No photo's to help

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karleamox
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No photo's to help

Hi, I was hoping for some help to identify some birds that I can't seem to find on the database.  I don't have any photo's to help and I'm a beginner and don't know the technical terms.  I appreciate any help.

I'm in Darwin, Northern Territory.

Bird 1:

Probably a largish honeyeater.  Drab grey/black all over but has a very distinctive white spot under it's black eye.

Bird 2:

Pigeon-sized bird with distinctive black hood, large red are around eye, yellow breast and underbody.  Wings and back are olive-green.

Bird 3:

Pigeon-sized bird, metallic blue/black all over, red eye.

Thanks again.

Karan.

windshear
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Bird 2: Australiasian Figbird. http://www.birdsinbackyards.net/species/Sphecotheres-vieilloti (northern birds are more yellow)

Bird 3:  Could be a Koel. Just a thought.

I'll leave 1 & 3 for others.

timrp
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3 may be a Spangled Drongo.

Araminta
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Bird 3 could be a White-winged Chough. (I'll try to find a photo)

M-L

windshear
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Argh! That was the one I was trying to think of the name of tim. laugh

A definite possibility. smiley

Araminta
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Did it look like that?

M-L

karleamox
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Close Araminta but the bird in the picture doesn't have the glossy-ness of the one I've seen here.  I'm going to have to have a better look tomorrow at it's tail and beak to narrow it down a bit more.  Thanks.  

karleamox
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Maybe a Drongo but just haven't noticed any "spangles".  Very glossy but without any distinguishing marks.  Will check again tomorrow. Thanks for the help.

BabyBirdwatcher
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Hi Number 3 could be a metallic starling, Australia's only native starling

lorne.johnson@d...
lorne.johnson@dow.catholic.edu.au's picture

I'm thinking White-gaped Honeyeater for No.1. Figbird sounds right. I'm pretty sure Metallic Starlings are rare visitors to Darwin - saying that, it sounds like your bird. I don't think choughs are found there at all. LJ

Woko
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Darwin is a long way from chough country.

Karan, for a beginner you're not doing too badly with your descriptions. Well done. Keep at it because the more detail you can provide, including habitat & behavioiur, the better the chances of an accurate identification. At some stage you might want to invest in a bird field guide.

timrp
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I think it is a Spangled Drongo, Metallic Starlings would be rare in Darwin an even more so for Chough's. Drongos have a metallic blue sheen over them and faint spots.

karleamox
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Thanks LJ I think you are right that bird 1 is a white-gaped honeyeater.  I'm going with the Australasian Figbird for bird 2 only because I cannot find anything remotely similar though I'm worried about the bright yellow underbody which I can't find in any photos of the Figbird.  The jurys still out for bird 3. 

karleamox
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Thanks Woko. I would love to get a field guide someday and a decent camera that can zoom in on them :-)

pacman
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Bird 2 - I hope that the Yellow Figbird (race ashbyi) pic attached answers your question on yellow belly.

Bird 3 - a Spangled Drongo should have an evident fishtail

Peter

pacman
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a typical Spangled Drongo pose, however this bird from Kunghur, Northern Rivers NSW - does this help to ID your bird?

Peter

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