98.html
I have recently returned from a two week spell of voluntary work with Programa Migres counting migrant storks and raptors over the Strait of Gibraltar. The work was concentrated along the Spanish coast between Algeciras and Bolonia. On my return I provided a trip report to E.J. Garcia and he has encouraged me to forward the trip report to EBN...

  tour operators

 

Birding Pal

http://www.birdingpal.org/Gibraltar.htm
Local birders willing to show visiting birders around their area...

Ornisun

http://www.ornisun.com/
ORNISUN BIRDWATCHING HOLIDAYS aim to provide a friendly, reliable and rewarding birdwatching holiday for our clients. Our experience of over 40 years watching birds in southern Spain and Gibraltar is invaluable when it comes to knowing where to go and when. Our holidays are structured in such a way so that we hope to see most of our target birds at least during one of our five tour days...

  other links

 

Migration in the Straits of Gibraltar

http://www.tarifa.net/nature/migreeng.htm
The Straits of Gibraltar (southern tip of Cádiz province, Spain) is the most important bottle-neck for central and western European migratory birds crossing the Mediterranean sea, travelling to and from their wintering quarters in the African continent. The fact that it is just 14km wide has made this area especially important for soaring birds (storks, vultures, eagles...); which during Autumn migration concentrate in hundreds of thousands in the area of Tarifa waiting for suitable winds to allow them to cross to Africa.

Upper Rock Nature Reserve

http://www.worldtouristattractions.travel-guides.com/attraction/attraction_guide.ehtml?o=486&NAV_guide_class=AttractionGuide&NAV_Attraction=486
Each Spring and Autumn, the Rock becomes a staging post for hundreds of thousands of migrating birds flying between their breeding grounds in Northern Europe and their wintering areas in tropical Africa. Resident species such as Peregrine Falcons, Blue Rock Thrush and Barbary Partridge are joined by owls and eagles, harriers and hoopoes, buzzards and black kites.

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