After rainless months a heavy afternoon shower meant that the evening would be thick with flying termites. Despite the running around to close windows and turn off lights to keep them out of the house, I always find these termite eruptions thrilling. And so do the local birds.
Tokay Gecko
During the actual after-dark flight it is the tokay geckoes that are the most active hunters. However, both Indochinese Rollers and Red-wattled Lapwings made use of our outdoor lighting to feed through the evening. Then arrived a new bird for our garden: a pair of Spotted Owlets. They took termites off the ground but were very sensitive to my presence and disappeared quickly before I managed to get any photos. However, they did eventually come back and I got a few distant shots.
Indochinese Roller
Red Wattled Lapwing
Spotted Owlets
The next morning I found the striking sight of circular piles of termites on the floor tiles under the lights of our open-sided sala. Rather than crawl away to all the cracks and crevices around the garden they were trying to hide underneath each other! Several birds, including Magpie Robins, Streak-eared Bulbuls, Pied Starlings and Mynas, were picking them off.
Oriental Magpie Robin
Asian Pied Starling
Streak-eared Bulbul
Common Myna
However, being under a roof most of the birds stayed away so I swept up the majority of termites and dumped them in a big pile in a more open area where I could watch what was going on more easily. There then followed two days of many birds slowly picking their way through the pile, including the Owlets coming back the next night.
Added to those already mentioned were Koels and Greater Coucals who I had seen feeding on termites before plus a few new ones: a White-breasted Waterhen, Javan Pond-herons, Baya Weavers and a very cute pair of Lapwing chicks! Only female Weavers took the termites. These birds are usually seed-eaters so I guess they were taking these protein-packages to their growing chicks.
White-breasted Waterhen
Javan Pond-heron
Baya Weavers
A beak to avoid
Mynas also staying away from the head-end of this Koel
Red-wattled Lapwing chick
By far the most numerous were the Great Mynas with up to about 20 around the pile at once. They kept out of beak-range of the larger birds, especially the Pond-heron's long dagger, but they also reluctantly gave the slightly larger Common Myna some space if it chased them. They were always lively and noisy with disputes that were impossible to follow but fascinating to watch.
Great Mynas in charge of the pile...
...until a Common Myna struts through
Joining the feast in quieter moments was a Striped Ground-squirrel.
Weeks later I still find some termite wings lying around the garden, which takes me back to the avian feeding frenzy. I wish I could come up with a better estimate of just how many termites there were but the best I can do is guess that the pile I made probably contained several thousand termites. And my list of termite-eating birds in our garden is now 16 species.
So dainty...
...less so
Pied Starlings are perhaps my favourite termite-eaters for their busy, no-nonsense attitude
Another termite disappears
I'm not sure what happened to its head feathers but it's not bad camouflage in the right place
Finally, I would like to thank all those hectic but ultimately tragic termites who provided me with such a great opportunity to watch the birds and other wildlife in our garden without having to try very hard.
Fluffed with satisfaction
After lunch, time to launch