canberrabirds

Unknown bird call

To: <>
Subject: Unknown bird call
From: "David Cook" <>
Date: Sun, 26 Jan 2014 09:11:37 +1100
Peter, I can only hear Fan-tailed Cuckoos calling in that grab.

David

-----Original Message----- From: Peter Shute
Sent: Sunday, January 26, 2014 7:32 AM
To: Geoffrey Dabb ; 
Subject: Unknown bird call

Did Geoffrey's recording turn out to be the right species? Here's another Brush Cuckoo variation, recorded at Mt Hotham, not that far from Mt Buffalo, at about 1300m just a couple of weeks before you heard yours. These and Fan-tailed Cuckoos were calling everywhere I went on the lower parts of the mountain.

Peter Shute

________________________________________
From: Geoffrey Dabb 
Sent: Friday, 24 January 2014 8:22 AM
To: 
Subject: FW: [canberrabirds] Unknown bird call

This call?

From: David Cook 
Sent: Friday, 24 January 2014 8:06 AM
To: COG bird discussions
Subject: Unknown bird call

Dennis / Nick

The description matches the alternative call of the Brush Cuckoo, rather than the standard one of evenly spaced, slightly descending single notes.

The other call is the one which often leads to a manic high-pitched finish. If you have access to the BOCA calls, the first half is of the standard call, the second half has the call than strongly resembles Nick’s description.

David

From: Denis Wilson<>
Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2014 11:33 PM
To: Nick Payne<> ; COG bird discussions<>
Subject: Unknown bird call

I am late in this dscussion, Nick, and I know you said it was on the lower slopes of Mt Buffalo, and coming from a tall Eucalypt.

My trouble is, your description of the call reminds me entirely and almost exclusively of a Little Grassbird.
http://www.birdsinbackyards.net/species/Megalurus-gramineus
Click on the sound file on the right hand column.

Was there a swampy area anywhere, nearby, as the call can carry deceptively. Perhaps the other side of the Gum Tree?

To my ears, the Brush Cuckoo does not fit your description - not even close, as I read your words:

* Three equal notes, the second slightly lower than the first and the third slightly higher than the first, then the same three notes repeated at a slightly higher pitch, then repeated again at a higher pitch again
http://www.birdsinbackyards.net/species/Cacomantis-variolosus


Denis Wilson

Some things in the universe are greater and deeper
than human intelligence.
It is the Power of Nature which bewilders us.
"The Nature of Robertson"
www.peonyden.blogspot.com.au<http://www.peonyden.blogspot.com.au>

On Thu, Jan 23, 2014 at 4:49 PM, Nick Payne <<>> wrote: Outside the COG area, but while cycling up Mt Buffalo this morning, on the lower slopes I heard a bird call I couldn't identify, coming from a tall Eucalypt. Three equal notes, the second slightly lower than the first and the third slightly higher than the first, then the same three notes repeated at a slightly higher pitch, then repeated again at a higher pitch again. A pause of five or so seconds, and then the same nine notes repeated. In musical notation, like the attached image. Any suggestions on what the bird was? I didn't see it.

Nick



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