White-winged Fairy-wrens near Jondaryan/Oakey, QLD

Hi all,

Stuart Warren and I made an attempt for the recently reported Painted Honeyeaters near Jondaryan yesterday (and dipped), however a nice consolation prize was a small party of White-winged Fairy-wrens on a small dirt road between Oakey and Jondaryan. According to the Atlas of Australian Birds this may be the eastern-most record of the species, though one dot on the map exists near Amiens, west of Stanthorpe that may be equal depending on where in the grid it falls. There are no records listed in Atlas from the Oakey area at all.

I’d be keen to hear from anyone who has seen WWFW in this area before, or if you haven’t reported a sighting from this far east before. The exact location can be found at: http://aussiebirding.wildiaries.com/trips/10356/trip_days/10962/display – the pin is on the right little dirt road, but probably not in exactly the right spot. There is a description on the page to help you find the right bushes.

Regards, Chris Sanderson ===============================

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5 comments to White-winged Fairy-wrens near Jondaryan/Oakey, QLD

  • david taylor

    Thats very interesting Bill, particularly the point about those three species often together – on my most recent visit to Mosquito Creek Rd at Inglewood I saw White-winged Fairy-wrens, Blue-bonnets and a couple of Yellow-throated Miners! This is the spot closest to Brisbane Ive personally seen WW Fairy-wrens and Blue-bonnets, though I think WW Fairy-wrens have been recorded on the roads west of Stanthorpe. Nice to hear of them near Oakey. Be interested to hear of any other sites others may have seen WW fairy-wrens and Blue-bonnets closest to Brisbane.

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    David Taylor Brisbane damasa@bigpond.net.au

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  • Tim Dolby

    Even more easterly there is a record from sunny NSW, in an area bordering the Clarence River (29°25’00″S 152°35’00″E), roughly northwest of Grafton. Again, I’m not sure what the degree of latitude is. Although this records dates back to the 1950’s (8/25/1957), so it would be really interesting to see if they’re still about.

    Cheers,

    Tim

    ________________________________________ href=”mailto:birding-aus-bounces@vicnet.net.au”>birding-aus-bounces@vicnet.net.au [birding-aus-bounces@vicnet.net.au] on behalf of Bill Jolly [jollyabberton@hotmail.com] Sent: Saturday, November 13, 2010 11:45 AM href=”mailto:chris.sanderson@gmail.com”>chris.sanderson@gmail.com; birding-aus Cc: stuart@brunningsqld.com.au

    Yes, there are small populations of White-winged Fairywrens at a few sites in the scrubbier parts of that area to the north of the Warrego Highway roughly bounded by Oakey, Kaimkillenbun and Dalby.

    Bluebonnets occur there too, as they often do alongside White-winged Fairywrens in other locations – and occasional Yellow-throated Miners.

    This sort of thing parallels similar groupings of just two or three species that can be associated with a small nudge in the habitat, not amounting to a big shift in the avifauna, but just letting a few other spp make use of an area – you know “Where you see A you’ll often see B” such as ground-feeding Banded Lapwings and Ground Cuckoo-shrikes, which will often utilise the same suitable paddock.

    Bill Jolly

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  • Bill Jolly

    Yes, there are small populations of White-winged Fairywrens at a few sites in the scrubbier parts of that area to the north of the Warrego Highway roughly bounded by Oakey, Kaimkillenbun and Dalby.

    Bluebonnets occur there too, as they often do alongside White-winged Fairywrens in other locations – and occasional Yellow-throated Miners.

    This sort of thing parallels similar groupings of just two or three species that can be associated with a small nudge in the habitat, not amounting to a big shift in the avifauna, but just letting a few other spp make use of an area – you know “Where you see A you’ll often see B” such as ground-feeding Banded Lapwings and Ground Cuckoo-shrikes, which will often utilise the same suitable paddock.

    Bill Jolly

    href=”mailto:chris.sanderson@gmail.com”>chris.sanderson@gmail.com href=”mailto:birding-aus@vicnet.net.au”>birding-aus@vicnet.net.au href=”mailto:stuart@brunningsqld.com.au”>stuart@brunningsqld.com.au href=”mailto:birding-aus-request@vicnet.net.au”>birding-aus-request@vicnet.net.au ============================== To unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message: unsubscribe (in the body of the message, with no Subject line) href=”mailto:birding-aus-request@vicnet.net.au”>birding-aus-request@vicnet.net.au

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  • "rmacfarl"

    By my atlas Oakey / Jondaryan are just west of the 152nd degree of latitude, whereas Quirindi is west of the 151st, so Oakey wins… :-)

  • Mick Roderick

    Chris,

    If you look further south on Birdata you will see a dot near Quirindi, NSW. White-winged Fairy-wrens live here and on the Breeza Plain which would be roughly as far east as your birds. There are also “easterly”  Blue Bonnets and Mallee Ringnecks in this area (plus recent records of Little Curlew and Aussie Bustard).

    Mick

    ________________________________ Cc: Stuart warren Sent: Fri, 12 November, 2010 8:38:00 PM

    Hi all,

    Stuart Warren and I made an attempt for the recently reported Painted Honeyeaters near Jondaryan yesterday (and dipped), however a nice consolation prize was a small party of White-winged Fairy-wrens on a small dirt road between Oakey and Jondaryan.  According to the Atlas of Australian Birds this may be the eastern-most record of the species, though one dot on the map exists near Amiens, west of Stanthorpe that may be equal depending on where in the grid it falls.  There are no records listed in Atlas from the Oakey area at all.

    I’d be keen to hear from anyone who has seen WWFW in this area before, or if you haven’t reported a sighting from this far east before.  The exact location can be found at: http://aussiebirding.wildiaries.com/trips/10356/trip_days/10962/display – the pin is on the right little dirt road, but probably not in exactly the right spot.  There is a description on the page to help you find the right bushes.

    Regards, Chris Sanderson ===============================

    To unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message: unsubscribe (in the body of the message, with no Subject line) href=”mailto:birding-aus-request@vicnet.net.au”>birding-aus-request@vicnet.net.au

    http://birding-aus.org ===============================

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