Nature Stuff

Birds

Masked Lapwing chick

Masked Lapwings

This is a bird well known for its gutsy behaviour. Whether it be for swooping, its raucous alarm call or unusual parenting habits, a family of these birds tends to make an impression. While their reputation is for being anything but timid, I’ve seen a wonderful gentle side to them.

Magpie

The Australian Magpie

The Australian Magpie (Gymnorhina tibicen) is a bird familiar to most Aussies. It has a mixed reputation. Some call it a nuisance for sometimes swooping at people at breeding time. Others welcome it into their gardens as a handsome and normally gentle bird. I fall firmly into the latter group.

Indian Myna

Indian Mynas

The Indian Myna, Acridotheres tristis, (also known as the Common Myna, Common Mynah, Indian Mynah) has earned the reputation of being one of the worst feral animals in Australia. It’s likely that if you live in Sydney, Melbourne, north Queensland or Brisbane, you’re already familiar with them.

Noisy Miner

Noisy Miners

As people make more and more changes to the Australian environment some critters are disappearing. But others, like the Noisy Miner, Manorina melanocephala, seem to be doing very nicely.

Noisy Miner and Indian Myna

Noisy Miner, Indian Myna

A lot of people want to know how to tell a Noisy Miner from an Indian Myna. It’s easy to distinguish between the two. Here’s a bunch of photos to help.

Goose beak

Geese teeth

There’s an old expression that said something in short supply was ‘as rare as hens’ teeth’. That might sound profound on a chicken farm but how much does this really apply to birds? When I told some friends I’d seen geese with fine sets of teeth no one believed me, so in the interests of setting the record straight I offer the following undoctored photo.

Masked Lapwing

Birds’ knees

One glance at a bird would convince most people that its knees bend the opposite way to ours. But do they really? And in fact, is it even correct to call those things knees?

Sulphur-crested Cockatoo

Sulphur-crested Cockatoos

If you see some spectacular large white Australian birds making a call sounding like someone being strangled, then chances are you’re in the presence of some Sulphur-crested Cockatoos.

Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo

Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoos

Now we’re talking about one of my favourite birds. So what is it about Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoos that makes them so special?.

Glossy Black Cockatoo

Glossy Black Cockatoos

The Glossy Black Cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus lathami) is a handsome bird that might not be around too much longer. As long as we keep clearing its habitat we push it closer to extinction. But as is so often the case, we can still do something about it.

Water birds

Common water birds around Sydney

Sydney’s permanent large ponds, like the lakes in Centennnial Park, are great spots to see all sorts of water birds. Want to know what kind of birds they are? This guide is far from complete, but at least it can help you fit a name to the most likely culprits.

Rainbow Lorikeet

Rainbow Lorikeets

As humans clear forests and replace them with farms, roads, buildings and ornamental gardens, they’re creating niches that suit some animals more than others. One bird that’s doing very nicely out of this arrangement is the Rainbow Lorikeet.

Starling

Starlings

For most of the Australian population, when you talk about a starling you’re thinking of the Common Starling. But there’s another type, seen in the north-eastern tropics, which deserves a mention — the Metallic Starling.

Australian White Ibis

Australian White Ibis

It probably seemed like a good idea at the time. Why not breed an Australian bird and release it in — wait for it — Australia. That can’t lead to any surprises, can it?

Raven

Black and white birds

This guide should help you identify some of those common black and white birds on Australia’s east coast. I’ll start with the biggest bird in this group and then work my way down to the smallest.

Noisy Miners

Bird politics

I used to think human politics were complicated. Then I started learning about bird politics. Now, I should really say I’m talking about bird behaviour here because the word ‘politics’ has too many connotations of kissing babies in exchange for votes. And I’ve never seen a bird stoop that low. Yet birds have lives rich in complex interactions with other creatures.

Tawny Frogmouth

Is the Tawny Frogmouth an owl?

Nope. It’s similar, and related, but it’s not an owl. This article explains the differences.

Pacific Black Duck

Pacific Black Ducks

This is one common duck throughout Australia. Chances are that if ducks are visiting a permanent Australian lake, pond or wetland then Pacific Blacks could be among them.

Black Swans

Black Swans

The black swan is related to geese and other water fowl and is the largest bird in that group. This handsome creature is the official bird emblem of Western Australia, although it’s common in the other states as well.

Raven's eye

Are they ravens or crows in Sydney?

Most people in Sydney think they can identify a crow when they see one, so it might come as a surprise to find out more about these handsome black birds. If you’re in Sydney, that bird which looks like a crow is probably a raven.

Brush Turkey

Brush Turkeys— building McMansion birds’ nests

You’ve just got to admire Brush Turkeys. They’re big birds. They conveniently hang around on ground level where they’re easier to see, and they make an amazing nest.

Darter

Darters — comfortable on land, in the air and in water

I admire these critters. They swim well, fly well and know a thing or two about catching fish as well.

Australian Pelican

The Australian Pelican

It’s hard not to notice a pelican when it’s nearby, because these birds are big. I’m talking about a bird with a wingspan as big as 2.5 metres.