Well I wonder. Is it actually likely that a call as simple as “seep” and our ability to identify it as such, would be different between sub species? I suggest
not likely. Maybe the Morcombe ... app
recorded it from this form but that may not mean he was suggesting it to be restricted to them. As I read
The Australian Bird Guide (Menkhorst
et al) 2017 edition, it mentions this “seep” call but does not specify it to just one subspecies.
Their presence in a Canberra garden at this time of year is nice. Pleasant, I suppose, maybe a bit ho-hum…..
Philip
From: Kevin and Gwenyth [
Sent: Tuesday, 5 May, 2020 4:48 PM
To:
Subject: [canberrabirds] Golden Whistlers in Emu Ridge
We were entertained for about 10-15 minutes at about 1.30 pm today in our Emu Ridge backyard by a pair (male and female) of golden whistlers. Apart from a few very brief stops
– mostly out of site among our and neighbours’ trees, but once or twice perched fleetingly in full site – they were repeatedly ‘chasing’ each other at speed, about a metre apart, around and through the trees. The dominant call was a single “seep” sound,
repeated every few seconds. It reminded us, inexpert as we are, of the single high pitched calls of king parrots (also regular visitors here), though rather quieter. According to the recordings of the golden whistler in our
Morcombe ... app, this “seep” is the ‘contact call’ of the
fulginosa sub-species, which – according to
The Australian Bird Guide (Menkhorst
et al) - is to be found in western Victoria and SE SA, which is a long way from Canberra! Are the various
ssp well separated geographically, as the bird guide suggests, or do they mix to some extent, so that it really could have been
fulginosa we were seeing?
We’ve not seen golden whistlers near our house in Emu Ridge, but do occasionally see (usually a single male) them in walks along the western side of Lake Ginninderra, south of
Ginninderra Drive.
Is this occurrence of interest, or just ho-hum?
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