During the month of July 2007 I have recorded 54 species of birds
in a 3 hectare area around our house on Whiskers Creek Road (or, for those in
brackets, other parts of the area).
Water
birds: Little pied cormorant, Australian wood duck,
(Pacific black duck, Masked Lapwing White-faced heron, Australasian grebe,
Purple Swamphen, Australasian Shelduck, Black-fronted plover,)
Birds
of prey:
(Wedge-tailed eagle, Nankeen kestrel, Collared sparrowhawk, Black‑shouldered
kite)
Parrots
and relatives:
Yellow-tailed black-cockatoo, Sulphur-crested cockatoo, Galah, Crimson rosella,
Eastern rosella, Gang-gang cockatoo (Red-rumped parrot).
Kingfishers
and other non-songbirds: Laughing kookaburra, (Common bronzewing,
Crested pigeon)
Honeyeaters:
Eastern
spinebill, White-eared honeyeater, Yellow-tufted honeyeater, Red wattlebird,
Noisy Miner
Flycatchers
and similar species: Scarlet robin, Golden whistler (Welcome swallow, Willie
wagtail, Flame robin, Magpie-lark)
Other,
smaller, birds:
Weebill, Striated thornbill, Yellow-rumped thornbill, Superb fairy-wren,
White-throated treecreeper, Silvereye, Spotted pardalote, Varied sittella,
(Common starling, Buff-rumped
thornbill, Skylark, European goldfinch, House sparrow)
Other,
larger, birds:
White-winged chough, Pied Currawong, Grey currawong, Grey butcherbird,
Australian Magpie, Australian Raven, Little Raven
Following the heavy rain in
mid-late June water birds, including up to 20 Australian shelduck, have remained
on Hoskintown Plain. The flock of up to
150 Australian magpies reported last month at Plains Road and Briars-Sharrow
Road was still around.
There have been many reports of
unusual honeyeaters from Canberra recently and the appearance of a
yellow-tufted honeyeater at our house suggests they may be
spreading here. Some species of birds
seem to be getting down to nest building (and other preparations for
breeding). This seems to be a little
earlier than usual.
Bird of the Month
This is based upon material in the
very good book “bringing birds back” published by Greening Australia. Comments in brackets are by this author.
Superb fairy-wren: Malurus cyaneus
Appearance: Small bold bird with long tail
held erect. Breeding males metallic blue
and navy (unmistakeable in this area).
Females and immatures brown: non-breeding males also brown but with blue
tail.
Voice: Often detected first by its brisk “prip-prip
call; also a merry trilling song.
Habits: Family groups (often large – up to 16 birds
at our patch, with non-breeding males ‘helping out’ the females). Found wherever there is some dense
cover. Often perches on fences and feeds
in the open outside revegetation plantings, fleeing for cover.
Food: Mostly insects and other invertebrates,
occasionally seeds and other plant matter.
Nest: Domed,
made of fine twigs, grass and moss, bound with spider web. Usually in grass tussocks or dense shrubbery
close to the ground. (Because of the
position of the nest they are rarely seen.
Most breeding records are of dependent young.)
Occurrence in Revegation: The most commonly occurring bird in the
Greening Australia survey of revegetation sites, recorded at 91% of sites. (This is a higher frequency than recorded in
the COG Garden Bird Survey, probably reflecting the bird’s preference for
habitat with some dense cover.)
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