Wednesday, August 15, 2018

stripe throated Hermit on nest

Hello all, "our" stripe throated Hermit (Hummingbird) is now really on the nest...the hormones are doing the job , she is there and she will do the job.
When we had guest in the great Tinamou cottage a few days ago (the nest is next to the entrance of the great Tinamou cottage), she was every time flying away from the nest when people came close by, now you can pass the nest, go with the vacuum cleaner and take a picture of her...no flying anymore. I had the idea that she was more diving away in her nest, did not hear or see her flying away.
The closer by picture I zoomed in, I will not disturb her...

Greetings from Terry
http://coffeeadventures.net/tinamou.html

Sunday, August 12, 2018

Euglossa Orchid Bee highlands western Panama




The name of the Orchid I don't know yet, it will come ...yes see down below!!!, but the insect is the Euglossa orchid Bee...beautiful!
Greetings from Terry
http://coffeeadventures.net/tinamou.html

I did ask the people of finca Dracula in Guadelupe about the name of the Orchid...
this is their answer... thank you for the answer ! https://fincadracula.com/
Es una Stanhopea
De especie habría que averiguar pero si es el mismo género que la foto que subí hace poco
Tuvo suerte porque las flores no duran más de un día
It's a Stanhopea Of a kind we would have to find out but if it is the same genre as the photo that I recently uploaded You were lucky because the flowers do not last more than a day

Saturday, August 11, 2018

New bird on the farm...white or purple throated Mountain Gem Juv





Hello all, So yesterday a mystery bird           https://terryboquetebirdstory.blogspot.com/2018/08/mysterious-hummingbird.html , now we are a step further. She is still here today, territory arguments with the rufous tailed Hummingbirds. Better video, you see she has a lot of brown in the back and forehead, no tail, so I think a Juvenile. Still doubts ...because a white throated Mountain Gem is according the book severe out of range, here it is 1250 meters altitude and acc. the book they are above the 1500 m. While the purple throated Mountain Gems can appear already between 600 to 1500 m... so still not a 100% ID

Greetings from Terry

http://coffeeadventures.net/tinamou.html




Friday, August 10, 2018

mysterious Hummingbird





Hi Everyone... I did hear "upset" Hummingbirds in the garden and  I was checking out what was going on. Then I did see a small orange bellied Hummingbird, very short tail. Grabbed my binoculars and did see a bright white supercilium,short straight beak.First I thought it was a female of a white throated Mountain Gem , maybe she lost her tail, but at the tip s of the tail I did see small white spot..also on the back... but a female of a magenta throated Woodstar...the supercilicum was too much...Stripe throated Hermit... this bird was too fast and active busy to feed for a Hermit.  Hans did run inside , did grab the camera, it was already darker outside (6.30 pm...so it was hard to have good pictures.) The video turned out better. Hope I will find out which Hummingbird it is.... I think it is a new bird on our farm.

Greetings from Terry

http://coffeeadventures.net/tinamou.html

Sunday, August 5, 2018

different stories...

Hello all, I have all kind of short stories to tell, so here they are.....

Story 1
It is August already..where is July? , my gosh! still there are birds active with nesting and feeding fresh fledged immatures... "our" stripe throated Hermit is sitting on a new nest. The old nest is still there...I have the impression she was rebuilding it , but I think she did stop with that and build a new nest on another spot half a meter away from the other nest. That is what I think...maybe there are two different stripe throated  Hermits...
Anyway, she is now on the nest, amazing because it is next to the entrance of the great Tinamou cottage and there were all the time guest in this cottage. The hormones did win!
It's hard to take a picture, it's a very private place...


 Story 2
A week ago I was with two birders in a more meadow area, watching birds and what I don't see often and for sure not taking a picture from was an eastern Meadowlark with a baby, they were getting food in the high grasses...and yes I have pictures to proof....cuteness!!

Story 3
Another day I was birding with a Dutch couple and they did not know before...but we figured it out they are birdwatchers, super! And he takes great pictures! I am allow to use his picture of the pair of scarlet thighed Dacnis that we did see that morning, female above the male ...what a great shot!

Story 4
And he did make a picture of a great Butterfly in El Valle (Panama), did ask me to ID...but well.... Butterflies I like them , but when I know all the birds, then I go into Butterflies... 😊😉 But our friend Dan ,  he is in birds and big time Butterflies and he did ID it! It's a Dusky-blue Groundstreak (Calycopis isobeon) Great story I like to share about this butterfly...
 I had a laugh about Dan's story of the moving of the hindwings, because the Dutch couple told me that they were thinking that the Butterfly was attacked by Ants, he did almost try to remove the" ants" , but his wife did not let him , because she was afraid of "maybe they will bite".
Then they did see the picture and figured out that they were not ants, just a movement...now they  know the whole story...
Here is Dan's story... This sp is in the Lycaenidae family......... common name-- Hairstreaks. Almost all of the many 100's of hairstreak species have those tiny 'tails' on the trailing edge of the hindwings---- like this one has. When perched, they rub the 2 hindwings together, and the tails move & wave back-&-forth. 
Both the 'tails' -- the anatomical feature-- and the 'tails' being rubbed together-- a  behavioral feature-- are thought to have evolved as a way of attracting the attention of a potential predator to a non-vital  part of the bug-- the wings & not the body
If the individual is not able to escape predation by movement, by flying away, the predator will very often be visually attracted to the movement, to the 'tails' moving/waving.
The tail can be 1/2 gone and the butterfly can often still fly, thus mate (the adult stage- the flying butterfly stage - is strictly the sexual or reproduction stage, and just a small part of the entire life cycle.). Should a predator hit the body, the predation effort is usually successful-- the butterfly gets eaten. If the predator hits the wing, often the butterfly escapes. Thus........ it's not uncommon to see hairstreaks that no longer have the portion of the wings where those 'tails' are located.


There are a good # of hairstreak sp's that live on/ near the ground... like this one. That's why the photo shows it perching on grass. While the great majority of hairstreak species are found in forests-- with most of the 'rarest' (least known) living high in the forest canopy, rarely coming near the ground--- the one in the photo is in a sub-family called Groundstreaks.


Common name of this one-- Dusky-blue Groundstreak (Calycopis isobeon), one of the most widespread--- from the tropics of S America to the semi-tropics of south Texas. [Hairstreaks are almost entirely found in the tropics--- with a worldwide distribution.]


My guess...... you've seen this butterfly sub-family, Groundstreaks, 100's of times--- very likely this same species, as it is one of the more common ones. As forests get replaced with grasslands/ pasture, the groundstreaks experience habitat increase--- rather than habitat loss.
It's just like with birds........ and so many life forms. If we take the time, there is often beauty there. If we don't look, we don't see.

Story 5
Hans and I crossed fingers for the nest and immatures in it from the rufous and white Wren pair. They were busy with building (took them 2 weeks) a nest in our spiny Palm tree in front of our balcony...but they did it in a dead palm leaf that was ready to fall down the tree. (I did see in my head already the disaster of sad babybirds on the ground)...But they made it...2 baby birds fledged and 4 days later the palm leaf did fell down!! Yess! Good timing!

Story 6
we did have some great mornings and afternoons weather wise and I did go a couple of times to different areas cloud forest... and of course did see the birds on our farm...
I took this video of the cloud forest on 1850 meters altitude... beautiful, I will never get use to that and yes we live here already 20 years! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OgZpLTprwrM
Yesterday afternoon I did go to the wettest cloud forest in Boquete... you can see , this tree is so amazing .. lot of clouds there...lot of epiphytes

                            And yesterday loads of common Bush Tanagers (common Chlorospingus)
                                                and immatures:

And so that was it...this morning a guest ask me if I could come and listen to the birds and tell him what we hear...he knows the birds big time in his country (USA), but here  it's of course hard.
And so we had a short time , but I love that kind of things. Here is the list of this morning and I greet you all!  Terry
http://coffeeadventures.net/tinamou.html
Tinamou Cottage Boquete, Chiriquí, PA
Aug 5, 2018 6:00 AM - 7:00 AM
Protocol: Historical
0.1 kilometer(s)
Comments:     just to hear and when light enough to see some from Highland Tinamou cottage to garden, not really "birdwatching"


Little Tinamou  1     HO
Spotted Wood-Quail  1     HO
White-tipped Dove  1     + song
Rufous-tailed Hummingbird  3     heard more
Lesson's Motmot  2     + call and song
Red-crowned Woodpecker  2     also heard call and song
Golden-olive Woodpecker  1     HO
Yellow-headed Caracara  1
Blue-headed Parrot  1     HO
Streak-headed Woodcreeper  2     HO
Yellow-bellied Elaenia  2
Ochre-bellied Flycatcher  1
Paltry Tyrannulet  1     HO
Boat-billed Flycatcher  1     + call and song
Social Flycatcher  1     HO
Yellow-green Vireo  2     + song
Rufous-breasted Wren  1     HO
Rufous-and-white Wren  1     HO
Orange-billed Nightingale-Thrush  2     heard more
Clay-colored Thrush  1
White-throated Thrush  2     heard also call (frog like)
Rosy Thrush-Tanager  2     HO  prob. more then 2
Rufous-capped Warbler  1
Buff-rumped Warbler  1     HO
Blue-gray Tanager  1
Scarlet-thighed Dacnis  2
Red-legged Honeycreeper  3     + call
Buff-throated Saltator  2     + call and song
Black-striped Sparrow  3     + song ( bouncing ball)
Yellow-crowned Euphonia  1
Thick-billed Euphonia  7
Lesser Goldfinch  2     HO
http://coffeeadventures.net/tinamou.html