Kookaburra bill
Birds often develop deformed bills and I wonder why they occur, accident or disease. I met this Kookaburra in the bush yesterday, and I recognised it by its distinctive bill shape from last year. It was in the same area and probably the same family group's home range as it was displaying with another bird. So although it appears that it might have difficulty feeding with such a long upper mandible compared with the lower one, it must be successful. Kookaburras catch most of their prey by pouncing down on them from a perch and snatching them with their bills. Typically, they catch anything from insects to small reptiles, so they need to be quick and efficient.
Showing posts with label kookaburra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kookaburra. Show all posts
Friday, 16 August 2013
Thursday, 29 September 2011
Woodswallows
I was helping to catch and band birds on a field study run by Richard Allen last weekend at the Weddin Mountains. The weather on Sunday was a bit windy for efficient mist-netting but we caught 108 birds, mostly on the Saturday.
The main birds of the trip were woodswallows. There was a flock of about 700 flying overhead most of Saturday, and they were coming down to feed on nectar from flowering Ironbark trees, then they came in to roost in the trees at dusk. The main species was white-browed, of which we caught 40, and there were also masked (2 caught) and dusky (1 caught).
Among the other birds we caught were a male and female sacred kingfisher,
and a one of those wonderful kingfishers, a kookaburra.
Adult male white-browed woodswallow
The main birds of the trip were woodswallows. There was a flock of about 700 flying overhead most of Saturday, and they were coming down to feed on nectar from flowering Ironbark trees, then they came in to roost in the trees at dusk. The main species was white-browed, of which we caught 40, and there were also masked (2 caught) and dusky (1 caught).
A dusky woodswallow on the left and
a white-browed woodswallow on the right
Among the other birds we caught were a male and female sacred kingfisher,
Male sacred kingfisher
and a one of those wonderful kingfishers, a kookaburra.
Kookaburra
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