Wow thanks everyone for your responses. This is fascinating. I was thinking
there might be a straightforward answer :-0
I will try to get some better photos of it - was just on the oval behind Fadden
primary school and then it went to get a drink out of the gutter on the Fadden
shop roof.
Thanks again,
Lori
-----Original Message-----
From: John Harris <>
Sent: Tuesday, 18 June 2019 2:26 PM
To: chatline <>
Subject: Re: [canberrabirds] Re: "Pink" Cockatoo
Thanks Philip. I think here we just have to agree to differ, not about the
various possibilities, but in the weight we give them. Of course I agree that
it is possible that the Pink Cockatoos could have both at the same or different
times got themselves stained in some way but that does not preclude the
possibility of a natural process which I tend to favour. I do not, by the way,
strongly advocate the SC x MM cross - my initial email, suggesting that
possibility, was intended as a bit of a joke given that the MM flying with the
SCs was still a live conversation on the chatline at the time. But I do favour
some natural process.
By the way, regarding the orange Kookaburra, it has not yet moulted into a
different 'normal' colour in 18 months.
On 18/6/19, 2:10 pm, "Philip Veerman" <> wrote:
I am sure the truth has a lot more coherence to the link that Paul sent,
than being anything natural. These birds have got into some odd paint or dye or
dirt or whatever. Or someone has done this to them intentionally. It does not
look anything like what I would expect from a hybrid. With hybrids, there is
typically a combination of characteristics that makes easy sense. In this case
it just doesn't look like that.
Also John wrote "Of course it could be stained in some way but Lori said it
is one of two, which needs both of them to have been stained at the same time."
However I don't see a logical connection there that it needs to have been that
both had the same thing at the same time (although I would suggest a connection
maybe to place more than time), for them or that whether or not that is true
makes any difference to deciding what is likely to have happened. As social
birds it is very likely that something may happen to more than just one.
Philip
-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Taylor
Sent: Tuesday, 18 June, 2019 11:03 AM
To:
Subject: Re: FW: [canberrabirds] Re: "Pink" Cockatoo
Blue, green, pink and yellow cockatoos in Sydney's eastern suburbs
https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/what-happened-to-these-cockatoos-20160427-gog4db.html
--
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Paul Taylor Veni, vidi, tici -
I came, I saw, I ticked.
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