A Bird Paradise
There are
over 10, 000 bird species in the world according to Birdlife International and
the of those 1,000 species can be found in Uganda not counting the other
species that have not been yet discovered. Birds are wondrous creatures that
can be found anywhere in the world, but each location has species that are
meant for the environment they are.
Uganda
being in the tropics has a variety of bird species that can be viewed from
anywhere, it does not matter if you are in Kampala where buildings are
competing with the skyline, you will still hear birds chirping away in the
distance singing songs so beautiful you need to pause to listen.
Apart from
seeing the birds all over Kampala, there are so many other places that have
rare birds all over Uganda that you can go see, here are our major bird reserve
recommendations. Even better, Jovago has hotels in all the major bird watching areas in
Uganda so all your hospitality needs within the parks and outside the reserves
are well taken care of.
Entebbe
Botanical Gardens;
Right off
the Entebbe- Kampala highway in the heart of
Entebbe you will find a beautifully landscaped area covered with trees till the
lake and as you walk through the trees you will find a number of vervet monkeys in the trees or just walking
on the grounds. Carry binoculars to identify a number of the birds that are
relative to the Ugandan environment but mostly you will find; Great Blue and Ross’s turacos ,
Klaas’s and Diederik Cuckoos , Woodland Kingfisher , Broad-billed Roller ,Black
and white casqued hornbill and starling, African Fish eagle and Eastern Grey
Plantain-eater, Hadada Ibis and Hooded Vultures, Shikra , Lizard buzzard ,
Long-crested eagle , Grey kestrel, Black Crake, Blue-cheeked Bee eater, Angola
swallow , winding and red faced cisticolas , Grey capped warbler, common
wattle-eye , and Green- throated and scarlet-chested Sunbirds.
Mabira Forest;
The thick forest cover along Kampala- Jinja highway
is home to over 315 including unrecorded rare bird species throughout and
offers a variable bird list to any bird enthusiast. Mabira forest is also the
best place to start your bird tour in Uganda and while there you will be able
to see species such as; Yellow White-eye, White-shouldered Titi, African Dusky
Flycatcher, Hairy-breasted Barbet, Barn Swallow, Speckled Tinkerbird, Collared
Sunbird, Little Green Sunbird, Yellow-throated Tinkerbird, Yellow-billed Kite
(sighted in flight over the forest), Bocage Bush Shrike (Grey-green
Bush-shrike), Hooded Vulture, Red-capped Robin Chat, Ashy Flycatcher, African
Shrike Flycatcher, Grey-backed Camaroptera, Red-billed Paradise Flycatcher, African
Harrier Hawk, Great Blue Turaco, Yellow-mantled Weaver, Black-and-white
Mannkin, Slender-billed Greenbul, Weyn's Weaver, White-throated Greenbul,
Grey-headed Nigrofinch, Viellots Black Weaver, Red-chested Cuckoo,
Buff-throated Apalis, Brown-throated Wattle-eye, Chestnut Wattle-eye, Jameson's
Wattle-eye, Red-bellied Paradise Flycatcher, African Blue Flycatcher among many
others.
Bodongo Forest Reserve;
This expansive mixture of tropical tree species is a
true bird paradise is one of Uganda’s biggest forest reserves with over 360
bird species with 22 species that can only be found in that very area such as; Puvel’s Illadopsis, Nahan’s Francolin, and the
Chocolate–Backed Kingfisher, White-headed Saw-wing, White Wagtail,
Black-eared Ground-Thrush, Little Crake, Yellow-billed Barbet, Chestnut-capped
Flycatcher, African Paradise Flycatcher, Chin-spot Batis, Grey-backed
Camaroptera, Lemon-bellied Crombec, African Moustached Warbler, Green-backed
Eremomela, Yellow-throated Greenbul, African Citril, African Golden-breasted
Bunting, Black-crowned Waxbill. Be sure to even more endangered species all
over the reserve.
Mount Elgon
Mount Elgon is located in the eastern part of Uganda
has thick forests with a up to 300 species. The park harbours 43 of the 144
species of the Guinea–Congo Forests biome and 56 of the 88 species of
Afrotropical highland biome that occur in Uganda with some isolated records of
the near-threatened species, the Taita Falcon. Mount Elgon represents a range
limit of some species or races that occur in the highlands of Kenya and
northern Tanzania, such as Hunter’s Cisticola and Jackson's Francolin. You can
find the; Cape Robin, Blue-shouldered Robin-Chat, Little Rock-Thrush, Northern
Anteater C, Nightingale, Spotted Morning-Thrush, Mountain Yellow Warbler,
African Reed Warbler, Little Rush Warbler, Upchers Warbler, Blackcap, Common
Whitethroat, Common Chiffchaff, the Uganda and Brown Woodland Warblers, Green
Hylia, White-browed Crombec, Yellow-bellied Hyliota, the Stout, Thrilling, and
Rattling Cisticolas. Chances of seeing the Banded Prinia, Chestnut-throated
Apalis, Northern Double-collared Sunbird, Grey-headed Sunbird among several
others.
Semuliki National Park;
This park has a large number of mostly
Central African bird species that are not easily sighted in the rest of East
Africa such as; Savanna biome, Piapiac, Red-throated Bee-eater,and Purple
Glossy-starling, Blue Swallow, White-throated Blue Swallow, Swamp Palm Bulbul,
Spotted Greenbul, White-starred Robin, Lowland Akalat, Red-throated Alethe,
Fire-crested Alethe, Snowy-headed Robin-Chat, Blue-shouldered Robin-Chat,
Red-eyed Puffback, White-tailed Robin-Chat, Northern Bearded Scrub-Robin,
Capped Wheatear, Common Stonechat, Abyssinian Ground-Thrush, Oberlaender
Ground-Thrush, Grey Ground-Thrush, Little Grey Greenbul, Toro Olive Greenbul,
Mountain Greenbul, Yellow-throated Nicator, Western Nicator, Purple-throated
Cuckoo-shrike, Petit’s Cuckoo-shrike, Black Saw-wing, Eurasian Oystercatcher,
Long-tailed Hawk.
By Evelyn Masaba
Public Relations Manager
Jovago Uganda
Very informative post for nature lovers and bird watchers.
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