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sitellas roosting behaviour?

To: Birding-aus <>
Subject: sitellas roosting behaviour?
From:
Date: Sun, 13 Sep 2009 21:25:49 +0000
I don't have any literature references, but this is how I imagine most small birds roost at night, particularly ones which have group socialising behaviour, as with sittellas.

Even in tropical climates, small birds need to conserve heat, and a clump of small birds is more difficult for nocturnal predators to attack successfully in the night, than a single bird.

In colder climates, small birds will need to cluster in hollows or in some sort of shelter to conserve heat more efficiently.

John Leonard

On 13/09/2009 11:54pm, Gary Wright <> wrote:
Near Djarindjin on Dampier peninsula near Broome, I saw some behaviour from

sitellas I had never seen before tonight. A group of six or seven sitellas

came into a tree at about 5 pm. 3 or 4 at a time sat very close together

just like white breasted woodswallows do, but the actual sittellas involved

changed over. As each new one would come along, the birds would do a loop

around the branch they were sitting on and often the new bird would end up

in the middle of the others. I didn't stay until dark, but the sun was

very low in the sky. I have never seen sitellas sit still before (except

once when sitting horizontal along a branch when a raptor went over) let

alone engage in this behaviour.

Has anyone seen this before? Is this sitella roosting behaviour?



Gary

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