birding-aus

Range of Weebill

To: martin cachard <>
Subject: Range of Weebill
From: Martin Butterfield <>
Date: Mon, 16 Apr 2018 08:47:49 +1000
For the Canberra area there is nice data available from the COG Garden Bird
Survey (GBS) to show the time series of abundance of birds.  For those not
familiar with the GBS - now in its 37th year - one of the key statistics is
Abundance (A) which is the average number of birds reported per active site
week.  For Grey Butcherbird it shows a dramatic increase starting from 2005.

I had in the past attributed the increase to the 2003 fires in the
Brindabellas ​forcing the birds down to the urban area but in fact the
increase appears to start in 1999.  Possibly the rate of increase is
boosted by the fires (and a few rural sites coming into the GBS from 2004
onwards).

What actually started the increase is a bit of a puzzle, but I suspect
Martin (excellent name, that) Cachard is close to the money in suggesting
the maturation of suburbs: in the case of Canberra this could be the
suburbs in the townships of Belconnen and Northern Tuggeranong developed in
the 1970s and 80s.  I'll try and look at some detail on this later today.

Martin Butterfield

Martin Butterfield
http://franmart.blogspot.com.au/

On 16 April 2018 at 06:26, martin cachard <> wrote:

> perhaps the increase in butcherbirds around the suburbs of Melbourne in
> the last few decades is because there is now more suitable habitat and
> available food.
>
> whenever I've visited Melb to see old friends & family, particularly
> around the eastern burbs of Blackburn, Box Hill, the Waverley's, and the
> Bayside areas, I have noticed some nice changes in the local native
> birdlife there...
>
> because I've lived up here in gorgeous FNQ since 1996, and these Melb
> locales were my old stomping grounds from when I was a boy and a MUCH
> younger man, these changes are not only a pleasant surprise, but they are
> also rather obvious to me as I'm not visiting them very often...
>
> in general, there are a lot more smaller birds around, like Brown
> Thornbills, White-browed Scrub-wrens, Superb Fairy-wrens etc, in people's
> residential gardens in these burbs. I hear butcherbirds calling in the dawn
> chorus in pretty much every suburb I overnight in when visiting, much more
> so than in the 70's to early 90's.
>
> as suburbs like these develop and mature, so does the vegetation that is
> within them as well - it seems to me that a nice mosaic of vegetation types
> has thus been created, and with enough shrubbery and other cover to 'bring
> back' such smaller songbirds as these, and of course, this supports more
> families of butcherbirds.
>
>
> the increasing controls on domestic cats has no doubt helped a great deal
> as well.
>
>
> and of course, this note of mine is a very general, and possibly a
> slightly romanticised, view of things, but I reckon that this helps to
> explain the butcherbirds increasing, especially in the greater eastern
> suburbs where I am from, and have been visiting in the last 22 years too...
>
>
> cheers for now,
>
>
> martin cachard
>
>
> writing to you now from a VERY NON-cyclone ravaged FNQ...
>
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: Birding-Aus <> on behalf of
> Peter Shute <>
> Sent: Monday, 16 April 2018 5:07 AM
> To: Mike Carter
> Cc: 
> Subject: Re: [Birding-Aus] Range of Weebill
>
> What's the reason for the increase in butcherbirds? People feeding them?
>
> Peter Shute
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> > On 15 Apr 2018, at 8:34 pm, Mike Carter <> wrote:
> >
> > Hi Patrick, Buff-rumped Thornbill is even more unlikely; that 2006
> publication that I mentioned lists that species as extinct on the
> Peninsula. Yellow-rumped Thornbill is a possibility but is distinctive so
> unlikely to be confused and has a patchy distribution. White-browed
> Scrubwren has a prominent white eye and would be plundered by Grey
> Butcherbirds which have become more common in built-up areas in the last
> three decades.
> >
> >
>
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