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Birdpedia - Australia - Weekly Digest

To: <>
Subject: Birdpedia - Australia - Weekly Digest
From: "Birdpedia - Australia Info" <>
Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2019 23:11:17 +0930
The following is a digest of Sightings Reported on Birdpedia for the period 
Monday, August 26, 2019 to Sunday, September 1, 2019:

Area: SA

Date: Monday, August 26, 2019

Location: Port Elliot Sewage ponds Hill Street Port Elliot.

Freckled Duck (Stictonetta naevosa) (40) Most birds were resting on the side of 
the plastic lined pond.

Blue-billed Duck (Oxyura australis) (5) 3 male and 2 female swimming with other 
ducks.

Pink-eared Duck (Malacorhynchus membranaceus) (65) On the bank and swimming 
with other species,same pond as for Freckled and Blue billed.

Reported by: Winston Syson on Thursday, August 29, 2019

---------------------------------------------

Date: Sunday, September 1, 2019

Location: On our Rockleigh property

Rufous Songlark (Cincloramphus mathewsi) (1) Species number 89 (over 11 years) 
! On arriving at our front gate the songlark was sitting on a low branch of a 
dead tree 20 metres away, singing. We used to see brown songlarks but the 
bushfire in January 2014 sent them somewhere else, and one has not been seen 
since

White-winged Triller (Lalage tricolor) (2) The only other time a triller has 
been seen was in October 2013, a male. Today a pair perched briefly in a gum 
tree in the creek line, the male singing. Soon they vanished.

White-winged Chough (Corcorax melanorhamphos) (4) Choughs have again nested in 
the creek line. This time the nest is in a tree very close to the road. There 
was quite a racket going on, which turned out to be a very large chick begging 
after its parent flew away. It had difficulty extracting a wing from the nest 
to have a practice flap. I was only able to identify it as a chick by the 
unkempt feathers on top of its head

White-browed Babbler (Pomatostomus superciliosus) (6-8) Babblers are more or 
less resident, and today there were at least 2 groups. 2 were in a dead Acacia 
outside our shed. Both had a fat orange centipede dangling from their bills, 
and instead of sensibly sitting still and eating their meal they bounced around 
the twigs trying to flick the uncooperative centipedes into a position where 
they could swallow them.

Reported by: Barbara and Peter Bansemer on Sunday, September 1, 2019

---------------------------------------------

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