birding-aus

Re: birding-aus to tick or not to tick

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Subject: Re: birding-aus to tick or not to tick
From: "Paul McDonald" <>
Date: Wed, 20 Oct 1999 19:06:09 +1000
Hi All, 

I have been told that dead birds are not to be ticked, one need only 
refer to the bible. Ticking [this is Aus not the US!, listing is for 
grocery shoppers ;)  ] a half decomposed Wandering Albatross is 
simply not comparable and hardly satisfying. 

However state lists are a different matter. I have been informed that 
if you have seen it already in another state, you can even tick bird 
calls in different states, without bothering to see it. 

As for mist nets etc, why can't you tick it if you went to the effort of 
putting the damn things up! I remember explaining to a visiting 
confused American why the thornbill I was holding was a Brown, 
whilst getting horribly confusedmyself.., tick it was a Chestnut-
rumped thornbill, a hand tick and lifer all in one! (For all those de-
listers, I have of course seen the bird, and caught heaps of the little 
buggers, since).

Happy ticking, 
Paul
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Paul McDonald
Division of Botany and Zoology
School of Life Sciences
Australian National University
Canberra, A.C.T.
Australia       0200

Ph: +61 6 249 2536
Fax: +61 6 249 5573
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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