First record of River Warbler Locustella fluviatilis and additional records for Plain Nightjar Caprimulgus inornatus and Lesser Masked Weaver Ploceus intermedius in Djibouti
Author
Dove, Carla J.
Author
Saucier, Jacob
Author
Whatton, James F.
Author
Schmidt, Brian
Author
Roble, Houssein R.
text
Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club
2017
2017-03-13
137
1
67
70
http://www.bioone.org/doi/10.25226/bboc.v137i1.2017.a3
journal article
298611
10.25226/bboc.v137i1.2017.a3
f12f1bce-92b3-447d-905e-1fe82f81b0bc
2513-9894
11558489
RIVER
WARBLER
Locustella fluviatilis
Breeds in central and
eastern Europe
east to south-west Siberia and north-west
Kazakhstan
, and is a long-distance migrant to the
southern African
countries of
Zambia, Malawi, Botswana, Zimbabwe
,
Mozambique
and northern
South Africa
, probably migrating via narrow routes through the Middle East and north-east Africa (Pearson 2006).
Ash
&
Atkins
(2009) and Redman
et al
. (2011) listed it as an uncommon passage migrant in the
central
Rift Valley in September
–November and April–May but did not list any records for
Djibouti
.
Two specimens
were obtained during the spring 2014 survey. On
11 May 2014
, a male (
USNM 647876
) was found dead on the ground under a small sapling between the armoury building and the religious chapel at Camp Lemonnier. The specimen was prepared as a skeleton (feathers saved), body mass was
20.7 g
, the stomach was empty, and heavy fat was noted at the time of preparation. The testes were minute (2 ×
1 mm
). Another specimen (
USNM 647822
) was collected on
13 May 2014
on the beach near Camp Lemonnier. Prior to collection, the bird was observed skulking inside a small isolated bush among the sand dunes. This specimen was prepared as a study skin with a partial skeleton. The bird was a male (testes; left = 3 ×
2 mm
, right = 2 ×
2 mm
) and the skull was 25% pneumatized. The preparation notes record extremely heavy fat and body mass was
24.6 g
.
We did not record any additional River Warblers during the winter 2016 (
1 February–2 March 2016
) survey. DNA barcoding (Hebert
et al
. 2003) was conducted on
USNM
647822 and the resulting mtCOI sequence was run through a
BLAST
search (
December 2015
). The top hit was GQ482077 (
L. fluviatilis
), with 100% pairwise identity and 99.7% query coverage. The mtCOI sequences for this specimen is deposited in GenBank (
KU
722455). Morphologically, the streaked breast and pale-tipped undertail-coverts separate this species from the closely related Savi’s Warbler
L. luscinioides
which has been recently recorded in
Djibouti
(Hering
et al
. 2015). Heavy fat reserves and reduced testes size on both specimens indicates that these individuals were migrants.