birding-aus

House Crows and ticking ethics

To: Chris Sanderson <>
Subject: House Crows and ticking ethics
From: Carl Clifford <>
Date: Thu, 27 Mar 2008 13:06:45 +1100
I think it is best to record any new species you see, with appropriate notes, e.g. ? aviary escapee. Whether you report it to anyone is up to yourself.

Carl Clifford

On 27/03/2008, at 11:55 AM, Chris Sanderson wrote:
Hi Tony,

I think Evan's point isn't that you left them out of your discussion, but more do you have a reliable way of telling which is which? For example, how do you know someone didn't have a pet House Crow that escaped? Bad example probably but if I told you there was a Blue and Yellow Macaw flying around in my back yard would you come and tick it? What about a Java Sparrow? Or
something really contentious like a Blue Rock Thrush?

I think it's important for each odd bird that is found to have the potential that it's a caged bird that has been released or escaped assessed. Which as
I understand is pretty much what we already do.

Regards,
Chris

ps. while I agree with Evan about putting what you want on your list, that
only works if you're not competing with other twitchers.  If you are you
need to use the same rules or it's not fair.

On Thu, Mar 27, 2008 at 10:23 AM, Tony Russell <>
wrote:

Ok, I hadn't considered them part of the discussion, but surely once
even escapes or releases establish viable populations, we have to admit
them to our listings. Hence dear old Starlings, Sparrows, Mynas,
Goldfinches, Greenfinches, Blackbirds etc etc are all now included
because we can't get rid of them and it's foolish to ignore them.

T.

-----Original Message-----
From: Evan Beaver 
Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2008 9:38 AM
To: Tony Russell
Cc: Alan McBride; Birding Aus
Subject: Re: [Birding-Aus] House Crows and ticking ethics


Not that it matters in any way to me, but there's a hole in your logic
Tony that seems to allow escapees and releases. But, as I've said
before, tick what ever you see fit, it's your list, no-one else
(should) care what's on it.

I however won't be ticking it, and hope that it's destroyed before
slinking off to find the rest of the House Crow secret society, lying in
wait for sufficient numbers to arrive and begin breeding, and fulfil
their ultimate goal of destroying all native avifauna.

EB

On 3/27/08, Tony Russell <> wrote:
My stance is that if the bird is in Oz, no matter how it got here, then it's tickable, and no amount of contention as to it's mode of travel is
relevant.

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