Spring
migration of Oriental Honey-buzzards Pernis ptilorhyncus
and other raptors at Tanjung Tuan, Malaysia, 2000–2001
By Robert DeCandido,
Deborah Allen and Keith L. Bildstein |
| |
Note:
This article was originally published in Forktail 22 (2006) the
journal of the Oriental
Bird Club (OBC) and was kindly submitted by Robert
DeCandido.
Please
support the OBC's conservation work by visiting
the OBC website and becoming a member. |
INTRODUCTION
Since the 1950s, it has been known that wintering populations of Oriental
Honey-buzzards Pernis ptilorhyncus and at least four other
raptor species migrate each spring from Sumatra north-east across
the Straits of Malacca to the west coast of Malaysia (Oakeley 1955,
White 1961, Medway and Nisbet 1964, 1965, Medway and Wells 1976, Wells
1990a, 1990b). This migration is part of the East Asian Flyway, with
most birds presumably returning to breed in the region from western
China and southern Siberia east to Japan (McClure 1998, Zalles and
Bildstein 2000, DeCandido et al. 2004a,b, Higuchi et al. 2005). However,
the magnitude, timing and duration of the migration of Oriental Honey-buzzard
and other species using this route remain unclear (Wells 1999, Zalles
and Bildstein 2000). Here we report results from counts made
in March 2000 and 2001. |
STUDY
SITE
Port Dickson (2°24'N 101°51'E, 0 m) is a small town on the
west coast of Malaysia on the Straits of Malacca. It is c.94 km south-west
of Kuala Lumpur and 90 km north of the city of Melaka (Figs. 1–2).
The town is located at the southern end of a range of mountains that
runs northsouth and presumably funnels many migrants along the western
coastal lowlands of the Malay Peninsula (Medway and Nisbet 1965, Wells
1999). The watch site is situated on the deck of a lighthouse, south
of Port Dickson at km 16, c.3 km west of the coastal highway, and
is known locally as Tanjung Tuan. The lighthouse is surrounded by
coastal evergreen rainforest in a small, protected forest reserve.
On clear days it is possible to see Sumatra c.38 km across the Straits
of Malacca to the south-west. From Tanjung Medang on the island of
Pulau Rupat of north-western Sumatra to Tanjung Tuan is the shortest
distance over the sea along the length of the Straits of Malacca (Zalles
and Bildstein 2000). Weather conditions typically were hazy or cloudy
with little wind in the
morning until 10h00, then becoming clear but humid. On many days a
3–15 km/h sea breeze from the west or north-west developed at
c.10h45. Occasionally, the wind direction and speed changed significantly
in subsequent hours. |

Figure
1 : Location of Tanjung Tuan in relation to Sumatra. |
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Figure
2 : Location of Tanjung Tuan, Malaysia (1) relative
to other important raptor migration watch sites in East Asia:
Selangor Plains, Malaysia (2); Chumphon, Thailand (3); SaPa,
Vietnam (4); Beidaihe, China (5); Uchiyama-toge, Nagasaki, Japan
(6); Kohyamacho, Kagoshima, Japan (7); Miyako Islands (Ryukyus),
Okinawa, Japan
(8); Kenting National Park, Taiwan (9); and Bali Barat National
Park, Indonesia (10). See DeCandido et al. (2004b) for further
details. |
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METHODS
Migrating raptors were counted during early to mid-March in 2000 and
2001 by RDC and DA using 8.5× and 10× binoculars. In 2000,
104 hours of observations were made on 15 days (8–22 March).
In 2001, observations were made for 68 hourson 11 days (2–12
March). Observations typically began at 09h00–10h00 andusually
ended by 17h00.
On nine occasions in 2000, and four occasions in 2001, we left the
count site at 15h00 because fewer than 25 migrant raptors had been
counted after 12h00. RDC identified, counted, and recorded the numbers
and species of raptors seen, while DA assisted, acting primarily
as a spotter while photographing the migration (see Porter et al.
1986, Inskipp et al. 1996, Clark 1999, Jeyarajasingham and
Pearson 1999). Over 99% of raptors were readily identified to species.
Both observers scanned mainly to the west across the Straits of
Malacca in the direction of Sumatra. An individual raptor was considered
to be a migrant if we observed it pass west–east across an
imaginary north–south line, and continued east and out of
sight past the lighthouse and nearby hills. We defined a flock of
migrating raptors as any group of at least two individuals making
landfall within 100 m and five minutes of one another. Wind direction
was measured using a weathervane mounted atop the lighthouse and
a handheld compass. Ambient wind speed was estimated from experience:
it could not be measured directly at the watch site because the
configuration of the lighthouse blocked or deflected wind currents
on the lighthouse deck.
To examine the
diurnal timing of Oriental Honey-buzzard migration, we included
data from counts taken in 1998 (45.5 hours during 2–8 March)
and 1999 (35 hours during 1–5 March 1999) by Lim Aun Tiah
of the Malaysian Nature Society (MNS). We used Chi² tests to
examine the significance of variation in arrival times. |
RESULTS
In total, 11,442 migrating raptors were counted in 2000– 2001
(an average rate of 66.5 birds/hour). In 2000, we counted 3,188
migrant raptors (30.7 birds/hour): 2,519 Oriental Honey-buzzards,
561 Black Bazas Aviceda leuphotes, 30 Chinese Goshawks
Accipiter soloensis, 18 Greyfaced Buzzards Butastur
indicus and five Japanese Sparrowhawks Accipiter gularis,
plus 55 unidentified individuals. In 2001, we counted 8,254 migrant
raptors (121 birds/hour): 8,129 Oriental Honey-buzzards, 47 Black
Bazas, 32 Chinese Goshawks, 30 Grey-faced Buzzards and seven Japanese
Sparrowhawks, plus nine unidentified individuals. Additional migrating
raptors, almost all likely to have been Oriental Honey-buzzards,
were seen by other observers making landfall along the Malaysian
coast north and south of the watch site during our study, but these
are not included in our totals.
Oriental Honey-buzzard
was the most common migrant, making up 93% of migrating raptors
in 2000–2001, followed by Black Baza (5.3%), with Chinese
Goshawk, Grey-faced Buzzard and Japanese Sparrowhawk comprising
the remainder. We recorded five other raptor species that we assumed
to be resident: Black-shouldered Kite Elanus caeruleus,
Brahminy Kite Haliastur indus, White-bellied Sea Eagle
Haliaeetus leucogaster, Changeable Hawk Eagle Spizaetus
cirrhatus and Black-thighed Falconet Microhierax fringillarius.
In 1998–2001,
Oriental Honey-buzzards were significantly more likely to be seen
during 11h00–13h00 than at other times of day (59% of records,
(Chi²=3751.4,d.f.=1, P=0.001, Fig. 3). Like Wells (1999), we
found that the Oriental Honey-buzzard migration was usually concentrated
into a 4–5 hour period after the arrival of the first wave
of migrants, and few individuals were seen after this time. On the
eight days in 2000–2001 on which we counted more than 100
Oriental Honey-buzzards per day, the first arrivals were at 11h08
on average (standard deviation=35.9 min).
The majority
of Oriental Honey-buzzards (96.7%) made landfall during light to
moderate (<15 km/h) winds. When winds exceeded 20 km/h, we did
not observe any migrating raptors making landfall. Over 99% of Oriental
Honey-buzzards were recorded in flocks (184 flocks in total), and
just 14 individuals were recorded migrating alone. Mean flock size
was 57.7 individuals, and the maximum was 388 individuals. The highest
single hour total of Oriental Honey-buzzards was 841 at 11h00–12h00
on 9 March 2001.
The maximum
daily count of Black Bazas was 325 individuals (in one flock) on
17 March 2000. The period in which migrants were recorded was 2
March–22 March for Oriental Honey-buzzard, 9 March–21
March for Black Baza, 2 March–21 March for Chinese Goshawk,
2–21 March for Japanese Sparrowhawk and 2–17 March for
Grey-faced Buzzard.
Most (>75%)
Oriental Honey-buzzards and all individuals of the other four species
were observed migrating eastwards within 300 m of the watch site.
All migrants arrived from below eye-level to a maximum height of
30 m. Oriental Honey-buzzards were often first seen low in flapping
flight over the sea as they attempted to gain altitude about 500
m from shore. Black Baza and Chinese Goshawk were only observed
arriving in gliding flight in flocks at a height of c.30 m. |

Figure
3 : Diurnal pattern of Oriental Honey-buzzard Pernis
ptilorhyncus
migration at Tanjung Tuan, Malaysia, during 1998–2001.

Figure 4 : Frequency distribution of migrant Oriental
Honey-buzzard
Pernis ptilorhyncus flocks at Tanjung Tuan, Malaysia in
2000–2001.
|
DISCUSSION
Our observations confirm previous records of significant numbers
of migrant raptors at Tanjung Tuan, e.g. L. A. Tiah (in litt. 2002)
counted 5,093 migrating Oriental Honey-buzzards (112 birds/hour)
in early March 1998, and 1,040 (63.7 birds/hour) in early March
1999. Our maximum hourly totals also accord with previous records:
680 individuals/hour on 3 March 1964 (Medway and Nisbet 1965), 670
on 2 March 1998 and 616 on 4 March 1998 (L. A. Tiah in litt. 2002).
We observed
the largest daily numbers of Oriental Honey-buzzards in early March.
Since 1955, daily totals of Oriental Honey Buzzards at Tanjung Tuan
exceeded 1,000 individuals on: 1 March 1987 (2,761: J. M. Thiollay
quoted in Wells 1999), 2 March 1998 (1,516: L. A. Tiah in litt.
2002), 2 March 2001 (1,758: this study), 3 March 2001 (1,285: this
study), 4 March 1983 (1,552: see Wells 1990a), 4 March 1998 (1,115:
L. A. Tiah in litt. 2002), 6 March 2001 (1,222: this study), 15
March 2000 (1,136: this study), 26 March 1964 (1,200: see Medway
and Nisbet 1965) and 27 March 1964 (1,602: see Medway and Nisbet
1965). The first Oriental Honey-buzzard migrants of the season have
been seen as early as late January (Medway and Wells 1976) to 13
February (Oakeley 1955), and as late as 2 April (White 1961, Wells
1990a), and 3 April further south over Singapore (Hurrell 1961).
Other authors
have recorded earlier and later dates of migrant raptors than those
we recorded, reflecting the limited duration of our visits. Wells
(1999) noted the earliest Chinese Goshawks around Tanjung Tuan on
3 February, and the latest on 15 April, while C. Nualsri (in litt.
2005) recorded 84% of individuals of this species at Chumphon, Thailand,
during 28–30 March 2005. Wells (1999) recorded Japanese Sparrowhawk
at Tanjung Tuan from 15 February to early May, with peak passage
on 21 March–15 April. For Black Baza, 96% of migrants were
seen during 16–30 March at Chumphon, Thailand (C. Nualsri
in litt. 2005). For Grey-faced Buzzard, the earliest migrants at
Hulu Klang (Selangor) near Kuala Lumpur were on 17 February 2006
(M. Chong in litt. 2006), while migration peaked in early to mid-March
at Chumphon, with 79% of individuals during 8–19 March in
2005 (C. Nualsri in litt. 2005).
Five additional
raptor species have been recorded migrating at the site: Osprey
Pandion haliaetus, Blackshouldered Kite, Black Kite Milvus
migrans, Eastern Marsh Harrier Circus (aeruginosus) spilonotus
and Common Buzzard Buteo buteo (Wells 1990a, 1999,
Zalles and Bildstein 2000). Non-raptor migrants (including Bluetailed
Bee-eater Merops philippinus and Blue-throated Beeeaters
M. viridis) have been described elsewhere (DeCandido et
al. 2004a,c).
Our findings
with regard to wind direction and wind speed in relation to raptor
migration generally agree with Wells (1990a, 1999). Usually, raptors
made landfall nearest the lighthouse when winds were light and had
a westerly component. When westerly winds exceeded 10 km/h, greater
numbers of migrating raptors were sometimes counted 6 km south at
Kampung Segenting (L. A. Tiah in litt. 2002). When winds were north-easterly,
raptors tended to drift further north up the coast. However in early
March, light winds from other directions occasionally produced significant
numbers of migrating honey-buzzards: during 14h00–15h00 on
2 March 2001, we counted 809 Oriental Honey-buzzards on east–northeast
winds of 2–10 km/h. The following day with similar winds,
we counted 377 honey-buzzards during 11h00–12h00, with much
of the migration passing to the north. When winds switched to south–south-east
by 13h00, we counted 801 honey-buzzards, mostly passing to the south.
Our observations
of the diurnal timing of raptor migration, which showed a clear
peak at 11h00–13h00 (Fig. 3), closely agree with those of
Wells (1990a). Possible explanations for this peak include: (a)
the location of appropriate roosting areas in north-eastern Sumatra;
(b) the timing of the onset of thermals in coastal Sumatra; and
(c) the timing of changes in meteorological conditions, especially
wind direction and speed, at Tanjung Tuan. All of these warrant
additional investigation, as do the factors that initiate movements
of particularly large numbers Oriental Honey-buzzards. Compared
to Agostini et al. (2005), who found that 82% of Eurasian Honey-buzzard
Pernis apivorus flocks crossed the Tyrrhenian Sea from
Cape Bon (Tunisia) to mainland Italy during 12h00–15h00, we
found that the majority of Oriental Honeybuzzard flocks (52%) made
landfall from 11h00–13h00. The difference was probably because
the European birds had to make a much longer (>150 km) sea crossing.
The total numbers
of migrant raptors each year at Tanjung Tuan is still not known,
because observations have only been for only relatively brief periods
of time per season (single day counts in the 1950s, three days in
1964, six days in 1983, and 15 days in 2000 and 11 days in2001).
On 3–6 March 2001, MNS members formed a north–south
team of observers (an ‘interception line’) stationed
along the coast stretching from 6 km south of the Tanjung Tuan at
Kampung Segenting to the northern part of Port Dickson town. They
found that 28% (of 4,302) migrating Oriental Honey-buzzards made
landfall north and south of Tanjung Tuan. Based on these data, the
totals we counted, and the limited duration of our observations
in the two seasons, we estimate that 10,000–20,000 Oriental
Honey-buzzards make the crossing from Sumatra to the west coast
of Malaysia each spring. By comparison, Medway and Wells (1976)
estimated that c.180,000 Oriental Honey-buzzards migrated south
over west peninsular Malaysia in autumn 1963. Recent observations
in spring at Tanjung Tuan suggest daily maxima of 1,500–1,800
individuals are likely at Tanjung Tuan, with both historical and
recent counts indicating that the peak of the Oriental Honey-buzzard
migration is likely to be in early March. Overall, the number of
Oriental Honey-buzzards counted at Tanjung Tuan are similar to spring
counts of migrating Eurasian Honey-buzzards making long (>15
km) sea crossings at Italy and Gibraltar (Giordano 1991, Agostini
1992, Zalles and Bildstein 2000), and recent autumn migration counts
of Oriental Honey-buzzards in Thailand (DeCandido et al. 2004b).
We recommend
the following: (1) a season-long count from mid-February to mid-May
should be conducted by experienced observer(s) in order to determine
the magnitude of the migration of all raptor species; (2) in early
March, a north–south ‘interception line’ of observers
perpendicular to the line of migration should be set up from several
kilometres north of the lighthouse in Port Dickson to several kilometres
south of the lighthouse in order to validate the percentage of migrants
that are not observed from Tanjung Tuan; (3) a ringing programme
should be established to determine the condition, age and sex of
individuals arriving through the season; (4) a watch site should
be set up in a highly accessible location (e.g. the grounds of a
hotel) near Tanjung Tuan, coinciding with demonstrations involving
captive birds of prey. Most people in Malaysia are unaware of the
great diversity of migrant species that pass through their country
in spring and autumn. Using the spectacle of raptor migration at
Tanjung Tuan combined with live, captive birds of prey affords a
significant opportunity to make many influential people aware of
this annual phenomenon in the area of Port Dickson. |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We dedicate this research to the late Laurence Poh and his wife, Audrey.
We greatly appreciate the encouragement and thoughtful advice of members
of the Malaysian Nature Society including Ooi Beng Yean and Liew Siew
Lan, Chiu Sein Chiong and Regina Anthony, Cheang Kum Seng, Dr. Chan
Kai Soon, Mike Chong, Lim Aun Tiah and Lim Kim Chye. Chukiat Nualsri
provided information regarding spring migrating raptors near Chumphon,
Thailand. Anne Arrowsmith
designed the maps. David Wells provided many helpful comments and
ideas. William Duckworth critically read the manuscript and directed
us to historical information about bird migration in South-East Asia.
We wish to acknowledge the hospitality shown to us by members of the
Tanjung Tuan lighthouse staff. This is Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Contribution
to Conservation Science number 132. Forktail 22 (2006) SHORT NOTES
159. |
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Kindly
submitted by:
Robert DeCandido,
Acopian Center for Conservation Learning, Hawk Mountain Sanctuary,
410 Summer Valley Road, Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania 17961 U.S.A. Correspondence:
1831 Fowler Avenue, The Bronx, New York 10462-3708 U.S.A. Email:
rdcny@earthlink.net
Deborah
Allen, P.O. Box 1452 Peter Stuyvesant Station, New York 10009 U.S.A.
Email: dallenyc@earthlink.net
Keith L.
Bildstein, Acopian Center for Conservation Learning, Hawk Mountain
Sanctuary, 410 Summer Valley Road, Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania 17961
U.S.A. Email: bildstein@hawkmtn.org |
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