Birdwatching report Hvar Island: May - October 2024.

Reading Steve Jones' report earlier this year, keen birdwatcher Tomislav Sjekloća was inspired to check out the Dračevica pond and other parts of Hvar, and we are delighted he has shared his sightings with us.

Blue Rock Thrush near Fortica in Hvar Town Blue Rock Thrush near Fortica in Hvar Town Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća

"This was my second Summer working in the city of Hvar and this year I spent much more time exploring Hvar island birds, so I thought I'd share my experiences with you as they might be useful for the readers who are interested in birds. A few days ago I saw a post from the birdwatching couple who visited the island in September, and also another one from Mr. Steve Jones about his report from April/May. Unfortunately, I didn't see his post earlier, but it seems we both visited Dračevica on the same day (May 6th) and even saw some of the same birds (Temminck's Stint, Glossy Ibis etc.). However, Mr. Jones' posts from previous years helped a lot as that was how I discovered Dračevica.

Temminck's Stint among Wood Sandpipers. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća

This post is based on about 15 visits to Dračevica and Starogradsko polje (including airport field) but I also visited some other places on the island in different times of the year (Dol, Stari Grad, Jelsa, Fortica, Sveta Nedjelja, Sveti Nikola, Malo Grablje, Motokit, Floriana park etc.). I will include the most interesting details and photos along with the complete list of the birds I managed to see (and confirm) on the island. The total was 65 species but there were some I could hear but didn't see so I didn't include those (such as Scops Owl and Cuckoo).

Squacco Heron and Glossy Ibis. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća

Dračevica was definitely more interesting to visit in the Spring when the water level was high. During my first visit to the pond (May 4th) I saw a Glossy Ibis and a Squacco Heron and managed to take a photo with both present. There were also 4 Wood Sandpipers and 3 Turtle Doves.

Turtle Dove. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća

Two days later there was a group of 15 Wood Sandpipers wth one Temminck's Stint among them. On the same day I saw a lot of Bee-eaters resting on power lines near the pond.

Bee-Eaters. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća

A week later I saw 2 Ruffs at the pond and one European Roller nearby which was my first time seeing this beautiful bird.

Ruffs at Dračevica. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća
European Roller. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća

On the May 19th there were a Grey Heron and a Little Egret, along with some Alpine Swifts. At the beginning of June I discovered 2 Green Sandpipers at the pond.

Grey Heron at Dračevica. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća
Little Egret. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća
Alpine Swifts. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća
Green Sandpiper. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća

Some of the other interesting sightings: Spanish Sparrows in Vorba Park in Stari Grad, Blue Rock Thrush below Fortica in Hvar, Short-toed Snake Eagle in Starogradsko polje during Summer, a flock of Eurasian Spoonbills flying over Jelsa on September 30th, Common Kingfisher at one of the coves in the Floriana Park area...

Spanish Sparrow at Vorba. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća
Short-Toed Snake Eagle. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća
Eurasian Spoonbills over Jelsa. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća
Kingfisher. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća
Red-Backed Shrike. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća
Subalpine Warbler. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća
Woodchat Shrike. Photo: Tomislav Sjekloća

The complete list of birds seen on the island between May and October 2024:

  1. Sterna hirundo – Common Tern – Crvenokljuna čigra

  2. Larus michahellis – Yellow-legged Gull – Galeb klaukavac

  3. Corvus cornix – Hodded Crow – Siva vrana

  4. Columba livia – Rock Pigeon – Divlji golub

  5. Streptopelia decaocto – Collared Dove – Gugutka

  6. Turdus merula – Blackbird – Kos

  7. Passer domesticus – House Sparrow – Vrabac

  8. Passer hispaniolensis – Spanish Sparrow – Španjolski vrabac

  9. Oriolus oriolus – Golden Oriole - Vuga

  10. Fringilla coelebs – Common Chaffinch – Zeba

  11. Hirundo rustica – Barn Swallow – Lastavica

  12. Delichon urbicum – House Martin – Piljak

  13. Luscinia megarhynchos – Common Nightingale – Slavuj

  14. Serinus serinus – Serin – Žutarica

  15. Sylvia cantillans – Subalpine Warbler – Bjelobrka grmuša

  16. Ardeola ralloides – Squacco Heron – Žuta čaplja

  17. Plegadis falcinellus – Glossy Ibis – Blistavi ibis

  18. Tringa glareola – Wood Sandpiper – Prutka migavica

  19. Streptopelia turtur – Turtle Dove – Grlica

  20. Emberiza cirlus – Cirl Bunting – Crnogrla strnadica

  21. Phasianus colchicus – Ring-necked Pheasant – fazan

  22. Parus major – Great Tit – Velika sjenica

  23. Lanius senator – Woodchat Shrike – Riđoglavi svračak

  24. Lanius collurio – Red-backed Shrike – Rusi svračak

  25. Calidris temmincki – Temminck's Stint – Sijedi žalar

  26. Apus melba – Alpine Swift – Bijela čiopa

  27. Apus apus – Swift – Crna čiopa

  28. Apus pallidus – Pallid swift – Smeđa čiopa

  29. Merops apiaster – European Bee-eater – Pčelarica

  30. Saxicola rubetra – Whinchat – Smeđoglavi batić

  31. Saxicola rubicola – Stonechat – Crnoglavi batić

  32. Motacilla flava – Yellow Wagtail – Žuta pastirica

  33. Motacilla alba – White Wagtail – Bijela pastirica

  34. Linaria cannabina – Common Linnet – Juričica

  35. Monticola solitarius – Blue Rock Thrush – Modrokos

  36. Chloris chloris – Greenfinch – Zelendur

  37. Calidris pugnax – Ruff – Pršljivac

  38. Coracias garrulus – European Roller – Zlatovrana

  39. Upupa epops – Eurasian Hoopoe – Pupavac

  40. Muscicapa striata – Spotted Flycatcher – Siva muharica

  41. Buteo buteo – Common Buzzard – Škanjac

  42. Accipiter nisus – Eurasian Sparrowhawk – Kobac

  43. Falco tinnunculus – Common Kestrel – Vjetruša

  44. Sylvia atricapilla – Blackcap – Crnokapa grmuša

  45. Sylvia melanoephala – Sardinian Warbler – Crnoglava grmuša

  46. Erithacus rubecula – European Robin – Crvendać

  47. Ardea cinerea – Grey Heron – Siva čaplja

  48. Egretta Garzetta – Little Egret – Mala bijela čaplja

  49. Tringa ochropus – Green Sandpiper – Crnokrila prutka

  50. Gulosis aristotelis – European Shag – Morski vranac

  51. Corvus corax – Raven – Gavran

  52. Circaetus gallicus – Short-toed Snake Eagle – Zmijar

  53. Platalea leucorodia – Eurasian Spoonbill – Žličarka

  54. Phylloscopus trochilus – Willow Warbler – Brezov zviždak

  55. Phylloscopus collybita – Common Chiffchaff – Zviždak

  56. Sylvia communis – Common Whitethroat – Grmuša pjenica

  57. Sturnus vulgaris – Common Starling – Čvorak

  58. Oenanthe oenanthe – Northern Wheatear – Sivkasta bjeloguza

  59. Regulus ignicapilla – Common Firecrest – Vatroglavi kraljić

  60. Alcedo atthis – Common Kingfisher – Vodomar

  61. Phoenicurus ochruros – Black Redstart – Mrka crvenrepka

  62. Lullula arborea – Woodlark – Ševa krunica

  63. Anthus pratensis – Meadow Pipit – Livadna trepteljka

  64. Prunella modularis – Dunnock – Sivi popić

  65. Troglodytes troglodytes – Eurasian Wren – Palčić

© Tomislav Sjekloća, May – October 2024.

Nalazite se ovdje: Home Novosti iz prirode Birdwatching report Hvar Island: May - October 2024.

Eco Environment News feeds

  • Rising GDP continues to mean more carbon emissions and wider damage to the planet. Can the two be decoupled?

    During Cop30 negotiations in Brazil last year, delegates heard a familiar argument: rising emissions are unavoidable for countries pursuing growth.

    Since the first Cop in the 1990s, developing nations have had looser reduction targets to reflect the economic gap between them and richer countries, which emitted millions of tonnes of CO2 as they pulled ahead. The concession comes from the idea that an inevitable cost of prosperity is environmental harm.

    Continue reading...

  • Born of student disquiet after the 2008 crash, the group says it is reshaping economists’ education

    As the fallout from the 2008 global financial crash reverberated around the world, a group of students at Harvard University in the US walked out of their introductory economics class complaining it was teaching a “specific and limited view” that perpetuated “a problematic and inefficient system of economic inequality”.

    A few weeks later, on the other side of the Atlantic, economics students at Manchester University in the UK, unhappy that the rigid mathematical formulas they were being taught in the classroom bore little relation to the tumultuous economic fallout they were living through, set up a “post-crash economics society”.

    Continue reading...

  • Release into Helman Tor reserve marks historical first for keystone species hunted to extinction in UK 400 years ago

    Shivering and rain-drenched at the side of a pond in Cornwall, a huddle of people watched in hushed silence as a beaver took its first tentative steps into its new habitat. As it dived into the water with a determined “plop” and began swimming laps, the suspense broke and everyone looked around, grinning.

    The soggy but momentous occasion marks the first time in English history that beavers have been legally released into a river system, almost one year after the government finally agreed to grant licences for releases.

    Continue reading...

  • It has rained in parts of the country every day of the year so far and downpours are expected to continue this week

    In a “miserable and relentlessly wet” start to the year, rain has fallen somewhere in the UK every single day for weeks on end.

    With more than 100 flood warnings in force across the country and further downpours forecast this week, scientists say the atmospheric forces behind Britain’s endless drizzle are the same ones driving devastating floods across Spain and Portugal.

    Continue reading...

  • Corteva will discontinue a mixture of Agent Orange and glyphosate, but another of its herbicides will still use Vietnam war-era defoliant

    The chemical giant Corteva will stop producing Enlist Duo, a herbicide considered to be among the most dangerous still used in the US by environmentalists because it contains a mix of Agent Orange and glyphosate, which have both been linked to cancer and widespread ecological damage.

    The US military deployed Agent Orange, a chemical weapon, to destroy vegetation during the Vietnam war, causing serious health problems among soldiers and Vietnamese residents.

    This article was amended on 9 February 2026 to add comment from a Corteva spokesperson.

    Continue reading...

  • Cullernose Point, Northumberland: These cliffs are always thrilling, but today is a riot of sound and damp air as we take the coastal path

    The sea is still raging after yesterday’s storm, waves the highest that I’ve seen here, more ocean than North Sea. The grey-green water, full of churned up sand, is frothing and erupting against dark rocks, bursting with the force of geysers as it collides with the land.

    Here at Cullernose Point, the dolerite cliffs of the Whin Sill thrust a giant wedge as they taper into the sea. It’s dramatic at all times, but today is especially thrilling, the sound all enveloping, the wind cutting, the air damp with spume.

    Continue reading...

  • Storm Marta sweeps Iberian peninsula just days after Storms Kristin and Leonardo brought deadly flooding and major damage

    Spain and Portugal have endured another storm over the weekend, just days after the deadly flooding and major damage caused by Storm Kristin and Storm Leonardo last week. Storm Marta passed over the Iberian peninsula on Saturday, bringing fresh torrential rain and killing two people. Storm Kristin killed at least five people after it made landfall on 28 January with Storm Leonardo claiming another victim last Wednesday.

    The outlook for this week is for more rain across Spain, Portugal and France, especially across north-west Portugal, where more than 100mm is possible during the first half of the week. Some of the heaviest of the rain will transfer to southern Italy and western parts of Greece and Turkey later in the week.

    Continue reading...

  • The beautiful game has a fast fashion problem, with clubs bringing out multiple kits every season. But a move towards upcycling old shirts and wearing vintage garments is on the rise

    It may have been a quiet January transfer window, but even so, thousands of new shirts will be printed for Lucas Paquetá, returning to his former Brazilian club Flamengo, while his West Ham shirt instantly feels old. Not to mention the thousands of other players moving from one club to another. Uefa estimates that up to 60% of kits worn by players are destroyed at the end of the season, and at any one time there are thought to be more than 1bn football shirts in circulation, many of which are discarded by fans once players leave.

    The good news is that lots of designers are bringing their upcycling skills to old kits, taking shirts and shirring them, sewing them or, as in the case of designer and creative director Hattie Crowther, completely transforming them into one-of-a-kind headpieces. “I’m not here to add more products into the mix, I’m here to reframe what’s already in circulation and give it meaning, context, and longevity while staying culturally relevant,” says Crowther, whose creations involving the colours and emblems of Arsenal, Liverpool and Paris Saint-Germain, are, she says, “a response to how disposable football product has become”.

    Continue reading...

  • Push to restart uranium mining in Patagonia has sparked fears about the environmental impact and loss of sovereignty over key resources

    On an outcrop above the Chubut River, one of the few to cut across the arid Patagonian steppe of southern Argentina, Sergio Pichiñán points across a wide swath of scrubland to colourful rock formations on a distant hillside.

    “That’s where they dug for uranium before, and when the miners left, they left the mountain destroyed, the houses abandoned, and nobody ever studied the water,” he says, citing suspicions arising from cases of cancer and skin diseases in his community. “If they want to open this back up, we’re all pretty worried around here.”

    Continue reading...

  • Forty-odd residents of Clydach Terrace in Ynysybwl, south Wales, relieved by council buyout after years in fear of fast flooding

    When Storm Dennis hit the UK in 2020, a wall of dirty, frigid water from a tributary of the Taff threw Paul Thomas against the front of his house in the south Wales village of Ynysybwl. He managed to swim back into his home before the storm surge changed direction, almost carrying him out of the smashed-in front door.

    “I was holding on to downpipes to stop myself being dragged out again. It was unbelievably strong, the water,” he said.

    Continue reading...

Novosti: Cybermed.hr

Novosti: Biologija.com

Izvor nije pronađen