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The year 2005 in birding and ornithology.
Worldwide edit
New species edit
See Bird species new to science described in the 2000s.
Rediscoveries edit
In April, an announcement is made that the ivory-billed woodpecker has been rediscovered in North America; in July, doubt is cast on this claim. The debate remains unresolved.
Extinctions edit
The thick-billed ground-dove (Gallicolumba salamonis), last seen in 1927, is officially declared extinct.[1]
Taxonomic developments edit
- The British Ornithologists' Union Records Committee announce that they have adopted the following species split:
- Common scoter and black scoter
- Velvet scoter and white-winged scoter
- Greater Canada goose and Lesser Canada goose
- Yellow-legged gull (split from herring gull)
Ornithologists edit
Deaths edit
- 3 February - Ernst Mayr (born 1904)[2]
- 25 February - Tony Norris (born 1917)[3]
- 23 May – Derek Ratcliffe (born 1929)[4]
- 9 June - James F. Clements (born 1927)
- 3 September - R. S. R. Fitter (born 1913)
World listing edit
- American Peter Kaestner becomes the fourth person ever to see over 8000 species of bird alive.
Europe edit
Britain edit
Breeding birds edit
- A pair of European bee-eaters makes a nesting attempt in Herefordshire - see Bee-eaters in Britain
Migrant and wintering birds edit
- The first part of the year sees a large influx of waxwings into southern England.
Rare birds edit
- Britain's third belted kingfisher was found on 1 April in Staffordshire, and was later seen briefly in east Yorkshire, then in Northeast Scotland; the last was in 1980.
- Britain's second Barrow's goldeneye was found in May in Northeast Scotland.
- Britain's second Audouin's gull was seen briefly at Spurn, east Yorkshire on 1 June.
- An influx of trumpeter finches in Kent and Suffolk in the spring are the first of this species to be seen in Britain since the early 1990s.
- A sooty tern visited the Anglesey tern colonies in North Wales in July - the first ever in Britain to be seen by large numbers of birders.
- Britain's first Swinhoe's storm petrel on a pelagic, 17 km south of the Isles of Scilly on 21 July.[5]
- A yellow warbler on Unst, Shetland in September is Britain's fifth.
- A Siberian rubythroat on Fair Isle, Shetland in October is also Britain's fifth.
- Britain's first magnificent frigatebird is found moribund in Whitchurch, Shropshire following Hurricane Wilma, and dies in care at Chester Zoo
- Britain's fifth green heron is found on Anglesey in November
- Hurricane Wilma also brought an unprecedented influx of laughing gulls to Britain during November
Other Events edit
- The British Birdwatching Fair has Myanmar as its theme for the year.[6]
Ireland edit
Rare birds edit
- Ireland's first green heron is found in County Cork in October
- Ireland's first Barrow's goldeneye is found at Quoile Pondage in County Down in November
References edit
- ^ "Fifth of bird species 'threatened'". CNN. 1 June 2005. Archived from the original on 25 February 2012. Retrieved 2 March 2011.
- ^ "Obituary: Ernst Mayr". The Economist. 10 February 2005. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
- ^ "Tony Norris". The Times. 26 March 2005. Retrieved 2 March 2011.
- ^ Thompson, Des; Birks, H. J. B. (August 2005). "Derek A Ratcliffe 1929-2005". British Wildlife. 16 (6): 410–2.
- ^ Hudson, D, ed. (2009). Isles of Scilly Bird and Natural History Review 2008. Isles of Scilly Bird Group.
- ^ "Celebrating 30 years of Birdfair: 3 decades of global conservation impact". Society for the Protection of Nature in Lebanon. 31 July 2018. Retrieved 12 December 2022.