On 5th December 2016 I visited an unremarkable road in an equally unremarkable but pleasant housing estate located at Broadfield near Crawley in West Sussex. I was with my good friend Clackers and our reason for visiting Beachy Road was to see a juvenile Rose coloured Starling that was frequenting a small back garden in that road.
Our mission was quickly successful and satisfied with our views of the Rose coloured Starling, which being a juvenile was not rose coloured at all, we made our way back to Oxford. Today, just over a month later I made a repeat visit to Broadfield with Peter, another Oxonbirder colleague, as in the intervening month or so the Rose coloured Starling had progressed its moult to such an extent that it was now beginning to look like an adult and was well worth looking at again.
The Rose coloured Starling in early December 2016 |
The Rose coloured Starling in mid January 2017 |
As this bird remains unsexed all one can say is that it is now in its second calendar year and its plumage will continue to change rapidly from now on until presumably it will look like a true adult possibly similar to the one I saw in Norfolk (see image below) or will it? The body plumage of the individual at Broadfield, although now showing a definite pink tinge is nowhere near the saturated bright pink of the Norfolk individual. So my question is as follows: Do they not acquire the rich pink body plumage until their third calendar year? Or is this bird a female and therefore duller than a male which presumably was the sex of the Norfolk bird?
Having little experience of this species apart from seeing six separate displaced migrants in Britain such as this one, I am not really qualified or able to supply an answer but some research online tells me that true adult males do not get their rich pink and black plumage until they are over two years old but second calendar year male birds do assume a duller plumage similar to a female. That is assuming the Broadfield bird is a male. It may well be a female in which case it will acquire its duller full adult plumage when it is a year old. We will have to wait and see.
Having little experience of this species apart from seeing six separate displaced migrants in Britain such as this one, I am not really qualified or able to supply an answer but some research online tells me that true adult males do not get their rich pink and black plumage until they are over two years old but second calendar year male birds do assume a duller plumage similar to a female. That is assuming the Broadfield bird is a male. It may well be a female in which case it will acquire its duller full adult plumage when it is a year old. We will have to wait and see.
Adult Rose coloured Starling (Third calendar year or older) Wells-next-Sea Norfolk June 2013 |
Second calendar year Rose coloured Starling Crawley West Sussex January 2017 |
The starling itself seems perfectly settled and why should it not be? It has a constant supply of food put out by the owners of the garden it favours, sharing the food and habitat amicably with Common Starlings, Chaffinches and Blackbirds amongst others and has the security of both conifer and deciduous trees at the bottom of the garden in which to perch and hide.
What a bird that normally spends the winter in peninsular India and Sri Lanka is doing eking out an existence far to the west in Great Britain is unanswerable but vagrants annually turn up in Great Britain and have also done so in many western European countries. These vagrant birds are often very confiding and the greatest numbers arrive when they have had a particularly good breeding season.
Other names for this bird are Rosy Starling and Rose coloured Pastor and recently it has been established that it is not related to our Common Starling and has been assigned to a genus of its own called Pastor. Its Latin binomen being Pastor roseus
All the time we were there it restricted itself to the small area that consists of the back garden it feeds in and the large conifer and two bare deciduous trees that grow at the end of the small garden. It is confiding and shows little concern at close approaches by birders and/or photographers.
What a bird that normally spends the winter in peninsular India and Sri Lanka is doing eking out an existence far to the west in Great Britain is unanswerable but vagrants annually turn up in Great Britain and have also done so in many western European countries. These vagrant birds are often very confiding and the greatest numbers arrive when they have had a particularly good breeding season.
Other names for this bird are Rosy Starling and Rose coloured Pastor and recently it has been established that it is not related to our Common Starling and has been assigned to a genus of its own called Pastor. Its Latin binomen being Pastor roseus
Rose coloured Starling and Common Starling |
During our visit a steady trickle of interested passers by, residents and birders came and went and the Rose coloured Starling sat in the bare boughs of its favourite tree and watched the proceedings, in between bouts of preening and bill wiping on the boughs of the tree.
The Rose coloured Starling spent much time wiping its bill on the branches Note the nictitating membrane protecting its eye |
Nice report. I'm hoping to visit Beachy Rd before going for a flight from Gatwick on Monday (!)...time tight so any tips on favoured location so I'm in with the best chance? Cheers, Adam
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