At 10:23 AM 10/15/97 +1000, you wrote:
>Hi all, particularly those in perth/WA,
>We took a cruise up the Swan River and had two sightings of Corellas. The
>first was a pair feeding in a paddock by the river, one was quite grubby,
>presumably with dirt from grubbing around looking for onionweed bulbs or
>whatever. The second sighting was of three birds in a large gum tree onm
>the banks of the river.
I haven't seen western corellas this close to Perth. They were probably
little corellas. The grubby bird probably had psittacine circovirus
disease. The Cacatua spp. will dig for food and the females will get dirty
when they are preparing a hollow, but usually it is only their faces which
get dirty and the powder down in their plumage soon cleans these areas
during preening. In most areas of Perth the main "soil" type is very sandy
and less likely to cause dirty feathers.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Shane Raidal BVSc PhD MACVSc Avian Health
Lecturer in Veterinary Pathology
Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences
Murdoch University phone: +61 8 9360 2418
Perth,WA, 6150 fax: +61 8 9310 4144
Australia
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