birding-aus

Cocos & Christmas Island Rarities

To: "'Laurie Knight'" <>, "'Dave Torr'" <>
Subject: Cocos & Christmas Island Rarities
From: "Tony Russel" <>
Date: Sun, 9 Jan 2011 12:53:09 +1030
Hang on Laurie - If a vagrant turns up and no-one twitches it, how might we
know that it was ever there ??

On your second point concerning BARC acceptances ,can those people just
returning from Christmas and Cocos add all those exciting new birds to their
Oz lists straight away without waiting for the submissions to be made to
BARC and for the tedious assessment process to take place ?( I say tedious
because it often takes a long time for a determination). Or might it be OK
for them to add them to their lists because in part those people make up the
BARC committee and know most of their ultimate submissions will be accepted?
My bet is that they have added them already ( as would I if I were among
them).

Hey ! I just checked TP's Totals and there they are !!  All added on with
great glee.  Hah!, just as I suspected.

Tony

-----Original Message-----
From: 
 On Behalf Of Laurie Knight
Sent: Sunday, 9 January 2011 12:08 PM
To: Dave Torr
Cc: Birding Aus
Subject: Cocos & Christmas Island Rarities

Or do you mean "if a vagrant turns up and no-one twitches it, was it  
really there?".  More to the point, "if a vagrant turns up and no-one  
twitches it, does anyone really care?"

The big question for the twitcher might be "if a vagrant turns up and  
BARC doesn't accept the observation, can I add it to my list?" ;)

LK

On 09/01/2011, at 11:25 AM, Dave Torr wrote:

> It has always struck me as a little strange that a vagrant that  
> turns up once is added to the list, yet a bird that goes extinct is  
> removed from the list. Perhaps if a vagrant does not turn up again  
> for (say) 50 years it should also be removed from the list? There is  
> also the interesting question of how often does a vagrant have to  
> come before it ceases to be a vagrant? And - to be really  
> philosophical - if a vagrant turns up and no-one twitches it then  
> does it exist???
>
> On 9 January 2011 12:16, Laurie Knight <>  
> wrote:
> How long do you have to reside at a place before you are considered  
> to be part of the population?  Do you include tourists and short- 
> term foreign students?  I'm not sure what the average "half-life" of  
> internment on Christmas Island is.  The long-term residents of  
> Christmas Island are made up of three ethnic groups: Chinese, Malays  
> and mainland Australians.
>
> Shifting the focus of attention to the birds, would you include all  
> the vagrants exciting the twitchers in the bird populations of Xmas  
> and CCK Islands?
>
> LK
>
>
> On 09/01/2011, at 10:32 AM, Carl Clifford wrote:
>
> Tom,
>
> I heartily agree. You could almost say that birding on Christmas and  
> Cocos was SE Asian birding for xenophobes, except for the fact that  
> the population of Cocos is mainly Malay and the population of  
> Christmas is mainly Middle Eastern, albeit they are banged-up in a  
> concentration camp
>
> Cheers,
>
> Carl Clifford
>
>
> On 09/01/2011, at 7:38 AM, Tom Tarrant wrote:
>
> Hi Frank,
>
> I think you are missing the point regarding that comment, as  
> exciting as
> Christmas and Cocos sound (I would love to go birding there!) they  
> are not
> in the same faunal zone as Australia so many birders don't see the
> relevance. You may as well go New Caledonia and add those species to  
> your
> 'French' list.
>
> Tom
>
>
>
> And I remember there was a comment about the possible Short-toed  
> Eagle in
> Victoria being better than the rarities reported on Cocos and  
> Christmas in
> December.  Sorry.  Not even close!!!  I saw 11 new birds for my  
> Australian
> list, and I dipped on two.  Even Mike Carter added 9 birds to his  
> Australian
> list.
>
>
> -- 
> ********************************
> Tom Tarrant
> Kobble Creek, Qld
>
> http://kobble.aviceda.org
>
> http://picasaweb.google.com.au/aviceda/
> ********************************
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