Bird Photography Challenge #31: Blue-Faced Honeyeater

Our interest was struck by this unmistakable honeyeater with its brilliant blue facial skin, and its varied song that starts early in the morning before many other birds.  Our first sighting of the Blue-Faced Honeyeater (Entomyzon cyanotis) was during our winter cruise in Queensland and it makes a handsome subject for our #31 Bird Photography…

The most widespread member of the Cormorant family, and the largest of the specie in Australia, the Great Cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo) is a handsome seabird and the subject of our #30 Bird Photography Challenge. What does it look like? The Great Cormorant varies in size from 70 to 90cms, with a wingspan between 121 and 160cms. His plumage is almost entirely black with a bluish gloss to it, except for a white patch on the side of the head and on each thigh. It has a yellow face with a hooked grey bill and piercing blue-green eyes. The legs and feet are charcoal. How does it behave? The Great Cormorant mainly feeds on fish, crustaceans, aquatic insects and frogs. It is an excellent swimmer and captures its food in shallow underwater dives which can last up to one minute. Its swims and pursues prey using its feet but not its wings. After a dive you can often see it drying its wings. Great cormorant are social birds and around breeding time they can form very large colonies, but they are often seen feeding alone. The Great Cormorant breeds mainly on the coast, nesting on cliffs or in trees. Four eggs are laid in a large nest of seaweed or twigs on the ground or in a low tree. Both parents incubate and care for the young. Did you know? The specie is often used in the traditional practice of “cormorant fishing” in parts of China. Fishermen tie a line around the throat of trained birds and deploy them from small boats. The cormorants catch fish without being able to swallow the larger ones, and the fisherman removes the fish from the birds’ throat. Where is it found? The Great Cormorant is found in aquatic habitats, such as coastal areas, large lakes and rivers. The photos were taken in the Gippsland Lakes, in Victoria, with a Canon 60D camera and EF100-400 lens, hand-held. Click on any image in the gallery to display in full screen.

Bird Photography Challenge #30: Great Cormorant

The most widespread member of the Cormorant family, and the largest of the specie in Australia, the Great Cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo) is a handsome seabird and the subject of our #30 Bird Photography Challenge.  It looks a little dull at a distance, but when you are lucky enough to get close, or observe it through…

Brahminy Kite

Bird Photography Challenge #29: Brahminy Kite

We often admire the Brahminy Kite (Haliastur indus) along the coast, particularly in Queensland along the mangrove flats.  It is unmistakable and you can see why it is also known in Australia as the red-backed sea eagle.  This beautiful bird of prey is the subject of our #29 Bird Photography Challenge.