Yes, all four are present at Durikai, with White-throated being the least
reported on Eremaea.
Steve Murray
-----Original Message-----
From:
On Behalf Of Tim Dolby
Sent: Tuesday, 14 August 2012 6:41 PM
To: Greg Roberts;
Subject: Three species of Melithreptus honeyeaters feeding
together
Hi Greg, fantastic stuff. I think you're right. There mustn't be many places
you'd get Black-chinned, White-naped and White-throated together. However
you can throw Brown-headed Honeyeater in to the mix. I wonder if there's a
location where you get the four mainland Melithreptus honeyeater together
(Black-chinned, White-naped, White-throated and Brown-headed). Girraween or
Sundown National Park perhaps? My money is on Durikai State Forest.
Cheers,
Tim Dolby
________________________________________
From:
on behalf of Greg Roberts
Sent: Tuesday, August 14, 2012 5:15 PM
To:
Subject: Three species of Melithreptus honeyeaters feeding
together
Today in the Sunshine Coast hinterland at Moy Pocket I had the three
mainland species of Melithreptus honeyeater - Black-chinned, White-naped and
White-throated - feeding together in eucalyptus trees.
There can not be very many places where this is possible; I'd like to hear
from anyone who has seen the three together. Black-chinned in particular is
rare in south-east Queensland.
Pictures here: http://sunshinecoastbirds.blogspot.com/
Greg Roberts
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