Hi All,
We have recorded the nominate subspecies at Leanyer Sewage Ponds in
Darwin on 20/09/2009 (1 bird) and 28/11/2009 (2 birds).
Cheers, Pete Kyne and Micha Jackson
-----Original Message-----
From:
On Behalf Of Mike
Carter
Sent: Monday, 21 March 2011 3:21 PM
To: ;
Subject: Little Egrets
Yes Paul, you're quite right about yellow-footed Little Egrets being of
the
nominate Asian race - that is if there is yellow on the upperside of the
toes as well as the underside because as I'm sure you well know, adults
of
the Australian race have greenish-yellow soles. In more extreme
examples,
the birds appear to be wearing yellow booties on or to have walked in 2
cm
deep bright yellow paint!
This subspecies has previously been seen at the WTP Werribee, Victoria,
and
at Darwin in the Northern Territory where they maintained a presence for
several years but I don't know the current situation there. For the
first
records, see:
Carter, M. & Menkhorst, P. (2006), 'Nominate Subspecies of the Little
Egret
Egretta garzetta garzetta in Australian Territory', Australian Field
Ornithology, 23: 104-108. Unfortunately I don't have a pdf of this
paper.
That paper has photographs that show the diagnostic features.
Note that these subspecies also differ in the loral pattern whilst both
have
mostly black bills in adult plumage. In the Australian subspecies, the
bare
skin of the lores extends from the eye to the forehead and is bright
yellow
or orange. In the nominate race the loral pattern is less conspicuous
because the pale area is restricted to the upper loral region with the
black
of the bill continuous through the gape almost to the eye. You should
check
this to confirm that your bird is of the Asian form.
On the other side of Port Phillip Bay we too have been having an
interesting
time with Egrets at the Eastern Treatment Plant. On 6 March we had our
first
Intermediate Egret since March 2001 with the only other recent record
nearby
being one in March 2006 at Edithvale. On that day we had two other
Egrets
greatly different in size that confused us for a long while but which I
now
believe were BOTH juvenile Little Egrets in spite of the size
difference.
Furthermore, we had similar birds on two other nearby wetlands on
Saturday
19 March. The bills on these birds are black distally but yellow on
basal
half and some have black, not greenish-yellow soles. All the birds were
photographed and I have written detailed reports which will be sent to
Dave
Torr with a view to placing them on the BOCA website. I suspect that
they
may have bred locally so we are seeing unfamiliar, very young, birds.
Mike Carter
30 Canadian Bay Road
Mount Eliza VIC 3930
Tel (03) 9787 7136
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