• Zagorath@aussie.zoneOP
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    11 months ago

    The adults are black and white, but the juveniles are usually light grey and white.

    I’ve done some more Googling, and it looks like there are multiple species of butcherbird. I was most familiar with the grey butcherbird, which stays grey into adulthood. These guys were probably pied butcherbirds, with their notable black “hood” that visually distinguishes them from magpies.

    noisy mynahs

    Noisy miners? Or Indian mynas?

    I don’t see mynas very often, but see miners all the time. They were a real dick yesterday, with one giving me a close swoop, and then proceeding to swoop to scare away a water dragon. These ones in the photo though were pretty chill. They hung out with the songbirds for the time I was watching, not particularly seeming bothered by them.

    • Red@aussie.zone
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      11 months ago

      Pied: Bingo

      Yep, noisy miners. They’re aggressive little buggers. One of the reasons that park designers are encouraged to include small shrubs with thick foliage, is to give smaller birds somewhere to hide from the miners, otherwise you tend to get a bit of a monoculture of miners.

      Yeah not too many mynahs around here thankfully. Partly due to the Butcher birds!