and typically at the main area of Canberra Tip (AKA Waste Management
Resource Centre) the silver gulls and white ibis are in big numbers,
although at times pelicans have also been there in large flocks
sandra h
On 1 June 2017 at 08:41, Noel Luff <> wrote:
> Mugga Tip, Canberra - of late Magpie Larks at green waste dump
>
> On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 8:05 AM, Roger Giller <>
> wrote:
>
> > Australian and Little Ravens at Jindabyne, with Silver Gulls as a back-up
> > crew.
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Birding-Aus On Behalf
> > Of
> > Laurie Knight
> > Sent: 1 June 2017 4:50 AM
> > To: Birding Aus
> > Subject: [Birding-Aus] How many species of dump chook are there in
> > Australia?
> >
> > It was fascinating to see Aus Pelicans filling the role of dump chook at
> a
> > landfill [presumably around Melbourne] on this week's episode of the War
> on
> > Waste.
> >
> > The dominant dump chooks in SEQ are white ibis. In other places, Silver
> > Gulls, the local corvids and Black Kites are the mainstays. In Weipa,
> Pied
> > Herons filled the role.
> >
> > How many other species of dump chook are there in Australia?
> >
> > Regards, Laurie.
> > <HR>
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