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Glossy Afternoon

To: <>
Subject: Glossy Afternoon
From: "Rotamah Island Bird Observatory" <>
Date: Thu, 22 Feb 2001 20:43:57 +1100
Spent a few hour today at the Den of Nargun area of the Mitchell River National Park.  A beautiful area for a swim on a warm day.  The birds were a bit quiet, but I was there between 11am and 2pm, so I guess it's to be expected.  On previous visits there, I've seen Spotted Quail-thrush running around the car park and Pink Robins in the gully.
 
There were a couple of interesting things however.  The first was several lyrebirds, four in all, but two we're being 'tended' by White-browed Scrubwrens as Pilotbirds are supposed to do (although I've never seen this myself).  The scrubwrens would hold back, about two feet from the lyrebird then as soon as it moved, the scrubwren would be in there, going through the turned over leaf litter.  I wonder if this is common and if other forest floor birds do the same?
 
The second sighting was a flock of black-cockatoos flying overhead.  I had already seen and heard some Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoos but my attention was drawn to a cockatoo-like call that was weaker and slightly higher pitched.  I was unable to get a good look at the birds, they were flying overhead and the vegetation gaps were few, but there were five of them.  They looked smaller than the typical yellow-tailed and all definietly had all dark tails which led to me deduce that they were probably Glossy Black Cockatoos.  I don't have a tape of the call handy to check whether this description fits their call but it was noticeably different to a yellow-tailed call which I am very familiar with from here on Rotamah.  Does anyone know if these birds regularly move this far east, I'm told it happens, just very rarely.
 
While taking that swim of mine, I was also able to watch three Wedge-tailed Eagles soaring majestically overhead.  I would highly recommend this area, not far at all from the Princes Hwy and easy to access.  This is the first time I've visited and not seen several Pink Robins and Crescent Honeyeaters.  Full species list below.
 
Craig Doolan
 
Little Pied Cormorant
Wedge-tailed Eagle
Yellow-tailed Black-cockatoo
Glossy Black-cockatoo
Superb Lyrebird
White-throated Treecreeper
Superb Fairy-wren
White-browed Scrubwren
Striated Thornbill
Brown Thornbill
Grey Fantail
Eastern Whipbird
Yellow-faced Honeyeater
Lewin's Honeyeater
Eastern Spinebill
Golden Whistler
Rufous Whistler
Silvereye
Pied Currawong
Satin Bowerbird
Australian Raven
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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