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Spotless Crake Porzana tabuensis is the commonest species of rail in the mid-montane wet grasslands of the Anggi Giji basin in the Arfak Mountains above the coastal gateway town Ransiki.

Extension : Anggi Giji basin

The twin mountain lakes of Anggi Giji and Anggi Gita, situated at 1,860 m elevation in the Sougb-country of the southern Arfak Mountains, were first visited by a western naturalist in 1904, but it was a young Ernst Mayr who in 1928, at the beginning of an extremely productive career in ornithology and evolutionary biology, discovered the area’s paramount ornithological attraction on the eastern shores of Anggi Giji: an entirely new species of munia, which E. Hartert named Lonchura vana, and which is now more commonly known as the Grey-banded Munia.

Whereas this restricted-range species subsequently has been found in the secluded upper Kebar Valley of the Tamrau Mountains, the Anggi Giji basin remains the easiest accessible location to get to grips with this munia and other wet grassland specialists as Lewin’s Rail Lewinia pectoralis and Spotless Crake Porzana tabuensis, moreover in a visually stunning setting. And stands of swampy Pandanus-dominated forest at the base of the surrounding slopes support the highly sought-after Shovel-billed Kookaburra Clytoceyx rex, with a good selection of the montane Arfak avifauna waiting to be explored uphill.

Day-by-day itinerary

Day 1 > After a pre-dawn breakfast in our Ransiki hostel we shall set out on the two hours' drive by 4WD-vehicle to Irai along the shores of Anggi Giji. From here we shall bird all morning following the seasonally fluctuating lake edge to the settlement of Hunku. Pacific Black Duck, Common Coot, Little Grebe, Little Pied and Little Black Cormorant, Great and Intermediate Egret, and Rufous Night-Heron abound and it shall not take long before we spot our first flock of Grey-banded Munias, which in season can congregate in flocks of more than 150 individuals. But observing the two secretive rails may require considerable effort and is influenced also by water levels in the basin. After lunch we shall bird all afternoon in the lakeside grasslands where we may accidentally flush Lewin’s Rail. Come evening and we shall take up position at locally exposed muddy stretches at the interface between grassland and reedbeds bordering the lake's edge. Here both Spotless Crake and Lewin’s Rail ordinarily come out to feed at dusk and we may hear both species vocalizing in season. Other birds we may see here include Black and Yellow Bittern, Clamorous Reed-Warbler, and Tawny Grassbird. Dinner at Hunku.

Day 2 > Subsequent to our pre-dawn breakfast, we’ll spend the first hour of light at muddy stretches and reedbeds along an affluent of Anggi Giji, then walk through grasslands toward a camp at the edge of the basin, where forest extends onto the surrounding hill slopes. After lunch here, we shall first bird the grasslands in this area where we stand another chance of seeing Lewin’s Rail, and later shift to the forest in the hope of finding Shovel-billed Kookaburra, perhaps as it starts calling toward dusk. Other noteworthy forest birds that we may encounter here include New Guinea Woodcock, New Guinea Eagle, Vogelkop Bowerbird, Rufous-sided and Western Smoky Honeyeater, Vogelkop Scrubwren, and Black Sicklebill, while a nocturnal foray after dinner could produce Jungle Hawk-Owl, Large and Mountain Owlet-Nightjar, and Large-tailed Nightjar.

Day 3 > Following an optional spotlighting session and our usual pre-dawn breakfast we shall seek Shovel-billed Kookaburra at first light and spend the rest of the morning in the forest and grassland here. After lunch we shall walk back to Hunku where we shall bird along the lake’s edge until dusk providing us with yet another opportunity to observe the rails. Dinner at Hunku.

Day 4 > After a pre-dawn breakfast we shall enjoy a final morning’s birding along the lake’s edge toward Irai where 4WD-vehicles await us to transport us to our Manokwari hotel after lunch. Dinner and a good night's rest in Manokwari.

Day 5 > Following a hearty breakfast in our Manokwari hotel we shall report at Rendani Airport for the mid-morning's flight to Jakarta.

Related links

Download our Anggi Giji basin tour dossier in handy PDF-format.

Read on about the birdlife of the Arfak Mountains.

Read on about our filming expedition for Vogelkop Bowerbird in the Arfak Mountains with the BBC Natural History Unit.

Browse our terms and conditions.

Browse our check-list of the birds of Papua.

EXTENSION
Anggi Giji basin

5 days/4 nights
From US$ 724


When?
Generally excellent year-round, though flood levels at the height of the rainy season, during the period December to February, may at times make movement through parts of the basin difficult.

Scheduled departure(s)
-

Physical toughness
Relaxed birding in flat or only slightly sloping terrain.

Tour summary
Day 1-4 > Anggi Giji basin.
Day 5 > Manokwari.

    Anggi Giji basin at a glance
  • Get to grips with the endemic Grey-banded Munia and other regional grassland specialists like Lewin's Rail and Spotless Crake in visually stunning mountain scenery.
  • See the highly sought-after Shovel-billed Kookaburra among a diverse montane forest avifauna.

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