Has anyone studied this aspect of CBC behaviour?
Regards, Laurie.
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Regards
Greg
Dr Greg. P. Clancy
Ecologist and Wildlife Guide
Coutts Crossing
NSW
Peter Shute
Nikolas
Â
----------------
Nikolas Haass
nha...@yahoo.com
Sydney, NSW
________________________________
From: Peter Shute <psh...@nuw.org.au>
To: 'Greg & Val Clancy' <gcl...@tpg.com.au>; 'Laurie Knight' <l.kn...@optusnet.com.au>; 'Birding Aus' <birdi...@vicnet.net.au>
Sent: Tuesday, December 6, 2011 8:28 AM
Stephen Ambrose
Ryde, NSW
Philip
-----Original Message-----From: birding-a...@lists.vicnet.net.au
[mailto:birding-a...@lists.vicnet.net.au] On Behalf Of Peter Shute
Sent: Tuesday, 6 December 2011 8:29 AM To: 'Greg & Val Clancy'; 'Laurie
Dr Stephen Ambrose
Ryde NSW
The thing is that a lone CBC calling would seem to be a more obvious
target (given that it is calling attention to itself) particularly
when it is flying high.
I have heard CBCs make a bit of a chuckling call that might be similar
to a raptor.
Are there any published records of their behaviour when they are nest
raiding?
Regards, Laurie.
PS I am not sure that it was a grammatical necessity to change the
subject line. (I think that makes it a separate thread in the archives).
> -----Original Message-----From: birding-aus-
> bou...@lists.vicnet.net.au
I have watched C-bCu's luring Currawongs out of the nest, presumably to allow the female an opportunity to parasitise the brood. The birds fly high around a stand of trees where the Currawongs are nesting, calling loudly, and the Currawongs just cannot resist to try and chase them off. Perhaps the indiscriminate calling we hear by individuals or pairs is an endeavour to draw other birds out to alert the C-bCu's of occupied breeding territories???
Other than that I think we might be able to assume that C-bCu's call for some of the same reasons other birds call. We assume they don't establish territories, but most birds defend breeding territories or food sources within defined territorial bounds and it's likely that C-bCu's are carrying out similar breeding season behaviour, albeit not tied to a personal nest site (unless they view the nests of their surrogates as a resource worth defending). Territory posturing may then explain the calling aggregations. Other cuckoos appear to call as territorial proclamations: Koels are very competitive, Fantailed, Horsefield's Bronze, Shining Bronze, Brush and Pallid are very vocal and I recently noticed many a brawl amongst competing Pallids in the Goulburn area (NSW sthn tablelands) this spring, induced and fueled by calling individuals.
Certainly cuckoos are one of the easiest groups to attract by call, a suitable whistle to Shining Bronze is the easiest way to get a closer view.
Allan Richardson
Morisset NSW
>> -----Original Message-----From: birding-a...@lists.vicnet.net.au
Stephen Ambrose
Ryde NSW
Allan Richardson
Morisset NSW
An interesting thread. Over the prevoius two summers (but not this one, for some reason) we had a pair of CBCs that appeared to maintain a territory in our street. Whilst they were particularly active/vocal in the early morning and evening we heard them at odd intervals throughout each day.
I find Allan's observations of multple birds roosting together particularly interesting. Early on in their stay, our CBCs had the expected interactions with the local Torresian Crows to get the female into the nest. However, they were here for at least a couple of months after that, keeping up with their aerial calling throughout that time. As we live in an area without an obvious source of fruiting trees, it got me thinking: were they maintaining a territory around their nesting sites with the aim of 'picking up' their young once they had fledged??
Regards
Judith
1. Early in the breeding season, males call to attract a mate and to also
proclaim a breeding territory. Advertising the breeding territory through
calling then continues throughout the breeding period.
2. Calling and flight displays are also used to attract the attention of
potential hosts (corvids, currawongs, magpies) away from their nest to allow
a female to sneak in and lay her egg.
3. Later in the breeding season CBCs call to muster fledged progeny,
especially if a single pair has parasitised several nests within the
breeding territory.
4. Calling while in long-distance flight, either between foraging &
roosting sites or on long-distance migration helps to keep the group(s)
together, thus providing safety in numbers. Perhaps another way of
protecting themselves, offspring and other close relatives when flying over
open areas and vulnerable to predation or mobbing?
It sounds like a great opportunity for a postgraduate project. What are the
purposes of the calls? Are there different calling patterns/visual displays,
each serving a different purpose? What is the genetic composition of calling
flocks that are on the move - are they family groups or do they comprise
unrelated/distantly-related individuals?
Stephen Ambrose
Ryde NSW
-----Original Message-----
From: Allan Richardson [mailto:alb...@bigpond.net.au]
Sent: Wednesday, 7 December 2011 8:36 PM
To: Judith Hoyle
Cc: ste...@ambecol.com.au; samb...@pacific.net.au;
birdi...@vicnet.net.au
Subject: Re: [Birding-Aus] What is the function of Channel-billed Cuckoo's
calling flights?
There are certainly some very interesting questions in relation to CBC's yet
to be answered. Some very interesting observations in there.
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Message: 5
Date: Tue, 6 Dec 2011 15:44:26 +1100
From: "Stephen Ambrose" <ste...@ambecol.com.au>
To: "'Philip Veerman'" <pvee...@pcug.org.au>, "'Birding Aus'"
<birdi...@vicnet.net.au>
Subject: Re: [Birding-Aus] What is the function of Channel-billed
Cuckoo's calling flights?
Message-ID: <000101ccb3d1$bbbbde10$33339a30$@com.au>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
I think it is more likely to ensure "safety in numbers" especially while in
flight. A lone individual is more likely to be mobbed by a nest host species
(currawong or magpie) or preyed upon by a predator (large raptor) than one
that is part of a flock. An individual calling as it takes flight alerts
others to follow. Calling while in flight keeps individuals within a flock
close together, especially if they are flying at night.
Dr Stephen Ambrose
Ryde NSW
Also interesting, but annoying, they often fly around calling at night. Like
3 A.M. this morning outside our bedroom window !!
Dick
DUNGOG NSW (70kms North of Newcastle)
Lynn and Dick Jenkin
Tashkent Friesians
PO Box 92 Dungog NSW 2420
02 49921158
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