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Birdline Western Australia Weekly Update

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Subject: Birdline Western Australia Weekly Update
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Date: 22 Aug 2011 01:30:51 +1000

Birdline Western Australia

Published sightings for the week ending 21 Aug 2011.

Tue 16 Aug Arctic Tern Hillarys Boat Harbour, Western Australia
Arctic Tern (1) Sheltering together with Crested Tern on north eastern side of harbour close to boat launching area. Has been reported in the area over the past two weeks and is quite approachable.
Bruce Wedderburn

Sun 14 Aug Hutton's Shearwater (10,500) Bunker Bay, Busselton, Western Australia
3 hour seawatch from Bunker Bay in Busselton: Hutton's Shearwater (10,500+), Fluttering Shearwater (2+), Indian Yellow-nosed Albatross (10+), Northern Giant Petrel (2), Soft-plumaged Petrel (2), Great-winged Petrel (10+), Pacific Gull (2) and Eastern Reef Egret (1)
Per Mark Newman, John Graff & Alan Collins

Laughing Kookaburra YC yard, Point Peron Rd, Rockingham Beach, Western Australia
It was just dark so didn't expect to see any birds until I heard its call (not laughing) - only 10m away on a boat mast spreader; First Kookaburra I've seen in well over 2 months here.
Snez Plunkett

Wed 10 Aug Common Sandpiper Collie River estuary near Bunbury, Western Australia
One bird seen several times; agitated, frequently flusing from tree roots on the river edge near the entrance to the sea.
Lawrie Conole

Sun 7 Aug Australian Painted Snipe (1) McNeill Claypan (Carnarvon), Western Australia

Per Les George

Sun 31 Jul Hutton's Shearwater (100+) Bunker Bay, Western Australia
3.5 hour seawatch from Bunker Bay near Busselton: Indian Yellow-nosed Albatross (15+), Shy Albatross (1), Northern Giant-Petrel (1), Giant-Petrel sp (12), Great-winged Petrel (60+) and Hutton's Shearwater (100+)
Per John Graff

Fri 15 Jul Dusky Honeyeater Ngunda Creek at 15 5 50S 127 36 23E, Western Australia
Even if the recent records around Kununurra are accepted this would represent another significant range extension. The Dusky Honeyeater was flitting about the grevillea and eucalypt competing with the other honeyeaters, so Brown and White-gaped were close by for comparison. These sightings need to be considered in the light of around 1000 hrs bushwalking and birding in the East Kimberley over 13 years. After my 1st sighting in about 2006 in the Carr Boyd Range, I have been fully aware of the controversial nature of the record/s. Sadly I was walking on my own and got no picture of the bird.
Clive Curson

Thu 16 Jun Little Egret (dark morph) Parry's Lagoon via Wyndham, Western Australia
The bird was pure white everywhere except on back and wings, which were "cuckoo-shrike" grey. This variable dark colour morph is known from Asia, (illustrated in the 2005 edition of Viney, Phillipps & Ying, Birds of Hong Kong & Southern China), and was also reported and photographed at Coombabah Swamp on the Gold Coast on 11 August.
Rob Gully

Birdline Western Australia is sponsored by Eremaea Birds and co-ordinated and hosted by Eremaea Birds.

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