Birds in Backyards

Bar-shouldered Dove. Bar-shouldered Dove.
Photo: K Vang and W Dabrowka © Bird Explorers

Distribution map of Geopelia humeralis Distribution map of Geopelia humeralis
Map © Birds Australia Birdata

Did you know?

The Bar-shouldered Dove is the common street-bird in Darwin and Cairns and its calls are a well-known part of urban life.

Facts and figures

Research Species: No
Minimum size: 27 cm
Maximum size: 30 cm
Average size: 28 cm
Average weight: 130 g
Breeding season: Year-round in the north, August to November in the south.
Clutch size: Two
Incubation: 14 days
Time in nest: 21 days

Calls

A loud and distinctive 'cook coo cook coo' and a bubbling, descending call.

Conservation status

Federal - Secure
NSW - Secure

Status of Australian Birds

Bar-shouldered Dove

Scientific name: Geopelia humeralis
Family: Columbidae
Order: Columbiformes

What does it look like?

Description
The Bar-shouldered Dove is a medium-sized, long-tailed dove. Adults doves have a blue-grey head, neck and upper breast, with a distinctive reddish-bronze patch on the hindneck, with dark barring. Young doves lack this patch and barring and tend to be duller overall. There is also a distinctive pinkish bar on the lower breast. The lower body is pale. They have a blue-grey eye-ring and reddish eye. They are usually seen in pairs or small parties. The northern subspecies hedlandi is lighter in colour. This species is also known as the Mangrove Dove, Scrub Dove, or Kookawook.
Similar species

The Bar-shouldered Dove is similar in size and shape to the Spotted Turtle-Dove, Streptopelia chinensis, and much larger than the Peaceful Dove, G. striata, or the Diamond Dove, G. cuneata.

Where does it live?

Distribution

Bar-shouldered Doves are found in humid and well-wooded regions of north-western, northern and eastern Australia from near Onslow in Western Australia to Bega in New South Wales, as well as in southern New Guinea. The subspecies hedlandi is restricted to the Pilbara region.

Habitat

Bar-shouldered Doves are found in woodland with a grassy understorey and in nearby open areas, usually near water. They are also often found in mangroves and are frequently seen in urban areas.

Seasonal movements

Bar-shouldered Doves are sedentary and there is no evidence of major seasonal movements.

What does it do?

Feeding
Bar-shouldered Doves feed on the ground in short grass near cover. They need to drink throughout the day. They mainly eat seeds of grasses, herbs and sedges, as well as rhizomes (small root storages).
Breeding

The nest of the Bar-shouldered Dove is usually hidden in dense shrubs or trees and in gardens, throughout its range. A thin platform is made from twigs and roots and is placed in a fork or on a branch. Both parents incubate the eggs and feed the chicks. Young doves are fed with 'crop milk', specially produced by the parent birds (a common characteristic of pigeons and doves).

Living with us

Living with humans
Bar-shouldered Doves have benefitted from clearing for agriculture and are common in urban areas in the Top End region (far northern Australia).

References

Crome, F. and Shields, J. 1992. Parrots and Pigeons of Australia. Angus and Robertson/National Photographic Index of Australian Wildlife, Sydney.

Higgins, P.J. and S.J.J.F. Davies (eds) 1996. Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic Birds, Volume 3 (Snipe to Pigeons). Oxford University Press, Victoria.

Beruldsen, G 2003. Australian Birds: Their Nests and Eggs. Self-published, Queensland.

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