As one would expect, most are tschutshensis. Dark breast in some birds is 
remnant of first year (1st basic) plumage. The bird with dark head and faint 
supercilium may have some macronyx in it but I'm inclined to think such 
individuals are more likely to be thunbergi/tschutschensis (t/t) hybrids or 
even possibly more eastern tschutschensis. (There are photos from Broome by 
George Swann of a similar bird.) Two reasons. Firstly, distribution of taxa 
as shown in Alstrom & Mild's Pipits & Wagtails makes that cross more likely 
than macronyx/tschutschensis (m/t) (whilst not ruling it out). Also perhaps 
more likely because a t/t cross would be a longer distance migrant than an 
m/t cross. In support of this long held belief, see Bell (1996) on leap-frog 
migration in Yellow Wagtails in Journal of Avian Biology (thanks Simon). For 
those without access to Pipits & Wagtails, in central Asia, thunbergi has 
the most northerly range, breeding between ~60-75 deg N to as far east as 
Kamchatka 160 deg E, then replaced by tschutschensis through to Alaska. 
Macronyx is the most southerly breeding form extending north to the latitude 
of northern Sakhalin 55 deg N. In central Asia, tschutschensis occupies the 
intervening region except in far north-eastern china and Sakhalin which is 
the domain of taivana.
 Any way good luck Simon. You'll probably get a head-ache and make little 
progress just like those of us who have gone before!
Mike Carter
30 Canadian Bay Road
Mount Eliza  VIC 3930
Tel  (03) 9787 7136
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