Birds of Western Australia - Part One
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- čas přidán 24. 05. 2018
- This is part one of a series that aims to help people identify West Australian birds and to recognise their different calls.
Correction : We have been told that the call for the red-tailed black cockatoos is incorrect in this video and we will re-do the red tails in a subsequent video.
Birds featured on this video:
00:09 Pacific gull
00:25 Silver gull
00:45 Great egret
01:07 Little egret
01:16 Western wattlebird
01:30 Carnaby's black cockatoo
01:42 Red tailed black cockatoo
01:53 Currawong
02:22 Great cormorant
02:37 Pied cormorant
02:47 Little pied cormorant
02:52 Darter or snake bird
03:07 Australian white ibis
03:28 Laughing kookaburra
03:54 Blue winged kookaburra
04:04 Magpie
04:34 Magpie lark
OTHER VIDEO CONTENTS
Part 5 - www.youtube.com/watch?v=YTOpp...
Carnaby's Black Cockatoo
Pink and Grey Galah
Eurasian Coot
Pied Cormorant
Common Bronzewing
Laughing Turtle Dove
Musk Duck
Emu
Pacific Gull
White Faced Heron
White Necked Heron
New Holland Honeyeater
Raven (with corellas)
Welcome Swallows
Black Swan
Part 4 - www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJEBE...
Osprey
Australian wood duck
Australian shelduck
Grey Teal
Pacific black duck
Australian grebe
Eurasian coot
Purple or Western swamphen
Australian ringneck parrot
Part 3 - www.youtube.com/watch?v=W9_lH...
Long billed corella
Little corella
Western corella
Western rosella
Galah (pink and grey)
Australian ringneck
Common bronzewing
Raven
Red wattlebird
Crested tern
Scarlet robin
Red capped robin
Western yellow robin
White breasted robin
Part 2 - www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2rzp...
Nankeen night heron
White faced heron
White necked heron
Sooty oyster catcher
Pied oyster catcher
New Holland honeyeater
Brown honeyeater
Singing honeyeater
Gilbert's (White naped or Swan River) honeyeater
White cheeked honeyeater
White plumed honeyeater
Western spinebill
Spiny cheeked honeyeater
Australian yellow eyed pelican
Note: 'Juvenile' was incorrectly typed on the video.
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Great video with bird sounds overlay. Thank you!
Glad you liked it!
It's worth mentioning that the laughing kookaburra is not native to Western Australia.
True, I guess it has become so much a part of the bush now that most people think they were always here.
@@WesternAustraliaNowAndThen True...just like Rainbow lorrikeets are now part of the landscape but only introduced
about 50 years ago.
I love the birds
Nice work, great range, and great to see labels in video.
I do wonder about your red tail black cockatoo call though. Yours sounds like a Carnaby flock to me. Carnaby flocks can be large, like in this audio, and thecred tails normally have a raspy voice.
Thanks, we do our best to capture as many birds as we can but it can be pretty frustrating. You could be right about the calls, I think someone else may have mentioned it to me a while back.
@@WesternAustraliaNowAndThen definitely you have labelled a red tail wrongly it's a carnaby call.
You're right. I was privileged to have a flock of about one hundred Carnaby Black Cockatoos visiting my tiny front garden last year (2022). They came for a couple of days in a row, making their distinct noise, all the while swinging on the branches of my young bottlebrush tree and drinking from the bird baths.
:)🌸
Which one is it in the morning that always has the same pattern of 3?
Like coo-coo....whup.... Coo-coo....whup.
Hmmm, I'm not exactly an expert on calls but there is a good selection on the following web page: www.birdsinbackyards.net/birds/featured/Top-40-Bird-Songs
another list of birds and their calls can be found at : www.graemechapman.com.au/resources/bird-calls.php
@@WesternAustraliaNowAndThen ahh thanks seems like the spotted turtle dove. Always in threes, like the second group of sounds in that link. Thank you.
1.11 DONALD DUCK???
Hate to be that guy, but the red-tailed cockatoo's call is incorrect. That's the call of a carnaby's. Red-tails have a short, lower-pitched, almost mournful call - czcams.com/video/ZovurDQfNoo/video.html
Thanks, I am no expert and corrections are always welcome :)