A number of Stonechat have been seen at Sabkhat Al Fasl in recent weeks
with all the ones I have seen appearing to be European Stonechat. I saw a male bird with a very white rump patch and plenty of white
extending down the outside of the tail in a Wheatear type tail pattern. This
bird turned out to be a NCT Stonechat the first one of the atumn for me. The
latest data on the Stonechat Saxicola
torquatus has found convincing reasons for recognising three species:
European Stonechat S. rubicola,
Eastern Stonechat S. Maurus and
African Stonechat S. torqatus. The
taxa breeding in the Caspian region, both of which winter in Saudi Arabia, were
revisited and after studying the type description and various museum specimens
it was concluded that the name variegatus
should not be applied to the taxon breeding north of the Caucasus but
rather to the population in eastern Turkey and Transcaucasia presently named armenicus. This means the former variegatus, northern Caspian population,
needed a new name with hemprichii
being the oldest available and valid name for the population. The paper also
called hemprichii (formerly variegatus)
North Caspian Taxon (NCT) and variegatus (formerly
armenicus) South Caspian Taxon (SCT).
The northern population NCT has a very characteristic male plumage with white
portions on each side of the outer tail extending to half to three-quarters of
the tail feather length, similar to many Wheatears and Red-backed Shrike. This
can be seen easily when perched birds spread their tail or when birds fly but
on perched birds with tails closed it can often not be seen. NCT also has a
large unstreaked pale rump patch, buffish when fresh becoming white when
abraded. In comparison European Stonechat has a streaked rump with usually
limited white. Females are more difficult as they resemble both SCT and
nominate birds and often need the tail coverts to be lifted to see the white
(even in the hand), with a few females lacking any white at all. The South
Caspian Taxon is similar to NCT birds but is larger, although a number of
measurements overlap, has less white on the tail bases in male plumage
(normally one-third to half the tail feathers white) often not visible in
flight. Females invariably lack white in the tail. Eastern Stonechat Saxicola maurus is an uncommon passage
migrant and winter visitor with NCT Saxicola
maurus hemprichii and STC Saxicola
maurus variegatus occurring but NCT birds being the commoner type. Migrants
occur mainly from March to April and September to November with many birds
spending the winter where they are often seen in open areas with scattered bushes
and in reeds beds near wetland areas as well as open fields.