Birds of the Enfield Forest and Surrounds 2019

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Birds of the Enfield Forest and Surrounds 2019 Birds of the Enfield Area Including the townships of Napoleons, Enfield, Dereel and parts of the Enfield State Park each side of the Colac Ballarat Rd This list was compiled from observations made by Ambika Bone and Indra Bone for Birdlife Ballarat 2019 [email protected] Stubble Quail Straw-necked Ibis Sulphur-crested Cockatoo Yellow-faced Honeyeater Magpie-lark Black Swan Yellow-billed Spoonbill Rainbow Lorikeet White-eared Honeyeater White-winged Chough Australian Shelduck Black-shouldered Kite Musk Lorikeet White-plumed Honeyeater Jacky Winter Australian Wood Duck Square-tailed Kite Crimson Rosella Red Wattlebird Scarlet Robin Australasian Shoveler Whistling Kite Eastern Rosella White-fronted Chat Flame Robin Grey Teal Black Kite Red-rumped Parrot Scarlet Honeyeater Eastern Yellow Robin Chestnut Teal Brown Goshawk Blue-winged Parrot New Holland Honeyeater Horsfield's Bushlark Pacific Black Duck Collared Sparrowhawk Horsfield's Bronze-Cuckoo Brown-headed Honeyeater Eurasian Skylark * Hardhead Spotted Harrier Shining Bronze-Cuckoo White-naped Honeyeater Golden-headed Cisticola Australasian Grebe Swamp Harrier Pallid Cuckoo Spotted Quail-thrush Australian Reed-Warbler Hoary-headed Grebe Wedge-tailed Eagle Fan-tailed Cuckoo Varied Sittella Little Grassbird Rock Dove * Little Eagle Brush Cuckoo Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike Brown Songlark Spotted Dove * Nankeen Kestrel Powerful Owl White-winged Triller Silvereye Common Bronzewing Brown Falcon Southern Boobook Crested Shrike-tit Welcome Swallow Brush Bronzewing Australian Hobby Australian Barn Owl Golden Whistler Fairy Martin Crested Pigeon Black Falcon Laughing Kookaburra Rufous Whistler Tree Martin Tawny Frogmouth Peregrine Falcon Sacred Kingfisher Grey Shrike-thrush Bassian Thrush White-throated Needletail Purple Swamphen Dollarbird Olive-backed Oriole Common Blackbird * Fork-tailed Swift Australian Spotted Crake White-throated Treecreeper White-browed Woodswallow Common Starling * Australasian Darter Spotless Crake Superb Fairy-wren Dusky Woodswallow Common Myna * Little Pied Cormorant Dusky Moorhen White-browed Scrubwren Grey Butcherbird Mistletoebird Great Cormorant Eurasian Coot Chestnut-rumped Heathwren Australian Magpie Red-browed Finch Little Black Cormorant Black-fronted Dotterel Striated Fieldwren Pied Currawong Diamond Firetail Australian Pelican Masked Lapwing Striated Thornbill Grey Currawong House Sparrow * White-necked Heron Latham's Snipe Yellow-rumped Thornbill Grey Fantail Australasian Pipit Eastern Great Egret Painted Button-quail Buff-rumped Thornbill Willie Wagtail European Goldfinch * Cattle Egret Yellow-tailed Black-Cockatoo Brown Thornbill Australian Raven Common Greenfinch * White-faced Heron Gang-gang Cockatoo Spotted Pardalote Little Raven Nankeen Night-Heron Galah Striated Pardalote Satin Flycatcher * Introduced Species Australian White Ibis Long-billed Corella Eastern Spinebill Restless Flycatcher .
Recommended publications
  • Australian Diurnal Raptors and Airports
    Australian diurnal raptors and airports Photo: John Barkla, BirdLife Australia William Steele Australasian Raptor Association BirdLife Australia Australian Aviation Wildlife Hazard Group Forum Brisbane, 25 July 2013 So what is a raptor? Small to very large birds of prey. Diurnal, predatory or scavenging birds. Sharp, hooked bills and large powerful feet with talons. Order Falconiformes: 27 species on Australian list. Family Falconidae – falcons/ kestrels Family Accipitridae – eagles, hawks, kites, osprey Falcons and kestrels Brown Falcon Black Falcon Grey Falcon Nankeen Kestrel Australian Hobby Peregrine Falcon Falcons and Kestrels – conservation status Common Name EPBC Qld WA SA FFG Vic NSW Tas NT Nankeen Kestrel Brown Falcon Australian Hobby Grey Falcon NT RA Listed CR VUL VUL Black Falcon EN Peregrine Falcon RA Hawks and eagles ‐ Osprey Osprey Hawks and eagles – Endemic hawks Red Goshawk female Hawks and eagles – Sparrowhawks/ goshawks Brown Goshawk Photo: Rik Brown Hawks and eagles – Elanus kites Black‐shouldered Kite Letter‐winged Kite ~ 300 g Hover hunters Rodent specialists LWK can be crepuscular Hawks and eagles ‐ eagles Photo: Herald Sun. Hawks and eagles ‐ eagles Large ‐ • Wedge‐tailed Eagle (~ 4 kg) • Little Eagle (< 1 kg) • White‐bellied Sea‐Eagle (< 4 kg) • Gurney’s Eagle Scavengers of carrion, in addition to hunters Fortunately, mostly solitary although some multiple strikes on aircraft Hawks and eagles –large kites Black Kite Whistling Kite Brahminy Kite Frequently scavenge Large at ~ 600 to 800 g BK and WK flock and so high risk to aircraft Photo: Jill Holdsworth Identification Beruldsen, G (1995) Raptor Identification. Privately published by author, Kenmore Hills, Queensland, pp. 18‐19, 26‐27, 36‐37.
    [Show full text]
  • Download This PDF File
    3.79 31 Field Notes on the Black Falcon By GEORGE W. BEDGGOOD, Lindenow South, Victoria, 3866. Because of the dearth of published records for Falco subniger in Victoria and southern New South Wales, I have summarised all my observations from 1955 to 1978. Wheeler ( 1967) lists it as "rather rare" but records it for all districts of Victoria. Although a bird of the drier inland plains, its nomadic wanderings may result in unexpected appearances outside its normal range. Factors affecting a regular food supply, such as drought, no doubt are responsible for such movements. Because its non-hunting flight is so "crow-like" it could easily be mistaken as "a corvid". The dark sooty-brown plumage which appears black, particularly when the bird is some distance from the observer, or when seen in silhouette, its similar size and general outline could all contribute to mistaken identification. When hunting, its flight is typically falcon-like, swift and calculated. Due to its size and lack of pattern in the plumage it ought not be confused with any other falcon. Between September 1955 and December 1956 I was able to record the species at Jindera, N.S.W., and in Victoria at Bonegilla and Corryong. The Jindera bird was my first experience with the Black Falcon. A farmer travelling in the car and knowing my interest in birds remarked that a pair had been seen frequently in the district. Approaching Jindera we flushed a bird from a telephone post. The farmer immediately identified it as a Black Falcon. It flapped and glided to a windbreak some distance away, its flight no different to that of the many corvids we had passed since leaving Albury.
    [Show full text]
  • Australia South Australian Outback 8Th June to 23Rd June 2021 (13 Days)
    Australia South Australian Outback 8th June to 23rd June 2021 (13 days) Splendid Fairywren by Dennis Braddy RBL South Australian Outback Itinerary 2 Nowhere is Australia’s vast Outback country more varied, prolific and accessible than in the south of the country. Beginning and ending in Adelaide, we’ll traverse the region’s superb network of national parks and reserves before venturing along the remote, endemic-rich and legendary Strzelecki and Birdsville Tracks in search of a wealth of Australia’s most spectacular, specialised and enigmatic endemics such as Grey and Black Falcons, Letter-winged Kite, Black-breasted Buzzard, Chestnut- breasted and Banded Whiteface, Gibberbird, Yellow, Crimson and Orange Chats, Inland Dotterel, Flock Bronzewing, spectacular Scarlet-chested and Regent Parrots, Copperback and Cinnamon Quail- thrushes, Banded Stilt, White-browed Treecreeper, Red-lored and Gilbert’s Whistlers, an incredible array of range-restricted Grasswrens, the rare and nomadic Black and Pied Honeyeaters, Black-eared Cuckoo and the incredible Major Mitchell’s Cockatoo. THE TOUR AT A GLANCE… THE SOUTH AUTRALIAN OUTBACK ITINERARY Day 1 Arrival in Adelaide Day 2 Adelaide to Berri Days 3 & 4 Glue Pot Reserve and Calperum Station Day 5 Berri to Wilpena Pound and Flinders Ranges National Park Day 6 Wilpena Pound to Lyndhurst Day 7 Strzelecki Track Day 8 Lyndhurst to Mungerranie via Marree and Birdsville Track Day 9 Mungerranie and Birdsville Track area Day 10 Mungerranie to Port Augusta Day 11 Port Augusta area Day 12 Port Augusta to Adelaide Day 13 Adelaide and depart RBL South Australian Outback Itinerary 3 TOUR MAP… RBL South Australian Outback Itinerary 4 THE TOUR IN DETAIL… Day 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Tolderol Game Reserve Wetlands Bird List This List Has Been Compiled from the Many Bird Surveys Conducted at Tolderol Game Reserve Wetlands Between 1993 and 2016
    Tolderol Game Reserve Wetlands Bird List This list has been compiled from the many bird surveys conducted at Tolderol Game Reserve Wetlands between 1993 and 2016. The data has been provided by Birds SA, Natural Resources SA Murray-Darling Basin and the many volunteers who have assisted by providing opportunistic sightings. It is important to remember this is not a complete list and more data will be added as becomes available. For more information or to find out how to contribute to bird monitoring at Tolderol Game Reserve Wetlands please contact Natural Resources SAMDB on (08) 85 329 100. American Golden Plover Brown Songlark Australasian Bittern Buff-banded Rail Australasian Darter Cape Barren Goose Australasian Grebe Caspian Tern Australasian Pipit Chestnut Teal Australasian Shoveler Common Blackbird Australian Hobby Common Greenshank Australian Kestrel Common Sandpiper Australian Magpie Common Starling Australian Magpie-lark Crake spp. Australian Pelican Crested Pigeon Australian Pipit Crested Tern Australian Pratincole Curlew Sandpiper Australian Raven Double-banded Plover Australian Reed Warbler Dusky Moorhen Australian Reed-warbler Eastern Barn Owl Australian Shelduck Elegant Parrot Australian Spotted Crake Eurasian Coot Australian White Ibis Eurasian Skylark Australian Wood Duck European Goldfinch Australiasian Grebe European Greenfinch Baillon's Crake Fairy Martin Banded Stilt Feral Pigeon Black Falcon Fork-tailed Swift Black Kite Galah Black Swan Glossy Ibis Black-faced Cormorant Golden-headed Cisticola Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike
    [Show full text]
  • Download the Bird List
    Bird list for PAIWALLA WETLANDS -35.03468 °N 139.37202 °E 35°02’05” S 139°22’19” E 54 351500 6121900 or new birdssa.asn.au ……………. …………….. …………… …………….. … …......... ……… Observers: ………………………………………………………………….. Phone: (H) ……………………………… (M) ………………………………… ..………………………………………………………………………………. Email: …………..…………………………………………………… Date: ……..…………………………. Start Time: ……………………… End Time: ……………………… Codes (leave blank for Present) D = Dead H = Heard O = Overhead B = Breeding B1 = Mating B2 = Nest Building B3 = Nest with eggs B4 = Nest with chicks B5 = Dependent fledglings B6 = Bird on nest NON-PASSERINES S S A W Code No. NON-PASSERINES S S A W Code No. NON-PASSERINES S S A W Code No. Red-necked Avocet Black Falcon Spur-winged Plover (Masked Lapwing) Rainbow Bee-eater Brown Falcon Australasian Bittern Peregrine Falcon Australian Pratincole Black-backed Bittern Galah Brown Quail Eastern Bluebonnet Black-tailed Godwit Stubble Quail Australian Boobook Cape Barren Goose Buff-banded Rail Brush Bronzewing Brown Goshawk Lewin's Rail Common Bronzewing Australasian Grebe Mallee Ringneck (Australian Ringneck) Budgerigar Great Crested Grebe Cockatiel Hoary-headed Grebe Adelaide Rosella (Crimson Rosella) Sulphur-crested Cockatoo Common Greenshank Eurasian Coot Silver Gull Common Sandpiper Little Corella Hardhead Curlew Sandpiper Great Cormorant Spotted Harrier Marsh Sandpiper Little Black Cormorant Swamp Harrier Pectoral Sandpiper Little Pied Cormorant Nankeen Night Heron Sharp-tailed Sandpiper Pied Cormorant White-faced Heron Wood Sandpiper Australian Crake White-necked
    [Show full text]
  • OF the TOWNSVILLE REGION LAKE ROSS the Beautiful Lake Ross Stores Over 200,000 Megalitres of Water and Supplies up to 80% of Townsville’S Drinking Water
    BIRDS OF THE TOWNSVILLE REGION LAKE ROSS The beautiful Lake Ross stores over 200,000 megalitres of water and supplies up to 80% of Townsville’s drinking water. The Ross River Dam wall stretches 8.3km across the Ross River floodplain, providing additional flood mitigation benefit to downstream communities. The Dam’s extensive shallow margins and fringing woodlands provide habitat for over 200 species of birds. At times, the number of Australian Pelicans, Black Swans, Eurasian Coots and Hardhead ducks can run into the thousands – a magic sight to behold. The Dam is also the breeding area for the White-bellied Sea-Eagle and the Osprey. The park around the Dam and the base of the spillway are ideal habitat for bush birds. The borrow pits across the road from the dam also support a wide variety of water birds for some months after each wet season. Lake Ross and the borrow pits are located at the end of Riverway Drive, about 14km past Thuringowa Central. Birds likely to be seen include: Australasian Darter, Little Pied Cormorant, Australian Pelican, White-faced Heron, Little Egret, Eastern Great Egret, Intermediate Egret, Australian White Ibis, Royal Spoonbill, Black Kite, White-bellied Sea-Eagle, Australian Bustard, Rainbow Lorikeet, Pale-headed Rosella, Blue-winged Kookaburra, Rainbow Bee-eater, Helmeted Friarbird, Yellow Honeyeater, Brown Honeyeater, Spangled Drongo, White-bellied Cuckoo-shrike, Pied Butcherbird, Great Bowerbird, Nutmeg Mannikin, Olive-backed Sunbird. White-faced Heron ROSS RIVER The Ross River winds its way through Townsville from Ross Dam to the mouth of the river near the Townsville Port.
    [Show full text]
  • Threatened Species Nomination Form
    2010 NOMINATION – Falco subniger Section 1 - Legal Status, Distribution, Biological, Ecological Conservation Theme 1. The conservation themes for the The species’ breeding habitat or nest sites potentially include assessment period commencing mallee woodlands near open country 1 October 2010 (for which nominations close 25 March 2010) are ‘heathlands and mallee woodlands’, and ‘terrestrial, estuarine and near–shore environments of Australia’s coast’. How does this nomination relate to the conservation themes? Taxonomy 2. What are the currently accepted Black Falcon- Falco subniger scientific and common name/s for the species (please include Indigenous names, where known)? Note any other scientific names that have been used recently. Note the species authority and the Order and Family to which the species belongs (Family name alone is sufficient for plants, however, both Order and Family name are required for insects). 3. Is this species conventionally Yes accepted? If not, explain why. Is there any controversy about the taxonomy? 4. If the species is NOT conventionally accepted, please provide: (i) a taxonomic description of the species in a form suitable for publication in conventional scientific literature; OR (ii) evidence that a scientific institution has a specimen of the species and a written statement signed by a person who has relevant taxonomic expertise (has worked, or is a published author, on the class of species nominated), that the person thinks the species is a new species. 5. Is this species taxonomically distinct Australian endemic species in a global genus and family (Taxonomic distinctiveness – a measure of how unique a species is relative to other species)? Legal Status 6.
    [Show full text]
  • Black Falcon, Falco Subniger
    NSW SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE Final Determination The Scientific Committee, established by the Threatened Species Conservation Act, has made a Final Determination to list the Black Falcon Falco subniger G.R. Gray, 1843 as a VULNERABLE SPECIES in Part 1 of Schedule 2 of the Act. Listing of Vulnerable species is provided for by Part 2 of the Act. The Scientific Committee has found that: 1. The Black Falcon Falco subniger G.R. Gray 1843 (family Falconidae), is a large (45-55 cm in length), very dark falcon with pale grey cere, eye-rings and feet. It is uniformly dark brown to sooty black, with a pale throat and an indistinct black streak below each eye. Some individuals have faint, narrow barring under the wings and tail. The dark form of the Brown Falcon Falco berigora is sometimes mistaken for the Black Falcon. However the Brown Falcon can be distinguished by its double cheek-mark, longer legs, bicoloured, barred underwings and comparatively slow flight (Debus 1998). 2. The Black Falcon is widely, but sparsely, distributed in New South Wales, mostly occurring in inland regions. Some reports of ‘Black Falcons’ on the tablelands and coast of New South Wales are likely to be referable to the Brown Falcon. In New South Wales there is assumed to be a single population that is continuous with a broader continental population, given that falcons are highly mobile, commonly travelling hundreds of kilometres (Marchant & Higgins 1993). The Black Falcon occurs as solitary individuals, in pairs, or in family groups of parents and offspring. Individuals may congregate at food sources (e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • Jadaptations of the Rare Endemic Grey Falcon
    Adaptations of the rare endemic Grey Falcon Falco hypoleucos that enable its permanent residence in the arid zone of Australia Jonny Schoenjahn Dipl.-Math. A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at The University of Queensland in 2018 School of Biological Sciences 2 Abstract The Grey Falcon Falco hypoleucos is an extremely rare and little known Australian endemic raptor. The Web of Science lists only two publications for this species, considered to be one of the five rarest Falco species of the world: a literature review and analysis of museum material (Olsen and Olsen 1986), and the results from the preliminary investigation that led to this study (Schoenjahn 2013). The difficulty in finding these rare birds (<1000 mature individuals), distributed thinly across much of Australia’s arid/semi arid zone (~5 million km2), hampers detailed studies and has deterred previous researchers from studying this species. The Grey Falcon is the only species of Falco to have its entire population confined exclusively to a hot arid environment. To understand the processes that help the species to persist in its extreme environment, I explore key aspects of its ecology, morphology, and anatomy, using observational data collected during 14 field seasons (2003–2016), involving 59 breeding events and satellite tracking data from seven individuals tracked for between 82 and 797 days. How do individuals, during the various stages of their lives, cope with extremely high ambient temperatures? Investigating whether the species is specifically adapted behaviourally and anatomically to its environment, I found that Grey Falcons keep physical exertion and thus activity levels low in each aspect of their day-to-day lives, and lack particular morphological or physiological characteristics that would help them to cope with heat better than other bird species do.
    [Show full text]
  • A Summary of Information and Comparison with the Brown Falcon Falco Berigora
    AUSTRALIAN 80 BIRD WATCHER AUSTRALIAN BIRD WATCHER 1985, II , 80-91 The Black Falcon Falco subniger.· A Summary of Information and Comparison with the Brown Falcon Falco berigora By GREGORY V. CZECHURA, Queensland Museum, Gregory Terrace, Fortitude Valley, Queensland 4006 and STEPHEN J.S. DEBUS, P.O. Box 1015, Armidale, N.S.W. 2350 Summary The literature concerning field recogmhon, body weight, diet, feeding/hunting behaviour, courtship and breeding biology of the Black Falcon Falco subniger is reviewed and supplemented with field observations. Some comparisons are made with the Brown Falcon Falco berigora. Generally, the (larger) Black Falcon tends towards faster and more aerial hunting methods and avian prey, and the Brown Falcon tends towards slower and more stationary searching methods and terrestrial prey, with greater emphasis on reptiles. In bodily dimensions, hunting behaviour and diet, the Black Falcon resembles the Lanner Falcon Falco biarmicus and especially the Lagger Falcon Falco jugger rather than other Australian falcons. In its adaptation to an arid environment (breeding strategy, diet and hunting tactics), the Black Falcon appears to differ somewhat from the Grey Falcon Falco hypoleucos. Data on the biology of the Black Falcon are limited and require further investigation. Introduction Calaby (1976) stated that not much is known about the habits of the Black Falcon Falco subniger, and claimed that confusion with dark-phase Brown Falcons Falco berigora has cast doubt on statements made about it. Cade (1982) implied that little is known about its hunting habits, breeding behaviour and nesting ecology. The purpose of this paper is to review what is known about the Black Falcon in order to identify some aspects of its behaviour and ecology that differentiate it from the Brown Falcon; also to draw together data scattered in the literature, and to place recent work (Cupper & Cupper 1981, Baker-Gabb 1984a, Hollands 1984) within the context of Cade's treatment of the genus Falco.
    [Show full text]
  • Breeding Biology, Behaviour and Foraging Ecology of the Black Falcon Falco Subniger Near Tamworth, New South Wales S. J. S. Debu
    Breeding biology, behaviour and foraging ecology of the Black Falcon Falco subniger near Tamworth, New South Wales S. J. S. Debus1, A. L. Bauer1 and G. I. Mitchell2 1Division of Zoology, University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales 2351 (Email: [email protected]) 217 Kyooma Street, Hillvue, New South Wales 2340 Received: 10 May 2017 The breeding biology and behaviour of the Black Falcon Falco subniger were studied in the Tamworth district (northern inland NSW) through 146 hours of observation over 47 days in 2015 (one pair, pre-laying to early incubation) and 261 hours of observation over 69 days in 2016 (four pairs, pre-laying to fledging, with checks through the post-fledging period). Pellets were collected from under vacated nests. Aerial displays (e.g. agility, V-dives, ‘undulatory roll,’ ‘high winnowing’), nest-site selection and occupation, courtship and mating are described. Adopted stick nests were high in tall or emergent riparian or paddock eucalypts; nearest-neighbour distances averaged 10.25 km (range 9– 12 km). Eggs were laid in July, and incubation appeared to take 34 ± 1 days at one nest. Males took a minor share of incubation (1–3% of daylight) and brooding of hatchlings (1%). Interspecific conflict or defence was strongest against corvids in the pre-laying phase, and against Wedge-tailed Eagles Aquila audax during the nestling phase. Feeding rates and estimated biomass provision were 0.09– 0.26 item/h and ~4–28 g/h at nests that failed during the incubation or hatchling phase, and 0.19 item/h and ~23 g/h to a single nestling that fledged underweight.
    [Show full text]
  • The Birds of the Bush Heritage, Cravens Peak Reserve
    This may be the author’s version of a work that was submitted/accepted for publication in the following source: Wells, Dez (2009) The birds of the Bush Heritage, Cravens Peak Reserve. Royal Geographical Society of Queensland, Australia. This file was downloaded from: https://eprints.qut.edu.au/59517/ c Consult author(s) regarding copyright matters This work is covered by copyright. Unless the document is being made available under a Creative Commons Licence, you must assume that re-use is limited to personal use and that permission from the copyright owner must be obtained for all other uses. If the docu- ment is available under a Creative Commons License (or other specified license) then refer to the Licence for details of permitted re-use. It is a condition of access that users recog- nise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. If you believe that this work infringes copyright please provide details by email to [email protected] Notice: Please note that this document may not be the Version of Record (i.e. published version) of the work. Author manuscript versions (as Sub- mitted for peer review or as Accepted for publication after peer review) can be identified by an absence of publisher branding and/or typeset appear- ance. If there is any doubt, please refer to the published source. The Birds of the Bush Heritage Cravens Peak Reserve Dezmond. R. Wells (Bsc, GradDipEd, AssDipAppSc)A ABirds Australia Southern Queensland, 32 Panoramic Dr, Narangba, QLD 4504, Australia. Email: [email protected] Abstract Bird communities were studied in two subregional areas of Cravens Peak, the Toko Plains and the Simpson- Strzelecki Dunefields, using the point counts method.
    [Show full text]