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Grey Butcherbird killings in Brisbane

To: Tony Russell <>, Philip Veerman <>, "'Peter Shute'" <>, "'Natalia Atkins'" <>, <>
Subject: Grey Butcherbird killings in Brisbane
From: Denise Goodfellow <>
Date: Tue, 15 May 2007 15:36:20 +0930
For a while we also had a dog that did such a thing, to an injured
Bar-shouldered Dove we were looking after.  Needless to say we got rid of
the dog.
Denise
Denise Lawungkurr Goodfellow
1/7 Songlark Street
BAKEWELL NT 0832
Ph. 61 08 89 328306

 
> http://web.mac.com/goodfellowdl
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On 15/5/07 2:21 PM, "Tony Russell" <> wrote:

> Next question is - can/do Magpies do a similar thing, ie, pull small
> aviary birds through the wires and/or scare them to death ? My partner
> has canaries on an outside verandah and we have several families of
> Magpie around.
> 
> Tony.
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: 
>  On Behalf Of Philip Veerman
> Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2007 2:12 PM
> To: Peter Shute; Natalia Atkins; 
> Subject: [Birding-Aus] Grey Butcherbird killings in Brisbane
> 
> 
> Hi Peter,
> 
> Yes Grey Butcherbirds will terrorise aviary birds. It is not only that
> they will extract the bird through the wires but just being there will
> frighten birds enough so that if they don't have sufficient cover, they
> will panic and die of collision injuries. This happened to me with my
> finches and Diamond Doves 35 years ago (when I lived in Melbourne and
> had birds). True, it could have been a cat or raptors but they weren't
> regular attenders. This was in an aviary. The only one I had pulled
> through the wires of a cage (when I had some temporarily in cages with
> full wooden sides roof and floor except on the one side the front),
> though was a Star Finch. A tuft of the birds feathers was left attached
> to the wires where it had been pulled through. Although I didn't witness
> it, Grey Butcherbirds were there and the only real possibility.  I know
> that wouldn't stand as proof of guilt in a court of law. True that the
> one at fault was me, for being unaware of the risk and not providing
> sufficient protection (but I was just a young fellow then). Later I put
> bird netting over the front of the cages and that removed the problem.
> 
> Philip



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