Somewhat similarly here in Ainslie yesterday am- in a Magnolia grandiflora tree in our front garden, we had 4 koels, 2 m and 2 f, in full sight and cry for
a few minutes before they went chasing off. A few days before there were a male and a female in sight on powerlines, and this was the first time we have had a female in sight. The four- some yesterday was dramatic in terms of sight, sound, and flapping between
branches (plus the odd currawong, Wattlebird, and Magpie Lark objecting to the invasion).
Robin Hide
From: Philip Veerman [
Sent: Friday, 27 December 2013 10:44 AM
To:
Subject: [canberrabirds] 5 Koels at home
I have been hearing 1 or 2 Koels throughout this season, near home but not especially close. At 7 a.m. today they were clearly closer than usual. I got up (& out) to check. There were 5 adult
Koels, centred around the front of 22 Castley Circuit (the back yard jungle / jumble is full of fruiting plums). Two males and 2 females perched in the same tree, whilst one other male was flying circuits around & calling. These all seen simultaneously. From
the noise there might even have been more than just one flying around. Of the 4 perched in the tree, 3 were near the top and noisy throughout, one female low in the tree was not calling. Apart from the usual calls there was a repeated almost rosella-like single
note. The two males perched about a metre apart and near the female appeared to be displaying to each other, sitting with wings very drooped and tails held spread (unlike the usual tight plumage posture). I think one had its eye showing obviously big (a bit
like Choughs do). This does not match the display mentioned in HANZAB. One Pied Currawong was closely inspecting the female Koel from all angles within about 15 to 30 cm for about 10 minutes (ignoring the 2 males). At one time it snapped at its tail in a flutter
fly through attack but the Koel showed no response whatever to any of this. A Red Wattlebird also inspected them for a few metres lower in the tree. After about 15 minutes of that they started to fly around with a lot of the usual chasing. I haven't before
encountered that many Koels in a group, so obviously interacting.
Philip Veerman
Kambah ACT 2902