Little Shrike-thrush for sure.
Well south of its current accepted range, as Phillip says. The pinkish sides of
the bill are quite distinctive, and the other overall colour is spot-on for
LS-t. Reasonably common here at Stony Chute in far northern NSW.
Cheers
Tony Gibson
Sent from my iPhone
> On 17 Dec 2017, at 15:18, Philip Veerman <> wrote:
>
> I wonder why would you call these "rather poor photos". I am curious as to
> why it would be a honeyeater. I can't pick it as any honeyeater and
> certainly not a Brown Honeyeater. The beak is notably long, although I think
> too straight for any honeyeater. My immediate reaction (although I don't
> know it well) and it is close to what books show, is Little Shrike-thrush
> but looks slim build and the location, unless I am misinterpreting the place
> is quite south of where the maps show. The colour fits Pilotbird, though the
> shape does not appear to match.
>
> Philip
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Birding-Aus On Behalf Of
> David Jackson
> Sent: Saturday, 16 December, 2017 5:41 PM
> To:
> Subject: [Birding-Aus] Can anyone help out there with this honeyeater
>
> Hi all, I was itting quietly in the Blue Mountains National Park at Pierces
> Pass Picnic Area minding my own business when I snapped several photos of
> this honeyeater, circa 18 cm in length. What hit me was its very coppery
> brown colour. I thought it might be a Brown Honeyeater but cannot see any
> yellow behind its eye and it seems more "rufously" than the Brown (in my
> VERY limited experience). Any ideas from these rather poor photos? A female
> something?
>
>
>
> Thanks in advance
>
>
>
> David Jackson
>
> Blackheath
>
>
>
> <HR>
> <BR> Birding-Aus mailing list
> <BR>
> <BR> To change settings or unsubscribe visit:
> <BR> http://birding-aus.org/mailman/listinfo/birding-aus_birding-aus.org
> </HR>
<HR>
<BR> Birding-Aus mailing list
<BR>
<BR> To change settings or unsubscribe visit:
<BR> http://birding-aus.org/mailman/listinfo/birding-aus_birding-aus.org
</HR>
|