View allAll Photos Tagged Pechora
I've always had a soft spot for Pipits and Pechora is surely the best of the lot. Not only is it very rare in the UK but it is fantastic looking and, as the name suggests, comes from the remote Pechora River area in Northern Siberia.
I have seen one previously in the UK last century [How old that makes me sound] but have bumped into them in both China and Siberia on foreign trips.
This one turned up in Trow Quarry, South Shields which has an amazing reputation for rare birds. It was very difficult to see well and it was pure luck that it landed in front of me
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Pechora Star waiting to lock out at Eastham at first Light.
Tolka River Valley Park (TRVP)
Finglas/Cabra
Dublin, Ireland 30-03-2022
Scientific classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Aves
Order:Passeriformes
Family:Phylloscopidae
Genus:Phylloscopus
Species:P.collybita.tristis
Binomial name
Phylloscopus collybita tristis
Siberian chiffchaff (Phylloscopus (collybita) tristis) is a leaf-warbler which is usually considered a subspecies of the common chiffchaff, but may be a species in its own right.
P. (c.) tristis, the Siberian chiffchaff, breeds in Siberia east of the Pechora River and winters in the lower Himalayas.
It is also regularly recorded in western Europe in winter, and it is likely that the numbers involved have been underestimated due to uncertainties over identification criteria, lack of good data and recording policies (Sweden and Finland only accept trapped birds)
It is a dull subspecies, grey or brownish above and whitish below, with little yellow in the plumage, and the buff-white supercilium is often longer than in the western subspecies. It has a higher pitched suitsistsuisit song and a short high-pitched cheet call.
It is sometimes considered to be a full species due to its distinctive plumage and vocalisations, being similar to P. s. sindianus in these respects.
Nominate P. c. collybita and P. c. tristis do not recognize each other's songs
Pending resolution of the status of P. (c.) fulvescens, which is found where the ranges of P. c. abietinus and P. c. tristis connect and may or may not be a hybrid between these, tristis is maintained in P. collybita
Range
Siberian chiffchaff breeds in Siberia east of the Pechora River and winters in the lower Himalayas.
Status in Europe
It is also regularly recorded in western Europe in winter, and it is likely that the numbers involved have been underestimated due to uncertainties over identification criteria, lack of good data and recording policies (Sweden and Finland only accept trapped birds).
Because of their unfamiliar appearance, British records in the 1950s and 1960s were originally thought to be greenish warblers, and accepted as such by BBRC, the national rarities committee, until the records were reviewed in the 1980s.
vocalisations
It is a dull bird, grey or brownish above and whitish below, with little yellow in the plumage, and the buff-white supercilium is often longer than in the western subspecies. It has a higher pitched suitsistsuisit song and a short high-pitched cheet call. It is sometimes considered to be a full species due to its distinctive plumage and vocalisations, being similar to P. s. sindianus in these respects.
Taxonomy
Common chiffchaffs (of the nominate race) and Siberian chiffchaffs do not recognize each others songs. Pending resolution of the status of the form fulvescens, which is found where the ranges of common chiffchaff (of the race abietinus) and Siberian chiffchaff connect and may, or may not, be a hybrid between these, tristis is maintained in P. collybita by most checklists