Readers’ wildlife photos

April 9, 2025 • 8:15 am

Reader J Monaghan from Australia sends us some urban birds from his area. It must be nice to live in Oz and see these around your house! Monaghan’s captions and IDs are indented, and you can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. 

Urban Birds

These photos were taken in my garden and neighbouring streets in the Lake Macquarie area of New South Wales, one of Australia’s largest coastal salt water lakes. As we live in a “bird corridor” with many native and introduced different birds, we have had to learn to co-exist.

Australian magpie (Gymnorhina tibicen). During their August to October breeding season they become  protective of their nests and young, swooping on and sometimes injuring unwary passers by. Cyclists resort to sticking plastic ties and pipe cleaners in their helmets to protect from direct injury:

Female Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) are an introduced bird. Several families live near a creek at the bottom of my street and we all slow down and drive slowly past them as they take their time waddling off:

Mallards are not particularly shy and are happy to visit. If we walk and talk slowly, they will hang around for quite a while:

Australian Wood Duck (Chenonetta jubata) are common in our area, particularly around creeks and parks, as have adapted well to the urban environment:

Eastern Rosella (Platycercus eximius). The only two photos I have of these birds, as not only do they rarely come out into the open but they are skittish and fly away at the sight of my creeping cats:

Eastern Rosella. My second photo, just before it took flight:

Kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae, also known as the laughing kookaburra). A frequent visitor to my friend’s pottery workshop, where it checks out her latest creations. Their raucous call can be sleep shattering at 6am:

Little Corellas (Cacatua sanguinea). Increasingly common in urban areas and often seen feeding on lawns, shrubs and playing fields. They are very social and can be boisterous and playful with each other. These two stayed still long enough for me to photograph them:

Masked Lapwing (Vanellus miles novaehollandiae). May swoop during breeding season but rare actual contact (unlike the magpie!). They nest in small depressions in the ground, and sometimes beside roads or in the roofs of buildings. We have to take care not to disturb their nests, which may require mowing around them or relocating them if they are in a particularly unsafe place:

Masked Lapwing couple on guard duty:

Sulphur-crested Cockatoo (Cacatua galerita). These birds are highly intelligent and comical, using loud, raucous calls and screeches to call out to each other. They drown out converstion when a flock flies over, so best to just wait until they fly off again:

The Sulphur-crested Cockatoo on the right spotted me trying to photograph it, raising its crest in reaction to my threat:

 Australian white ibis (Threskiornis molucca). Though they have many names (Tip turkey, Dumpster chook, Rubbish raptor), they are most commonly known as Bin Chickens, due to their ability to survive in cities by scavenging our leftovers, as their wetlands have been increasingly lost.

Australian White Ibis. Wary enough of humans that I couldn’t get close enough to take a better photo of them but brave enough to take over the local dog park:

13 thoughts on “Readers’ wildlife photos

  1. This is my kind of style – on-the-spot get a photo no matter what – great birds! I think the Kookaburra is going to be my favorite every time.

  2. What a cool set! I’ve heard about magpies swooping in on pedestrians and cyclists.

    1. I’ve experienced it Mark. For a kid it is like Jurassic Park.

      D.A.
      NYC

  3. Thank you for sharing your photos. The second bird in the series looks a lot like a Pacific Black Duck (Anas superciliosa). They do hybridize with Mallards, though this individual overall seems closer to regular superciliosa. But you live there and I don’t. What kinds of variation do you see?

  4. Thanks you J.M. mate! I was born and grew up in Australia (and NZ). The birds (kookaburra) and their noises are amongst my favorite memories there. And Fosters off course! 🙂

    Excellent pictures, top notch dinosaurs.
    And unlike so many other creatures from The Motherland… few of the birds are fatal to humans, though I’ve been attacked by magpies. (Cassowaries are rare in Melbourne.)

    Next do irokanji jellyfish – so terrifying. IF YOU DARE!
    cheers,
    D.A.
    NYC

  5. Thanks for all the pics! I think that your duck on the grass labelled as a mallard is rather a Pacific Black Duck,
    Anas superciliosa, a close relative, and widespread native Australian species.

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