canberrabirds

distinguishing reed birds.

To: 'John Harris' <>, 'Susan Robertson' <>, "" <>
Subject: distinguishing reed birds.
From: Philip Veerman <>
Date: Sun, 3 Mar 2019 05:21:07 +0000

All those are very good, correct and context-useful start points. And then there are the calls, that differ markedly between them but bear in mind, especially in summer time, all three might be present and seen and heard. The Little Grassbird is hard to hear. Also useful that the sparrow does not typically live in reeds, though they use them sometimes.

 

Philip

 

From: John Harris [
Sent: Sunday, 3 March, 2019 3:53 PM
To: 'Susan Robertson';
Subject: Re: [canberrabirds] distinguishing reed birds.

 

Living adjacent to reed beds, I take an interest in reed birds. Of the reed birds, the three most commonly seen around here are the Reed Warbler, the Little Grassbird and the Golden-headed Cisticola. They are all elusive and difficult to distinguish with only a quick glimpse. But I have a system of telling them apart from only a short look. I use the ordinary House  Sparrow as a reference point. The RW is, if anything, slightly larger than a sparrow. At a quick glimpse, it lacks the Sparrow markings on the back and wings and is an altogether plainer bird, brownish above, buff or even creamy below. It flies up and back into the reeds more often than the other two. The LGB is about Sparrow size or a little smaller and skinnier. It has Sparrow-like markings on the back, more olive-brown than a sparrow but that is not always discernible in a quick glimpse. It is light underneath with spots but you rarely get to see the spots. I am invariably looking down on it. The GHC is a smaller bird again, clearly smaller than a sparrow, more the size of a thornbill. It has Sparrow-like markings on the back but it is yellower than the others, especially even more yellow in the breeding season. It is whitish below.

The real experts will be able to provide very specific distinguishing features, I am sure,  but I rarely see them for long enough to study the exact feathering etc. My little system works for me.

 

 

 

 

From: Philip Veerman <>
Date: Sunday, 3 March 2019 at 11:31 am
To: 'Susan Robertson' <>, chatline <>
Subject: RE: [canberrabirds] Buff-banded Rails

 

Well I would suggest to you that any place in our area that has “Buff-banded Rails and another bird in the reeds” is highly likely to also have Golden-headed Cisticola, especially if you saw something that could be it. Whether that is what you saw yesterday, only you can know (or not). Try again and I suggest you will know.

 

Philip

 

From: Susan Robertson [
Sent: Sunday, 3 March, 2019 8:58 AM
To:
Cc: 'Rory Read
Subject: [canberrabirds] Buff-banded Rails

 

I’m happy to say that I was wrong that the Buff-banded Rails had left Hassett Park in Campbell. There are at least two still living there.  There is another bird in the reeds there I’d love to have identified.  I just caught a quick look at it yesterday and wondered if it was a Golden-headed Cisticola.

Susan Robertson

 

 

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