The Rufous Fantail is a truly delightful summer visitor to our neck of the woods. It would be one of my favourite birds both for their plumage and typical fantail behaviour. During a recent visit by Birdlife East Gippsland to Fairy Dell near Wiseleigh, a pair was spotted constructing their nest.
Rufous Fantail Rhipidura rufifrons
Showing posts with label Rufous Fantail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rufous Fantail. Show all posts
Thursday, 30 November 2017
Tuesday, 26 January 2016
Bird Nerd visits Queensland 09
Dawn on New Year's Day was quiet especially at the Maroochy Wetlands. Solo me saw a good crop of birds.
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| I wonder what this bird with a rufous fantail is called? |
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| Ah yes. Rufous Fantail Rhipidura rufifrons |
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| Plumed Whistling-duck Dendrocygna eytoni |
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| Bar-shouldered Dove Geopelia humeralis |
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A family of Forest Kingfishers Todiramphus macleayii were eying off the real estate bargains.
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The bird above is a Mangrove Gerygone Gerygone levigaster. The bird below is an immature.
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It looks like a Grey Shrike-thrush but is a tad smaller and sounds different. The Australian Bird Identification Facebook page pointed me in the direction of a Little Shrike-thrush Collurcincla megarhyncha. Below are other images of the same bird.
Thursday, 14 January 2016
Bird Nird visits Queensland 03
From Tamworth, the run in to Brisbane is via Warwick and down "the gap" then on past Ipswich to an adventure on the Clem7 tunnel under the Brisbane River [still 150 clicks to Buderim!]. Well, it was off birding with Ethan first thing the next morning to a couple of spots he and his Gran, Elaine, had been to at a previous visit back in the winter.
First stop was the Maroochy Wetlands Sanctuary. Ethan was quite insistent that we get there as early as possible. As a legacy of Joh Bjelke-Petersen, Queensland has never been a participant in daylight saving time hence it is one hour behind the rest of the east coast [and half an hour behind South Australia - doesn't that make sense!] thus the sun rises at 5am at the summer solstice. This means the 5 or 6 resident Pacific Koels [and Kookas and magpies] start up about 4.30am as the sky lightens in the east. We were at the sanctuary at 6! Believe it or not, being in the usual environment of the Koel and hearing a mob of them calling each other around the neighbourhood sounded quite normal and not at all intrusive. I actually enjoyed them - unlike the one lonely resident in Sale with his plaintive, repetitive "ko-el, ko-el".
Maroochy Wetlands Sanctuary is a very nice piece of environmental real estate between the outskirts of Bli Bli and the South Maroochy River. You park your car in a small carpark by the entrance to a soft fruit farm and the visitor centre. The first part of the path takes you through a small section of rainforest then a boardwalk goes through some open forest, mangroves and pockets of casuarina to the riverside. Ethan and Eliane had been here with a local birder, Russell, earlier in the month so Ethan had a good idea about what was present. He could hear a Spectacled Monarch calling as well as fig birds, fantails, crows, magpies, honeyeaters etc. We hadn't gone two yards before we were ambushed by Rufous Fantails. Just as Gouldiae has to sweep Eastern Yellow Robins out of the way, we had to sweep the Rufous Fantails out of the way as well as the Lewins Honeyeaters! We also spotted a Shining Flycatcher as a highlight and the Spectacled Monarch on our return via the rainforest.
First stop was the Maroochy Wetlands Sanctuary. Ethan was quite insistent that we get there as early as possible. As a legacy of Joh Bjelke-Petersen, Queensland has never been a participant in daylight saving time hence it is one hour behind the rest of the east coast [and half an hour behind South Australia - doesn't that make sense!] thus the sun rises at 5am at the summer solstice. This means the 5 or 6 resident Pacific Koels [and Kookas and magpies] start up about 4.30am as the sky lightens in the east. We were at the sanctuary at 6! Believe it or not, being in the usual environment of the Koel and hearing a mob of them calling each other around the neighbourhood sounded quite normal and not at all intrusive. I actually enjoyed them - unlike the one lonely resident in Sale with his plaintive, repetitive "ko-el, ko-el".
Maroochy Wetlands Sanctuary is a very nice piece of environmental real estate between the outskirts of Bli Bli and the South Maroochy River. You park your car in a small carpark by the entrance to a soft fruit farm and the visitor centre. The first part of the path takes you through a small section of rainforest then a boardwalk goes through some open forest, mangroves and pockets of casuarina to the riverside. Ethan and Eliane had been here with a local birder, Russell, earlier in the month so Ethan had a good idea about what was present. He could hear a Spectacled Monarch calling as well as fig birds, fantails, crows, magpies, honeyeaters etc. We hadn't gone two yards before we were ambushed by Rufous Fantails. Just as Gouldiae has to sweep Eastern Yellow Robins out of the way, we had to sweep the Rufous Fantails out of the way as well as the Lewins Honeyeaters! We also spotted a Shining Flycatcher as a highlight and the Spectacled Monarch on our return via the rainforest.
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| Australian Figbird Sphecotheres viridis |
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| Lewin's Honeyeater Meliphaga lewinii |
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| Rufous Fantail Rhipidura rufifrons |
This is the first decent image I have taken of this beautiful species which I only saw for the first time at Nangara Reserve near Drouin last year courtesy of Gouldiae. Before that I had neglected to even recognise that the species existed. I think it is a delightful little bird. Here are some more images of it.
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| Spectacled Monarch Monarcha trivirgatus |
Both the Fantail and the Monarch were in the rainforest section so it was pretty dim in there. High ISO and a bit of Photoshop manipulation for these images. More later.
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