canberrabirds

Kookaburra behaviour

To: 'Alison' <>, 'Dr David Rosalky' <>, 'COG bird list' <>
Subject: Kookaburra behaviour
From: Philip Veerman <>
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 2023 05:25:09 +0000

I suggest it was exactly that too. As in an attempt at a hole being created. That is what they do and there is other observations and film of various kingfishers doing that. That it was not producing results you could see within 20 minutes doesn’t mean that isn’t what was being tried. Maybe it would never succeed at this location or maybe it would. That does not always count a lot in bird thinking.

 

Philip

 

 

From: Canberrabirds [ On Behalf Of Alison
Sent: Sunday, 5 November, 2023 3:46 PM
To: 'Dr David Rosalky'; 'COG bird list'
Subject: Re: [Canberrabirds] Kookaburra behaviour

 

I watched the same thing happening at the Botanic Gardens a few years ago, but they were pecking at what could become a hollow.

 

From: Canberrabirds On Behalf Of Dr David Rosalky
Sent: Sunday, 5 November 2023 3:39 PM
To: COG bird list <>
Subject: [Canberrabirds] Kookaburra behaviour

 

When we were in Sydney last week, we observed strange behaviour by a pair of Laughing Kookaburras.

 

There are three palm trees near our townhouse, each of which displays a bulge resembling the covering leaves of an earlier clump of fronds, situated about ¾ up the trunk.  The LK’s perched on a telegraph wire about 10m from the trees.  Over the period of about 20 minutes while I was watching, the LKs took it in turns to “attack” one or other of the trees.  The attacks involved flying directly into the bulge of the target tree, bill first.  The attacks were not very vigorous and certainly nothing seemed to be happening in terms of a hole being created, or food produced, or nesting material being obtained.  A rather pointless exercise, it appeared to be.  There were many hits on the trees perhaps every 30 seconds or so.

 

I recall once watching a pair of Sacred Kingfishers doing something similar in attacking a plugged-up hollow in a nearby tree.  But their attacks had more purpose, vigour and effect.  The plug was slowly being chipped away, presumably revealing a hollow suitable for breeding.  Perhaps it was the same instinct with the KLs but ineffective and against a very poor selection of target tree.

 

Any thoughts?

 

David Rosalky

 

 

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