birding-aus

WA Report 2b

To:
Subject: WA Report 2b
From: "Peter Ewin" <>
Date: Thu, 18 Oct 2001 09:58:06 +1000
Non-passerines cont'd

Common Greenshank       Tringa nebularia
Four birds flushed from mangroves at New Beach on the 1st, and a couple near the Monkey Mia visitors centre on the 3rd.

Common Sandpiper        Actitis hypoleucos
A number of individuals seen at New Beach on the 1st and 2nd, and at the Murchison River estuary near Kalbarri on the 5th.

Grey-tailed Tattler     Heteroscelus brevipes
A number of birds feeding on exposed sand flats at New Beach on the 5th.

Ruddy Turnstone Areneria interpres
A small flock present at the salt lakes on Rottnest Island on the 19th. Then not seen until a single at New Beach on the 2nd. A couple near Denham on the 3rd, and present at Oyster Reef (5th) and on the beach south of Cervantes on the 6th.

Great Knot      Calidris tenuirostris
About half a dozen birds were roosting between Denham and Little Lagoon on the 3rd.

Sanderling      Calidris alba
A single bird on the salt lakes at Rottnest on the 19th.

Red-necked Stint        Calidris ruficollis
A small flock at the wader roost near Denham on the 3rd.

Pied Oystercatcher      Haematopus longirostris
First seen feeding near the road at the settlement on Rottnest Island on the 19th. A few individuals seen around the south west corner on the 22nd and 23rd, but proved commoner in the New Beach/Denham area. A pair was also seen on the beach south of Cervantes on the 6th, to total eight days all up.

Sooty Oystercatcher     Haematopus fuliginosus
Common around the south west corner, being seen on four consecutive days between Dunsborough and Albany, including Two People?s Bay. Also seen around the cliffs near Kalbarri on the 5th and 6th.

Black-winged Stilt      Himantopus himantopus
A pair first seen at a farm dam near Tammin, East of Northam on the 30th. Then seen at a number of swamps on the following tow days, including behind Miaboolia Beach at Carnarvon. About 10 were also present at the swamp near Greenough on the 6th.

Banded Stilt    Cladorhynchus leucocephalus
A large flock (200+) on the salt lakes on Rottnest Island (19th)

Grey Plover     Pluvialis squatarola
Two birds seen in the Murchison River estuary at Kalbarri on the 5th, and a single bird seen on a beach south of Cervantes the following day.

Red-capped Plover       Charadrius ruficapillus
A few birds were present on the salt lakes on Rottnest Island on the 19th, and otherwise seen only around the Little Lagoon near Denham on the 2nd and 3rd.

Greater Sand Plover     Charadrius leschenaultii
One individual seen at New Beach on the 1st and about a dozen at the wader roost near Denham on the 3rd.

Black-fronted Dotterel  Elseyornis melanops
Two birds seen at a creek crossing east of Eneabba (south of Dongara) on the 31st were the only ones seen.

Banded Lapwing  Vanellus tricolor
At least four lapwings were present on the first fairway of the Rottnest Island golf course on the 19th and a single bird flew over the road east of Geraldton on the 31st.

Pacific Gull    Larus pacificus
Common around the south west between Dunsborough and Two People?s Bay, but also seen as far north as Geraldton and Kalbarri on a total of eight days.

Silver Gull     Larus novaehollandiae
One of the commonest species for the trip, recorded on 20 days, usually near the coast.

Caspian Tern    Sterna caspia
Two birds were seen off Quaranup Road near Albany on the 25th. However proved more common north of Perth, including Geraldton, Carnarvon and Denham to be seen on seven days.

Lesser Crested Tern     Sterna bengalensis
A number of birds were roosting with Crested and Caspian Terns south of the visitors centre at Monkey Mia on the 3rd.

Crested Tern    Sterna bergii
Commonest north of Perth (recorded on 14 days including eight straight from the 31st), but also seen around the south west coast including Rottnest Island on the 19th.

Rock Dove       Columba livia
Often present in urban areas including Perth, Carnarvon and Denham, and seen on 11 days.

Spotted Turtle-dove     Stretopelia chinensis
The last species added to the trip list, though probably due to poor observation. Seen at Lake Herdsman on the 7th, before another was seen the next day, perched on powerlines in front of the house I had stayed at three weeks earlier.

Laughing Turtle-dove    Streptopelia senegalensis
Common in Perth, but also seen as far north as Northampton (on the 6th) and as far east as Albany (26th), eventaully being recorded on 11 days.

Diamond Dove    Geopelia cuneata
Five were seen perched in a shrub near Hamelin Pools on the 2nd.

Peaceful Dove   Geopelia placida
At least two were calling at the Murchison River crossing on the 4th.

Crested Pigeon  Ocyphaps lophotes
The most regularly recorded pigeon, with sightings on 13 days. First seen near Pingelly on the 20th, then near Albany on the 25th. Then seen everyday north from the wheatbelt, except for in the immediate area around Kalbarri on the 5th.

Common Bronzewing       Phaps chalcoptera
Commonest in the south west, including Dryandra, coastal heath at Cape Naturaliste, and at Stirling Ranges NP. Really only seen north of Perth at Kalbarri NP on the 5th, and recorded on 11 days all up.

Brush Bronzewing        Phaps elegans
A single female was seen (after much searching) on the road leading to Fitzgerald River NP on the 29th. Another bird was seen on the road between Cervantes and the Pinnacles on the 7th.

Red-tailed Black-cockatoo       Calyptorhynchus banksii
Only observed on four occasions, with four seen quietly feeding in a tree in Bungendore Park on the 20th, and two seen in a tree between Manjimup and Lake Muir on the 24th. A small flock was seen near the Kalbarri turnoff on the 1st, and two more were seen just down this road from the Highway on the 4th.

Long-billed Black-cockatoo      Calyptorhynchus baudinii
I had recorded White-tailed Black-cockatoos on a previous trip to Perth previously, but was not certain which species they were after the split, so I was keen to track them down again. I had difficulty with birds flying, though found habitat useful (virtually all Long-billeds were in Marri forest) and thought I could tell the calls eventually (the Short-billed being closest to the Yellow-tailed on the east coast). A huge (200+) flock was seen at Wungong Dam on the 20th, and seen on three consecutive days in the south west corner. The most northerly of the six days sightings was just to the north of Northam.

Short-billed Black-cockatoo     Calyptorhynchus latirostris
Seen on one less day than the previous species, with the first sightings of a about 100 birds feeding in pine trees west of Albany on the 25th and was common around Two People?s Bay. Seen just to the south of Geraldton on the 31st, and a large flock was also present at Yanchep NP.

*Western Corella        Cacatua pastinator
Proved more widespread than expected. First seen about 200 metres along Thompson?s Lane on the western side of Lake Muir on the 24th. Three distant birds seen on the ground near Tammin appeared to be this species, and the following day a number of flocks were seen through the wheat belt, including at New Norcia. Three birds were also seen in a paddock to the east of Cervantes on the 7th.

Little Corella  Cacatua sanguinea
Only seen in Carnarvon township, on both the 1st and 2nd.

Galah   Eulophus roseicapillus
Seen on sixteen days, absent really only from the moist south west corner, and the Denham township area.

Cockatiel       Nymphicus hollandicus
A small flock was seen just north of Wooramel Roadhouse on the 2nd and another was seen near Kalbarri on the 5th.

Purple-crowned Lorikeet Glossopsitta porphyrocephala
Luckily I had seen these before, because the birds seen were all seen in tall Karri trees which were in flower, and were virtually impossible to get good views of. Around Pemberton on the 23rd they were seen at the Bicentennial Tree and roadside to the north of town. A small flock was near the picnic area in the Porongorups National Park on the 27th.

Rainbow Lorikeet        Trichoglossus haematodus
The Perth feral population was seen on four days.

Australian Ringneck     Barnardius zonarius
Seen on 16 days, though not north of the Murchison River crossing or in the immediate Albany area.

*Elegant Parrot         Neophema elegans
A number of birds were seen at both the Ochre Trail and Gura Road Junction in Dryandra on the 23rd. Common in the unburnt mallee area in the Stirling Ranges National Park, and a single bird seen flying over the road south east of Wave Rock, brought the count to four days.

Rock Parrot     Neophema petrophila
A pair was seen at the end of the track at Madfish Bay, in William Bay NP on 25th.

Western Rosella         Platycercus icterotis
First seen at the Button-Quail site in Dryandra on the 23rd, and eventually seen on six days, including Lake Muir, the Albany area and Stirling Ranges NP. About six birds flew along the track for about 300 metres around the summit of Nancy Peak on the 27th.

*Red-capped Parrot      Purpureicephalus spurius
The first eight ticks on the 20th, a pair flying over the carpark at Wugong Gorge. Proved common, though often very cryptic, being recorded on eight days, the last being seen at the Fitzgerald River crossing on the 29th. Particularly easy to see around Albany, where often seen perched on powerlines on the edge of town.

Regent Parrot   Polytelis anthopeplus
Only seen on three days, between the 28th and 30th, around the Stirling Ranges area where it was quite common.

Pallid Cuckoo   Cuculus pallidus
First seen calling from a television antenna in the township of Northam on the 30th. Heard the following two days, and another seen near Geraldton on the 6th.

Fan-tailed Cuckoo       Cacomantis flabelliformis
The commonest cuckoo, being recorded on 10 days, though only once outside the south west corner. First heard at Wungong Dam on the 20th, and particularly common in the Albany area.

Horsfield's Bronze-cuckoo       Chalcites basalis
Recorded on seven days, though only seen once, at Cape Naturaliste on the 22nd. Heard at various places including Wugong Dam, Stirling Range NP and on the road towards Denham.

Shining Bronze-cuckoo   Chalcites lucidus
Recorded on six days, all in the south west, with the only sighting being a bird in Kings Park on the 18th.

Southern Boobook        Ninox boobook
Heard both nights around Dryandra Village, and another called late on the 28th at Stirling Range retreat.

Tawny Frogmouth Podargus strigoides
A single bird was spotlit on the ground in the paddock behind Dryandra Village on the 20th. Another was found road killed near Jurien on the 6th.

Laughing Kookaburra     Dacelo novaeguineae
This introduced species was common in the south west corner, being recorded on the first 12 days. However, north of Perth they proved much scarcer, with birds only being recorded on the 31st (just north of Northam) and the 7th (Yanchep NP).

Sacred Kingfisher       Todiramphus sanctus
One bird was seen perched on the tennis courts at Geordie Bay (Rottnest Island) on the 19th. Another bird was possibly heard near the Old Mill Dam at Dryandra on the 20th.

Red-backed Kingfisher   Todiramphus pyrrhopygia
A single bird was seen perched on powerlines on the approach to Kalbarri on the 5th.


_________________________________________________________________
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp

Birding-Aus is on the Web at
www.shc.melb.catholic.edu.au/home/birding/index.html
To unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message
"unsubscribe birding-aus" (no quotes, no Subject line)
to 


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
  • WA Report 2b, Peter Ewin <=
Admin

The University of NSW School of Computer and Engineering takes no responsibility for the contents of this archive. It is purely a compilation of material sent by many people to the birding-aus mailing list. It has not been checked for accuracy nor its content verified in any way. If you wish to get material removed from the archive or have other queries about the archive e-mail Andrew Taylor at this address: andrewt@cse.unsw.EDU.AU