We are back from Menorca where we spent two weeks enjoying this wonderful island for the fifteenth year.
We collected a Fiat Panda from Mahon Airport via our good friends Setta and Mixalis at Momple Car Hire. The little Panda is the ideal car for negotiating the sometimes narrow lanes of the Menorcan countryside or the slender, immaculate streets of quiet inland towns.
We collected a Fiat Panda from Mahon Airport via our good friends Setta and Mixalis at Momple Car Hire. The little Panda is the ideal car for negotiating the sometimes narrow lanes of the Menorcan countryside or the slender, immaculate streets of quiet inland towns.
We split our time between sightseeing, birding and simply relaxing during the warm, sunny days.
"Click the pics" for bigger photos and a taste of Menorca.
"Click the pics" for bigger photos and a taste of Menorca.
Near Es Prat
Near Binimel
Cala Fornells
Es Mercadal
Es Migjorn
Joan Riudavets Moll - Aged 114 years
Melons- Es Migjorn
Es Migjorn
Hotel Ses Tillets
I'm now busy catching up with friends and family alike. Until then the rest of this post is about a relatively common species wherever I go.
I took quite a lot of pictures of flycatchers, birds that at home I would normally just label as “Spotted Flycatcher” Muscicapa striata, the common flycatcher of the UK that breeds in most of Europe and western Asia.
Quite recently the International Ornothological Committee (IOC) decreed that the spotted flycatcher that breeds in the Balearic Islands (Menorca, Majorca, Ibiza) and also the islands of Corsica and Sardinia is a separate and distinct species, Muscicapa tyrrhenica. They named the species Mediterranean Flycatcher.
A molecular phylogenetic study published in 2016 found that the subspecies M. s. tyrrhenica and M. s. balearica were genetically similar to each other but significantly different from the other spotted flycatcher subspecies. The authors proposed that these insular subspecies should be considered as separate rather than conspecific species.
In recent years “splits” of previously conspecific species are all about genetics rather than appearance, and as one might expect, the description of each species is much the same.
It is said that Muscicapa striata has “dull grey-brown upperparts and off-white underparts. The crown, throat and breast are streaked with brown while the wings and tail feathers are edged with paler thin margins.”
In comparison Muscicapa tyrrhenica has “paler and warmer plumage on the upperparts, with more diffuse markings on the head and breast.” The sexes are alike in each case.
Judge for yourself with pictures here from Greece, the UK and Menorca.
Mediterranean Flycatcher - Menorca
Mediterranean Flycatcher - Menorca
Mediterranean Flycatcher - Menorca
Spotted Flycatcher - Greece
Spotted Flycatcher - Greece
Are you a splitter or a joiner? Maybe like me you just enjoy flycatchers - with or without spots?
Linking today to Wild Bird Wednesday, Anni's Birding and Eileen's Saturday Blog.