The Province

Unusual visitor lures birders to Victoria

Redwing is one of three documented Asian species newly found in North America

- RICHARD WATTS

A shy, easily overlooked and entirely forgettabl­e visitor from Asia is attracting attention and raising some alarm in rural Saanich.

The visitor is a redwing, or turdus iliacus, a bird slightly smaller and a whole lot browner than the American robin (also a thrush) seen across North America. It looks something like an immature robin, and is brown on top and speckled brown across the breast without the orange.

“It’s like a robin that didn’t get coloured,” said Ann Nightingal­e, past president of the 750-member Victoria Natural History Society.

“It has a few subtle marks on it, but nothing that would make most people go, ‘Oooh, ahhh.’ ”

Despite the redwing’s unspectacu­lar appearance, it has attracted birdwatche­rs from as far away as Michigan and Minnesota.

An influx of those enthusiast­s is already raising the ire of some residents of the Interurban/ Wilkinson Road area, Nightingal­e said, where the redwing seems to have taken a very low-profile roost.

The redwing is quite common across northern Europe and Asia. But this sighting is only the second recorded in Victoria. The first was two years ago.

“It’s a pretty skulky bird,” Nightingal­e said. “It hardly ever comes out in the open. You might get to see a piece of it in the bushes. For birders, that’s enough for a check.”

Nightingal­e is one of a long-standing cadre of people in Greater Victoria whose hobby is watching and spotting birds. They call themselves “birders,” not birdwatche­rs, and enjoy their hobby using binoculars, telescopes, backyard feeders and printed checklists of species likely to show up in any particular place.

The redwing is one of three documented Asian visitors to northwest North America recently.

A fieldfare, another brownish and unspectacu­lar Asian thrush, has appeared in Missoula, Mont., and a red-flanked bluetail has been documented in Portland, Ore.

Nightingal­e said she heard of a birder from Minnesota who drove through Montana, checked off the fieldfare, and continued to Victoria to get a sight of the redwing before heading to Portland for the red-flanked bluetail.

Local birders, through the Victoria Natural History Society, organize an annual count of birds during the holiday season. This year’s Christmas Bird Count took place Dec. 19.

Nightingal­e said its numbers were average, at best — 141 species, one more than last year, but well below the 2004 record of 154.

The overall sightings of individual­s also appear to be down.

Nightingal­e said no numbers have been tallied, but she said some speculate the low numbers may be the result of a poor berry crop. Arbutus berries, for example, are not supplying a good crop of wild food for birds.

 ?? — ANDREAS TREPTE ?? The redwing, or turdus iliacus, is a variety of thrush common in Asia.
— ANDREAS TREPTE The redwing, or turdus iliacus, is a variety of thrush common in Asia.

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