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Subject: | Re: grubby/odd-cloured cockatoos |
From: | Anne & Roger Green <> |
Date: | Fri, 17 Oct 1997 10:43:20 -0700 |
Shane Raidal wrote: The Cacatua spp. will dig for food and the females will get dirty > when they are preparing a hollow, but usually it is only their faces which > get dirty and the powder down in their plumage soon cleans these areas > during preening. Someone in the SAOA recently reported yellowish Sulphur-crests near the River Murray and I've regularly seen "pink-breasted" Sulphur-crests and Little Corellas, also near the Murray, in winter and spring. They can look awfully like some exciting hybrid but I concluded the pink was from redgum nest frass/"sawdust" and possibly the yellow was from the lining of a limestone nest hole. (Suphur-crests have nesting colonies in the cliffs along the mid and lower Murray) Regards, Anne -- Atriplex Services:-Environmental Consultants, Growers of Australian Native Plants,Landscapers, Bush Guides,Educators. http://www.riverland.net.au/~atriplex |
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