| Tropical Birding tour report: The Yucutan and Palenque
 
 Collared Aracari - Iain Campbell
 
 31 Jan:
 An
 early morning start had us outside R??o Lagartos by sunrise.
 Immediately we
 found both Couch’s and Tropical Kingbirds singing away. A
 family of Orange
 Orioles showed nicely in the warm morning light as Yucat??n
 (Black-throated)
 Bobwhites sang nearby. We had nice looks at a stunning male Mexican
 Sheartail. Aztec
 Parakeets and White-fronted Amazons were both common and conspicuous as
 they
 flew about in noisy flocks. A Laughing Falcon perched up high while a
 pair of
 Crested Caracaras flew by. Investigation of piercing screaming calls
 turned up
 a pair of Limpkins perched on a dead snag, seemingly out-of-place in
 the dry
 desert scrub. They were using nearby marsh habitat, though, and we soon
 encountered other marsh birds like Crane Hawk and Tricolored
 Heron.
 By mid-morning were we
 headed out onto the lagoon. The main attraction, flame-colored
 “American”
 Greater Flamingos, did not disappoint. We leisurely watched a nice
 flock as a
 pair of Peregrine Falcons flew overhead, flushing a mixed flock of
 shorebirds: Semiplamated
 Plover, “Western” Willet, Long-billed Curlew, Ruddy
 Turnstone, and Marbled
 Godwit among them. Close inspection of gulls on a nearby mudflat proved
 very
 fruitful. We found numbers of Laughing, Ring-billed, Herring, and
 Lesser
 Black-backed Gulls. A Kelp Gull and a Kelp x Herring Gull hybrid were
 special
 treats. Traveling slowly along the mangroves gave us some superb looks
 at a
 male Painted Bunting, “Mangrove” Yellow Warblers,
 over ten Common Black-Hawks,
 half a dozen Boat-billed Herons, and two Bare-throated Tiger Herons.
 Wading
 birds on the way back to the dock included Roseate Spoonbill, White
 Ibis,
 Little Blue Heron, Reddish Egret, and Black-crowned Night-Heron. Just
 before we
 landed we were entertained by a flock of Black Skimmers perched in
 front of a
 Pepsi machine and a Laughing Gull with a bright red bill and
 legs.
 
 We
 went back to the desert
 scrub mid-afternoon, and we did indeed find some new species. We found
 a nice
 covey of Yucat??n Bobwhites along the road on the way.
 White-bellied Wren,
 Groove-billed Ani, Zenaida Dove, and Northern Cardinal were all new for
 the
 trip, as was a very noisy pair of the extremely localized
 Yucat??n Wren.
 1
 Feb:
 This
 morning we enjoyed leisurely strolls around the grounds at the
 Cob?? and Tulum
 ruins, mainly taking in the architecture. Along the roads, we found
 both
 Short-tailed and Roadside Hawks. We got our first taste of lowland
 rainforest
 birding in the early afternoon along the road at Felipe Carillo Puerto.
 Mixed
 flocks contained a nice mix of northern migrants and resident birds:
 Olivaceous
 Woodcreeper, Yellow-throated Vireo, Tropical Gnatcatcher, Magnolia
 Warbler,
 Summer Tanager, Hooded Warbler, and the gorgeous Gray-throated Chat.
 Garrulous
 flocks of Black-headed Saltators were conspicuous most of the
 afternoon, as
 were Tropical Pewees calling from high up in dead trees. Roadside
 flower banks
 provided food for Canivet’s Emerald and Wedge-tailed
 Sabrewing. Two
 countersinging male Black-headed Trogons put on quite a show. After
 supper we
 drove the road for night birds and had nice looks at a few Common
 Pauraques.
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