Red-tailed Tropicbirds on Norfolk Island [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED]

It was a case of right place, right time for once with my camera last week when I caught up with plenty of Red-tailed Tropicbirds at Rocky Point, Norfolk Island. Rocky Point is the roughly the south-western corner of Norfolk Island and it is accessed by a lovely walk through the 100 Acres reserve. The endangered endemic Tasman Parakeet hasn’t found its way there yet (mostly in the national park) but the other two endemics (Norfolk Island Gerygone and Slender-billed White-eye) are there. During summer you walk right under the biggest Black Noddy and White Tern breeding colony on Norfolk. There are still a few straggler Noddies nesting, but the White Terns appear to be all done. At the point I had about 40 minutes of 10 or so tropicbirds doing all sorts of aerial acrobatics right in front of me. Sometimes they came so close, I almost wondered if they might also have some chicks still around and I was disturbing them, but I’m almost certain they are all finished. A couple of months ago, there was an adult sitting under a bush about six inches from the edge of the track! I took plenty of pictures and put them on my Norfolk Island natural history blog if you’re interested – http://naturalnorfolk.com/wp/?p=343


Birding-Aus mailing list
Birding-Aus@birding-aus.org
To change settings or unsubscribe visit:
http://birding-aus.org/mailman/listinfo/birding-aus_birding-aus.org

Comments are closed.