Hi Kim, fellow twitchers and other birders,
I think I’m one of the culprits here, though I had already decided that mine looked a bit debatable and changed it in eBird to “Little
x Long-billed Corella (hybrid)”. But the thing is I HAD checked my favourite field guide, the CSIRO Australian Bird Guide, and one of the adult Long-billeds there looks very like my photo. I suspect there’s quite a variation in even the non-hybrid birds, so
it’s very difficult to be sure which we are looking at in the ACT where they are known to have hybridized. This wouldn’t be such a problem except we’re all so concerned with our eBird rankings that we have to go and find one each year
😊.
My immediate solution (when I get desperate enough!) will be to go down to Lake Tuggeranong and find the one Sandra photographed, which is actually a lot redder even than the Long-billed Corellas in the field guide!
I can’t find Sandra’s photo taken last week in eBird, but in case it helps, here’s the list with mine which is NOT enough
of a Long-billed Corella to make the cut:
https://ebird.org/checklist/S157910784
Would it help if Kim made them rare in the ACT in eBird? Not everyone puts up a photo to be critically examined, so maybe
it would be better if everyone without a photo described what they’re seeing that justifies the sighting?
Cheers,
Sue
From: Canberrabirds <>
On Behalf Of Kim Farley via Canberrabirds
Sent: Monday, January 8, 2024 9:16 AM
To: Canberra birds <>
Subject: [Canberrabirds] eBirders! Take care with Long-billed Corella identification
Hi all
I have needed to unconfirm several Long-billed Corella records in recent weeks as the photos submitted showed what were clearly hybrid birds. Little and Long-billed Corellas interbreed, and the hybrids show varying amounts of red across
the throat as well as on the lores (between bill and eye).
For our newer birders in particular, before submitting an eBird record for Long-billed Corella, please check a field guide (hard copy or app), or Macaulay Library - or whatever authoritative guide works for you. Document your sighting in
eBird and/or take a photo to upload later.