birding-aus

Cape Leeuwin Seawatch

To:
Subject: Cape Leeuwin Seawatch
From: Frank O'Connor <>
Date: Tue, 06 Aug 2002 23:52:59 +0800
At 01:17 29/07/2002 +0800, I wrote:
On Wednesday there was a very strong westerly wind blowing. After the rain cleared in the morning I went to the Cape at about 13:30 and stayed until about 15:30. I sat down on the ground in the lee of a bush to shelter from the wind and keep low to reduce the shake of the scope. Very little to start with. The expected Yellow-nosed Albatross, and a Southern Giant-Petrel hung around for a while. Then a Shy Albatross. Then three smaller birds passing a Yellow-nosed Albatross. Couldn't be certain, but they looked most like Soft-plumaged Petrels. Then a group of 10 birds close together. Flying straight into the wind. Many fleeting glimpses between the swells. Very dark above. Very white below. Flying quickly with very few glides. But the wing length was too short for shearwaters (e.g. Little or Hutton's) or most of the petrels that I know. I wasn't sure what they were. I would need to do some homework with all the reference books I brought.

About 10 minutes I got onto another flock of about 20 smaller birds. They looked the same as the first flock. A thought began to form in my mind. These definitely weren't Little Shearwaters. Maybe ..... Common Diving-Petrels????? But they are very rare in WA .... I think.

A short while later I saw three larger birds fly through. These were long winged. Hutton's Shearwaters? But they were heading west. They should have been heading east back to NZ (although this is about a month early anyway). And I usually see Hutton's in WA strung out in a line while these three were just close together. More homework.

Another two possible Hutton's flew through. Then a scattering of about 15 or so birds over several minutes. These were smaller but longer winged. Were these Little Shearwaters? I have only seen these in WA as singles or twos. Could 15 pass through in a short period? More homework.

Then another close flock of about 30 of the smaller birds again. Yes they were very dark above and white below. The tail looked square. The wingspan was longer than the length of the bird, but not a lot longer. They couldn't be prions as they were too dark. The light wasn't always great but there were patches of sunlight. These weren't pale grey. They were dark above. I guess the distance was 400 to 500 metres through my 60 times zoom. I could distinguish general colours and size, but very little of the body shape. I have only seen Common Diving-Petrels once on a pelagic off Tasmania. They were quite close to the coast in about a 5m swell! Very fat bodies.

Three more possible Hutton's went through and a Great Skua. The total for the afternoon was ~40 Yellow-nosed Albatross, 2 Shy Albatross, 1 Southern Giant-Petrel, ~60 Australasian Gannets (almost all adults), ~60 possible Common Diving-Petrels, ~20 possible Little Shearwaters, 8 possible Hutton's Shearwaters, 3 possible Soft-plumaged Petrels, 9 Sooty Oystercatchers. I was very surprised not to see any all dark petrels such as Great-winged and White-chinned which I have seen fairly commonly in previous years in September, or others such as Cape Petrel or White-headed Petrel which I have seen before at the cape. And no Wandering Albatross, Blue Petrel, Grey Petrel, prions etc which I was hoping for. And no beach washed birds anywhere that I checked during the week.

I did my homework, and things were as I thought. Very very few records of Common Diving-Petrel in WA. But they were at roughly this time of year. And a party of them recorded 50km south of Albany. The books describe them as having "quail like" flight. These were flying quickly but I wouldn't have described them as flying like quails. Also they are supposed to fly into waves. These were going over the waves when needed, and along the lee face of the waves on many occasions (hence I got quite a lot of fair views of them). But these birds didn't appear to be feeding, but simply flying west (or possibly around the cape).

Hutton's Shearwaters do start returning south in late July. Not clear whether this refers just to the Kimberley / Pilbara. I see them in mid August on the Perth pelagics, and sometimes off the coast. These birds could have been feeding as they weren't just flying straight into the westerly wind, but cutting back a few times and they weren't in a line.

Little Shearwaters do breed (in winter?) off the south coast near Esperance and Albany. Large colonies further north in the Abrolhos Islands. But surely you wouldn't get a loose flock strung out over 100 to 200 metres together? Very little information relevant to WA except a mention of groups up to 6. These birds weren't flying dead straight but they never cut back. i.e. they moved a bit side to side but always kept flying generally in a westerly direction.
... cut ...

I went to the Museum of WA last Thursday and checked the specimens and talked to Ron Johnstone and John Darnell. The small birds were Little Shearwaters. Ron has a few reports of them moving in flocks on the south coast. The larger birds were Hutton's Shearwaters. These are uncommon on the south coast at this time of year, but a few have been recorded before.

___________________________________________________________________
Frank O'Connor     Birding WA http://members.iinet.net.au/~foconnor
Phone : (08) 9386 5694                Email : 

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>
  • Cape Leeuwin Seawatch, Frank O'Connor <=
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