birding-aus

Papuan Harrier

To: "'Phil & Sue Gregory'" <>, "'Birding Aus'" <>
Subject: Papuan Harrier
From: "Tony Russel" <>
Date: Tue, 4 Jan 2011 08:58:54 +1030
Thanks Phil, a very difficult ID to get right because of the natural
variations .

Tony


-----Original Message-----
From: 
 On Behalf Of Phil & Sue Gregory
Sent: Monday, 3 January 2011 9:45 PM
To: Birding Aus
Subject: [Norton AntiSpam] [Birding-Aus] Papuan Harrier

I have been grappling with the field identification of Papuan Harrier  
(Circus spilothorax) for some years, with well-marked male Swamp  
Harriers a major i.d. problem, and immatures very difficult to  
separate indeed. I agree that the very clear photo of recent postings  
is clearly Swamp Harrier, adult male Papuan would be much darker on  
the head, probably have better defined black breast streaks and a well  
defined black trailing edge.
Here is a draft of part of the account from my field guide:
Male very distinctive, head, mantle and breast heavily streaked black,  
black above with black tipped silvery-grey secondaries, upper tail  
coverts white, grey tail, whitish beneath with variable dark streaks  
on body, dark of breast always ragged, not cleanly demarcated from  
underparts. It is reported that a form with a sharply demarcated black  
head and breast (similar to male Pied Harrier) exists in central  
highlands. A rare dark morph is mostly black with a dark grey tail; F.  
dark brown with pale uppertail coverts, conspicuous dark tail bands,  
paler underparts with dark breast streaks. Some birds show white  
around head. In flight adult male is a very striking species  
resembling male Pied Harrier, with blackish wingtips, blackish  
upperwing coverts, silvery grey secondaries and inner primaries;  
underwing whitish with black primary tips and dark trailing edge. F.  
plumage largely very dark brown with silvery underside to primaries  
and darker underwing coverts, tail with dark bands. May show white or  
pale rump but this often absent. Iris yellow, cere greenish-yellow,  
legs and feet yellow, orange-yellow on male. Imm. birds are dark brown  
with pale cream buff on nape or on nape, crown and face, may often  
lack white upper tail coverts. Shows whitish buff streaking on mantle  
and silvery undersides to primaries and tail. Sub-adult male has  
blackish streaked throat and breast.
Swamp Harrier is a major pitfall, status of this species not well- 
known in NG due to identification difficulties. Two useful separation  
features may be  dark bands on the tail of female and young Papuan  
Harrier, and pale patches on the head and/or nape of that species when  
immature. Swamp Harrier imm. shows rusty underparts. Vagrant Pied  
Harrier has also been claimed but no doubt confused with ad. male  
Papuan, which is larger, has less white on leading edge of wing,  
usually has well-streaked chest with no clear division between breast  
and underparts.

As ever, if you can get a photo of any putative Papuan Harrier that  
greatly aids the chances of correct  identification; I suspect female  
or immature birds are much more numerous than adult males and hence  
the most likely to be vagrants.

Phil Gregory

Email: 
Website 2: Http://www.cassowary-house.com.au

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