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Currawong eats cuckoo? Katoomba!

To: Carol Probets <>
Subject: Currawong eats cuckoo? Katoomba!
From:
Date: Sun, 4 Jun 2006 17:07:31 +1000
Thanks, Carol. The bronze-cuckoo chest/belly barring was v.clearly visible. (Even dead it seemed to have the jizz!) So now I can only imagine that the red at the eye was either blood or -- is there a local, small bronze-cuckoo with a red iris...?

Regards,
Judith.


Judith's observation is interesting, but I doubt the unfortunate prey was a Little Bronze-Cuckoo, as these are not found anywhere near the Blue Mountains. We do have Shining Bronze-Cuckoos - some of which overwinter - and less often the Horsfield's. However, because of the red eye-ring, I wonder if it could have been a White-naped Honeyeater, which are around in great numbers right now. Is it possible the striped effect was due to dishevelled feathers?

Earlier this year I saw a Pied Currawong in my garden carrying a freshly dead Eastern Spinebill, so I do suspect they can kill birds around that size occasionally.

It snowed lightly in Katoomba as well on Thursday evening. Despite the cold, we do have plenty of birds in winter, especially when the banksias are flowering well. Perhaps surprisingly, in over 20 years living here, I've yet to see a bird actually frozen to death. The winter overnight minimum temperatures here actually tend to be less extreme than in places like the Capertee Valley and further inland (though the maximum temps are usually lower in Katoomba).

Hope this helps.

cheers

Carol

Carol Probets
Katoomba
Blue Mountains, NSW



At 2:34 PM +1000 4/6/06,  wrote:
On Thursday 1 June 2006, in near-freezing weather, as I was walking along a street in the town of Katoomba (NSW) , I observed the following: A Pied Currawong entered a shrub, and emerged shortly / as I approached, carrying something striped and birdlike in its bill. It flew across the (v.narrow) street, and landed on the bank there. It began pecking at the object. Although this was occurring close to me, I raised my binoculars to see what it was eating. At lowest magnification, the food appeared to be a small Bronze-Cuckoo. The Currawong flopped the dead bird this way and that as it pecked and pulled at it. But the body kept falling away; then the Currawong jumped up onto a low/fallen branch, and repeatedly snagged the dead bird in a fork, but it would shortly fall again, as the Currawong pulled at it. Because of all this movement, the dead bird was difficult to see clearly in more than repeated glimpses from different aspects. However, one STRIKING feature was evident: the dead bird had red eye-rings. I looked for this over and over, as the Currawong flopped the bird around, thinking perhaps this was blood from the eyes. The Currawong, though, was showing no interest in the eyes, working instead at the neck-breast-belly area of the body. And when at last I tried to get closer, the Currawong flew, carrying the body, into a tree-fern, which proved both safe from me and, apparently, a good place to cradle the food while pecking at it. During most of last week, the weather in Katoomba was very cold, and at night was perhaps below zero. That day it had snowed heavily in Blackheath, further up the line. As I didn't see what had killed the bird, I thought it could have frozen to death overnight, and been found in the shrub by the Currawong, just as I was coming down the street... Returning home here to SEQ, though, I find that the only red-eye-ringed Bronze Cuckoo that ranges through NSW is the Little Bronze-Cuckoo, and that my maps do not show this bird as far south as Sydney. Also, what would such a creature be doing in early winter at such an inhospitable altitude...? I am unfamiliar with Blue Mountains birds' habits.

Cheers,
Judith
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