This photo shows a sample of the huge wader flocks which can be found at Pak Thale. Over 500 individual birds can be counted in the photo. The blue arrow is pointing to a Nordmann’s Greenshank Tringa guttifer, the bird we wanted to see today having missed it on our previous visit to Pak Thale. Three birds of this species were seen and all at considerable distance.
This species is listed by BirdLife International as Endangered because it has a very small population which is declining as a result of the development of coastal wetlands throughout its range, principally for industry, infrastructure projects and aquaculture. Preliminary analyses of survey data collected at its breeding sites in Russia have provided evidence that the species’ population is indeed undergoing a very rapid decline; clarification of these results may lead to a review of its threat status in the near future. The estimated world population is between 600 and 1,300 birds!!
Reference: BirdLife International (2017) Species factsheet: Tringa guttifer. Downloaded from BirdLife on 18/01/2017.
Nordmann’s Greenshank aka Spotted Greenshank breeds in eastern Russia along the south-western and northern coasts of the Sea of Okhotsk and on Sakhalin Island. Its non-breeding range is not fully understood, but significant numbers have been recorded in South Korea, mainland China, Hong Kong (China), and Taiwan on passage, and in Bangladesh, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Peninsular Malaysia in winter. It has also been recorded on passage or in winter in Japan, North Korea, India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar (which may prove to be an important part of its wintering range), Singapore, the Philippines and Indonesia. There are unconfirmed records from Nepal and Guam (to US).
Reference: Wikipedia
Country: Thailand
Location: Pak Thale
Family: Sandpipers, Snipes (Scolopacidae)
Species: Nordmann's Greenshank (Tringa guttifer)
Date taken: 06/12/2016