canberrabirds

FW: "Golden Bosun Bird"

To: "" <>
Subject: FW: "Golden Bosun Bird"
From: John Layton via Canberrabirds <>
Date: Thu, 19 Jan 2023 00:07:24 +0000

Oops... it should Bibendum

On 19/01/2023 11:03 am, John Layton via Canberrabirds wrote:

With all due deference, the portly south-side blue bird of happiness may strike some  observers as the blue bag of happiness or, to a Francophile, it might suggest the blue Bibedum of happiness.

On 19/01/2023 9:49 am, Geoffrey Dabb wrote:

I have brought the below to John’s attention, as being likely to interest students of bird colour.

 

 

 

John  -  In that brief story you have brought together two topics that have interested me for some time. The first is the remarkable plumage variations within this species, starting with the difference between sexes.  Then, even among individuals we see here, there are variations between adult females, some with black crowns, some with tawny crowns. The background colour of female underparts can vary from white to warm buff.  The rapid development of plumage of the young has been written about, including in Canberra Bird Notes.  If you watch the development in a fledgling over its first few weeks you can almost see it change, as it moves towards male or female plumage.  To generalise, nestlings can seem quite pale, but lose the golden-buff and become more brownish whether they are male or female.

 

The second issue is how people describe colours. ‘Golden’ means different things. Consider the ‘golden’ of  a Golden Eagle (or Golden Retriever) and the ‘golden’ of a Golden Bowerbird. Then there is the complication that the light can make such  a difference to what we see. On some days In Canberra, with full sun or light haze, there are a few minutes after sunrise when everything is bathed in strong golden light.  For the photographer, there is a question whether an image captured in such conditions can be described as ‘natural’. 

 

Getting back to the young koel, below is one in the nest at a pale stage.  1 is an unedited snap of the bird in moderate light conditions. 2a has been edited to show a possible effect of very strong light.  2b shows the bird as it did not exist, but might possibly be recalled in the memory of an impressionable observer.  

 

 

 

 

From: Canberrabirds <> On Behalf Of John Layton via Canberrabirds
Sent: Tuesday, 17 January 2023 7:22 AM
To:
Subject: [Canberrabirds] "Golden Bosun Bird"

 

The Golden Bosun Bird of Weetangera

Received an excited phone call from a non-birding friend yesterday morning to say there was a “Golden Bosun” in his fig tree. I expressed extreme doubt, nonetheless, he couldn't imagine that it was anything else. He had seen Golden Bosuns in a documentary about Christmas Island one time. (😁)

"You must see come over quick and look, it positively glows like gold when the sun's on it."

"Fool's gold," I thought but said nothing and drove to Weetangera where I was just in time to get a good view of a remarkably golden coloured young koel before a clangour of Pied Currawongs sent it to a large plum tree in a neighbouring yard. Except for currawongs, no other birds were seen near it.

I'm still very much on a learning curve when it comes to koels and haven't noticed a young one before, certainly not one sporting such remarkably golden plumage. Put it this way, on a scale of one to ten indicating the degree of golden colour, this chick would score a good number 9. Would it be an unusual specimen?

John Layton

Holt.



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