160 © British Birds 97 • April 2004 • 160-182
ABSTRACT Israel is renowned for the large numbers of pelicans, storks and
raptors which migrate through the country en route to and from African
wintering areas. From 1990 to 1999, the autumn migration of soaring birds
was intensively studied during the Northern Valleys Survey,one of the few
comprehensive, long-term, ground-observation surveys in the Western
Palearctic.The principal species, including White Stork Ciconia ciconia, Honey-
buzzard Pernis apivorus, Levant Sparrowhawk Accipiter brevipes and Lesser
Spotted Eagle Aquila pomarina, tend to concentrate in large numbers on a
relatively narrow front, making them comparatively easy to monitor.This
paper, which complements an earlier paper describing raptor migration at
Eilat (Shirihai & Christie 1992), summarises the results of the survey between
1990 and 1999. For some species, long-term monitoring on migration routes
provides critical information on world population trends, otherwise
unobtainable from the breeding grounds.
Soaring bird migration
over northern Israel
in autumn
Dan Alon, Barak Granit, Judy Shamoun-Baranes,
Yossi Leshem, Guy M. Kirwan and Hadoram Shirihai
83. Lesser Spotted Eagles Aquila pomarina, migrating over northern Israel, October 2002.This photograph
shows part of a flock-stream containing nearly 2,000 Lesser Spotted Eagles. Hadoram Shirihai