birding-aus
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To: | "Joel Weintraub" <> |
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Subject: | Wagtail in Adelaide |
From: | |
Date: | Thu, 2 Oct 2003 09:10:40 +1000 |
Hi Joel, Did you check against Willy Wagtail? they are VERY common! Peter BTW They are listed under fantails, rather than wagtails.
I was in Australia last week (arrived back in the U.S. today), and had a White/Black-backed Wagtail in Adelaide on 27 Sept. 2003. I found a phone # in the telephone directory for the Clubs-Birds...Adelaide/Ornithology and reported the bird to the secretary? of the organization, who contacted the President who I believe was going to Kangaroo Island on the 28th (but not clear how...by ferry or plane). His wife I was told is doing surveys on the airport and had a permit to access that area.....and I hope that they and others tried to follow up on the 28th to try to relocate the bird. I run a Rare Bird Alert in southern California, USA and have been birding over 50 years. As an RBA compiler, I sometimes encounter out of state birders who are not knowledgeable about the local fauna and misidentify species. It is a rare occasion when a qualified birder from out of the region actually finds a rarity. Given that situation.... I fully expect my sighting to be relegated to "Identification Not Established". Given the low probability that the individual I saw could be relocated, I also expect this record to be rejected. However, we had in 1995 and 1996 a Black-backed Wagtail in my southern California county. It stayed for several weeks in 1995 and I became the "unofficial" watcher of that bird when over a thousand birders from all over the U.S. came to my area to observe it. It briefly came back in 1996. An internet Google search on my name and Wagtail (Wagtail Weintraub) should show some hits for that time. Thus I am *very* familiar with at least one of the 2 species in the complex. I also became familiar with your Australian black-and-white birds (Magpie, Magpie-Lark) and neither was the bird I saw. Here is my sighting. We were returning from Kangaroo Island with our tour group in a 12 seater plane...on charter to Emu Airlines. I believe the plane was actually from Aussie Airlines...but a number of people were coming to Adelaide that day from KI. We arrived at Adelaide after sunset...probably between 6 and 6:15 pm or so. I had my binoculars around my neck.... 10X Nikon Superior E. After landing, the plane taxied to the parking area before the General Aviation Terminal. Right near the parking area (within 40-50 feet) I noticed a small bird walking within a small temporary puddle of water. I got good binocular views of the individual, and immediately recognized it as a Wagtail...black bib...black and white bird....and my feeling now is that the crown and back were black. I immediately called out to the other passengers that there was a Wagtail on the parking area....and 2 saw the bird (one birder without binocs...one non-birder).....but they didn't see enough to provide details about the individual. No photograph was taken and no description written down at the time. Obviously security is high in that area and we were immediately escorted into the terminal. I did get another chance to see the bird when dis-embarking but it soon disappeared. I must have had about 15 seconds of viewing time. I'm positive it was a Wagtail.....and probably a Black-backed Wagtail. It wasn't until we got to our hotel that I checked my Simpson and Day and Prizzy books and found that there were very few records of Wagtails in Australia. In California this complex is usually a "one day wonder." In my case...a bird on the tarmack feeding from a temporary pool which probably didn't have much food....makes it unlikely that anyone would relocate the bird in the same area...however I made the effort to report it and did make contact with some Adelaide birders that evening. I don't know what they found the next day. Joel Weintraub Dana Point, California OrCoRBA Compiler, OrangeCountyBirding moderator 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 |
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