birding-aus

Rockwarbler mimicry

To: Birding-aus aus <>
Subject: Rockwarbler mimicry
From: Ricki Coughlan <>
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 13:58:30 +1000
G'day all

I have looked Rockwarbler mimicry up on the Birding-Aus archives and there is only one mention of it several years ago. Having found only a small repetoire for Rockwarblers in the HANZAB, I felt that it may be good to put another record of this event "out there". Perhaps others will also feel inspired to keep an ear out for this behaviour.
Despite being an avid Rockwarbler observer for some decades, I had  
not witnessed this so emphatically until last Friday. I was in  
Sydney's Royal National Park in the company of a Canadian friend who  
had come to Australia specifically to see this one bird(!) after  
dipping on it in 2004. To her great joy (and a huge reduction in my  
stress levels), we observed a pair of these very confiding birds at  
very close quarters for some time, as they foraged amid moss on a  
large boulder. On more than one occasion, one bird (presumably the  
male) fed some small invertebrates to the other (also not recorded in  
HANZAB).
On two occasions the bird which was providing the food to the other  
stopped foraging and began to beautifully mimic a White-throated  
Treecreeper's "warbling/trill" call - no, not like the occasionally  
heard Rockwarbler "warble" - the Rockwarbler was perfectly  
reproducing the discrete and loud warble which White-throated  
Treecreepers make especially around this time of year. The  
treecreeper was making the same call from a tree on the other side of  
the trail and the calls and their volume of both birds were clearly  
identical.
A number of Acanthizids possess mimicry skills to one degree or  
another, but this event demonstrated to me that it is the Rockwarbler  
which produces the best quality (if not quantity) of mimicry skills.
Ricki Coughlan
Cremorne Point, Sydney

http://www.redtail.net.au



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