PHOWN summaries and recordsVirtual Museum View records in Virtual Museum formatCoverage map for all species Species totals, Nest stats per species and Observer totals Species summary , or General query Observer records, or View VM record Photo of the week, or PHOWN repeats, or PHOWN priorities |
PHOWN record summary
Enter new vm record to see a different record and hit 'Go'.
|
Species allocated by Coordinator: Record details entered by participant: (see all records here for this participant) Google map for this record (zoom in and switch to satellite view)
Best: Vitelline Masked Weaver - first record for species from Ghana
Photos uploaded by observer
 
Large photos
1153, Vitelline Masked Weaver Ploceus vitellinus (see species summary here)Record status ACCEPTED Vm 5333 [on-line data upload (2013-04-10): 37225] Species Vitelline Masked Weaver Ploceus vitellinus Observer(s) Davies J Country, town, locus Ghana, , Nasia,
NW_010000BBLocality Wetland south of Nasia Latitude, longitude 10.1445825347128, -0.804206728935242 [0 m accuracy] Date 2013/2/22 Notes Two nests next to each other alongside the road, situated roughly 40m from the nearest water. The nests were roughly 3m from the ground in an Acacia. Nest count 2 Nest site tree
To see this map with all other PHOWN records, click here. Note that the map on this page will load very slowly and probably will only work if you use Chrome as a browser.
History of repeat colony counts
Note: repeats from the same day are not shown.vm Species code Date Nests Notes 5332 0 20/2/2013 2 Suspected to be a nest of Little Weaver, 2 birds were recorded at the same site 10m away, and nest size and shape matched up for Little Weaver although I'm not 100% certain as Black-headed Weaver - Ploceus melanocephalus has been recorded from the vicinity and the nest is similar. Nest size played a role in my opinion of this being Little Weaver though. The nests were not over water but within 15m of water. 5333 1153 22/2/2013 2 Two nests next to each other alongside the road, situated roughly 40m from the nearest water. The nests were roughly 3m from the ground in an Acacia.
Vm 5332
Vm 5333