Showing posts with label Eastern Reef Egret dark morph. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eastern Reef Egret dark morph. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 February 2019

Queensland Visits: Ethan 01

Ethan and I did some shorebirdwatching in the Gladstone area for a few days last week. We had a great time. Here are some of Ethan's images using a Canon 5D and a Tamron 150-600 G1 lens. Rule number one is: get closer.

First off are some endemic Aussie birds.

Double-barred Finch
Leaden Flycatcher (female)
Leaden Flycatcher (male)
Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike (almost fledged)(saw the adults)
Caspian Tern
Crested Tern (adult above; juvenile below)
Gull-billed Tern
Little Terns
Eastern Reef Egret (dark morph)
White-bellied Sea-eagle

Monday, 4 September 2017

Broome 2017 _ Wave The Waders Goodbye _ Day 01

Well, not permanently. Until next spring. Broome Bird Observatory does a 5-day course in late March/early April when waders gather in Roebuck Bay and set off to their northern hemisphere breeding destinations.

You live on base. The cuisine is themed for the seven world-wide migratory flyways. You do a tour each day, have some lectures/talks and spend the last few hours of each day observing gathering birds on the bay and watching them head off. Usually. Bar-Tailed Godwits and Great Knots are migratory. The others are Aussie residents.

Day 01

Bar-tailed Godwit Limosa lapponica


Great Knot Calidris tenuirostris


Brahminy Kite Haliastur indus



Eastern Reef Egret Egretta sacra grey morph


Lesser Crested Tern Thalasseus bengalensis


Nankeen Night Heron Nycticorax caledonians juvenile


Saturday, 10 June 2017

Invasion of South Australia 04

Days 09-11


Next to last stop was Innes NP at the tip of the Yorke Peninsula. We camped at Cable Bay Campground and first thing next morning, we walked the road to Cape Spencer without seeing or hearing a Western Whipbird. So we transferred to the West Cape Road and did the walking thing again. This time success with several birds heard and a few photos taken. Then on to Royston Head looking for Rock Parrot. Jack P saw a pair but by the time the other 8 of us had arrived the birds had flown over the edge and out of sight. Most walked the loop to the light seeing an Eastern Reef Egret and a White-bellied Sea-eagle and we gathered back at the cars to see Phil running up and announcing that Dan was baby-sitting a pair of Rock Parrots. This was several hundred metres along the cliff tops where Dan was crouching about 30 metres from a pair on top of a bush. We stopped, all had excellent looks with bins then we slowly moved closer taking multiple photos until we reached Dan then we continued to edge closer. Eventually one flew, joined a third and finally the second one flew when we were only 10 metres away. A special moment. Lots of emus around. Adults and half-size youngsters.

Emu Dromaius novaehollandiae


Rock Parrot Neophema petrophila

Eastern Reef Egret Egretta sacra

Rufous Field-wren Calamanthus campestris

Silvereye Zosterops lateralis

Leaving Innes NP towards lunchtime, we arrived at Gluepot just on dusk and Eagle-eyes Phil spotted a Spotted Nightjar at least a hundred metres in front of the car seeing just the eye shine. We were able to pull up about 30 metres from the bird and approach it to within 3 metres before he/she decamped.

Spotted Nightjar Eurostopodus argus

Next morning we specifically searched for Black-eared Miners with the simple remit of taking a photo of every single one we saw for later determination of separating BEM from Yellow-throated Miners [which have genetically swamped BEM] and the many hybrid birds. Let me tell you it took four hours of running through sandy bush hunting down calls of Miners then trying to get a look. Eventually we saw a few dozen and scrutiny of the images on computer at our last camp for the trip, Hattah [again], showed we had seen two birds we were happy to ID as true Black-eared Miners. Gluepot has a good sheet explaining the differences and a handy table making it easy to place any bird in the genetic spectrum. It is probably fair to say that there are probably no true, 100% DNA BEMs now. Due to the ubiquity of mobile phone signal, within 20 minutes or so of sending Rohan Clarke our images via text messaging, we were able to get confirmation that our images were true BEMs. We live in an amazing world both technological and natural. So pretty exciting and satisfying to tick BEM.

Black-eared Miner Manorina melanotis
This bird is a hybrid at best. Note the faint yellowing of the neck.
Other birds we saw included ...

Southern Scrub-robin Drymodes brunneopygia

Major Mitchell Cockatoo Lophochroa leadbetteri

White-browed Scrub-wren Sericornis frontalis

At one of the bird hides we came upon this delightful Inland Snake-eyed Skink Cryptoblepharus australis. 



Our last night was camped at Hattah and we had another go at seeing Striated Grasswren but saw lots of Mallee Emu-wrens and took lots of photos of them. A great bird and a great way to end the trip.

Jacky Winter Microeca flavigaster


Mallee Emu-wren Stipiturus mallee

Magic. f"anything" and be there.

Saturday, 29 October 2016

Go North 04 -- The Tip

Bamaga to The Tip is just 40kms or so. There were plenty of people about but we managed the stock shot.


After the walk out to the tip and back, we had lunch. The tide went out while we were there revealing the usual mudflats/sandbanks so a bit of lightweight birding was indulged in.

Whimbrel Numenius phaeopus
Grey-tailed Tattler Heteroscelus brevipes
Greater Sand Plover Charadrius lechenaultii
Red-capped Plover Charadrius ruficapillus
Eastern Reef Egret Ardea sacra dark morph
stand-off with a Silver Gull Larus novaehollandiae
Eastern Reef Egret Ardea sacra dark morph