Birds of the Week: The Black Crow Kings of Alice Springs

The Crows tune up in the soft light. "We are just awake, but not ready yet" some say. "Go back to sleep" say others. The inevitable. Silence. A small croooaak. A waaaark. Crack!. Then ten and more giving full voice. Silence. Once more chuurrppp. Kwaaaark - kwaaaak. Much more now of the rattling, raucous corvid morning symphony.

Fifty years in the desert – the ethnobiological life of Amadeo Rea

A friend of mine, who was just finishing the manuscript for Birds of Arizona with the University of Arizona Press said “Why don’t you find out from your old Indian friends what the river was like when it ran and what birds were there?”

Bird of the Week: Black Vulture (Coragyps atratus). “They eat anything, but especially they like the shit.”

Vultures have been called masters of two disciplines: soaring and sanitation (Dunne et al. 1988:136). In towns, villages, and rural communities where there is no modern plumbing or garbage disposal, they provide the only sanitation services. “They eat anything, but especially they like the shit,” observed a worker in a slaughterhouse in Guatemala.

Roadkill of the Week: Robert Adamson’s reflections on the death of two Tawny Frogmouths

I was wondering where she came from, when she held out a bag and said "I went home to get this bag, I will take them away and see they have a proper burial." She said "You know what, you are the only one who stopped; after so many cars that sped by, some even hitting the other dead bird." She went on the explain that when the female had been knocked down, the male flew onto the road and tried to help her somehow. Then as she watched, the male Tawny was knocked down by another car coming the other way.

Bird of the week: a-rabinybi – Beach Stone-Curlew

Yanyuwa traditional owners established the li-Anthawirriyarra (people of the sea) Sea Ranger Unit as a means for managing their vast estate. The rangers are employed to monitor and manage heritage sites such as Macassan camps; monitor and manage turtle and dugong populations and survey, map and eradicate feral animals.

Paarpakani – the Tjanpi Desert Weavers fly into the Godinymayin Yijard Rivers Arts Centre

The Tjanpi Desert Weavers have a whimsical and very often funny approach to their art and I'm sure more than a bit of that rubbed off on their northern counterparts, where often weaving is more utilitarian. You can see some of the Tjanpi Weaver's wonderful work at their website.Yesterday the Tjanpi's whimsy won over the practical.

Bird of the week: Pied Imperial Pigeon. “One of the glories of our avifauna.”

You folk, conch shells shall be! Bailer shells you shall become! Pearlshells you shall become! Ducks you shall become! Native companions be! I go! Better that I should go! For white pigeons will come with me!

Bird of the week: Trouble down pit with the Black-winged Stilts

Sternly worded letters to administrative staff of such corporations and combative encounters with shop-front staff, are only likely to have one outcome; the closure of such facilities to birders. Shop-front staff find dealing with insistent birders just as onerous and boring as birders find the process themselves. With management fielding complaints from both sides, it is easy to see the most expedient course of action for them to end the problem altogether.

Bird of the week: Blue-faced Honeyeater at the Bat’s-wing Coral Tree cafe

The facts which kept me longest scientifically orthodox are those of adaptation—the pollen-masses in Asclepias—the misseltoe, with its pollen carried by insects and seed by Birds—the woodpecker, with its feet and tail, beak and tongue, to climb the tree and secure insects. To talk of climate or Lamarckian habit producing such adaptation to other organic beings is futile. This difficulty, I believe I have surmounted. From a letter to Asa Gray by Charles Darwin, 1857

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