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Australian birds – numbers

Subject: Australian birds – numbers
From: calyptorhynchus <>
Date: Mon, 6 Jun 2022 16:20:12 +1000
Category 5: winter visitors from elsewhere in the southern hemisphere 

:-)

On Mon, 6 Jun 2022 at 15:24, <> wrote:

And what about Double-banded Plover a visitor from New Zealand?

 

Mike Carter 03 5977 1262

U181/160 Mornington-Tyabb Road

Mornington, Victoria 3931, Australia

 

 

Thanks Phil,

 

I had no idea that those five species (Koel, Channel-billed Cuckoo, Dollarbird, Buff-breasted Paradise-Kingfisher and Black-faced Monarch) left Australia completely in the winter.

 

Always learning new things.

 

John L

 

On Mon, 6 Jun 2022 at 13:08, Phil Gregory <m("gmail.com","oreornis");" target="_blank">> wrote:

Surely you have to include Koel, Channel-billed Cuckoo, Dollarbird, Buff-breasted Paradise-Kingfisher and Black-faced Monarch as summer breeders that leave?

My Sicklebill Safaris 2019 checklist, the last time I updated it, listed total bird species Australia and nearby islands is 855, a further 91 + are from the distant groups like Christmas, Cocos.

Total endemics 363 with another 13 on distant islands and Antarctica

Regards 

Phil Gregory

ornithological writer/tour leader/tour facilitator

Field Guides / Sicklebill Safaris / Cassowary Tours
PO Box 597
Malanda
QLD 4885
Australia

 

There are four categories of bird found in Australia (mainland and Tas):

 

1. Vagrants; these are birds from outside the region and are found in ones and twos or small numbers and not regularly, they do not breed.

2. Winter visitors from northern hemisphere, mainly waders; these come here in our summer during the northern winter and do not breed. Some individuals may overwinter.

3. Summer breeding visitors; birds which arrive in Australia from the north to breed in summer. As far as I know there are only two species that arrive to breed and then leave Australia entirely in the winter (Papuan Pitta and Black-winged Monarch). Many species arrive in the south to breed, then fly north in the winter after breeding, but some individuals in these species remain in northern Australia over the winter (even though many individuals of the same spp travel to PNG). So these will also be resident.

4. Residents; breed in Australia, stay in Australia the whole year (with or without local movements).

 

So, to get the number of residents, get the Birdlife Australia list for the mainland and Tasmania, knock off all vagrants, winter visitors, and the Papuan Pitta and Black-winged Monarch, and all the rest are resident.

 

--

John Leonard
Canberra
Australia
www.jleonard.net

Make nature great again.

 

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--

John Leonard
Canberra
Australia
www.jleonard.net

Make nature great again.

 



--
John Leonard
Canberra
Australia
www.jleonard.net

Make nature great again.

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