Striated Pardalote
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Striated Pardalote | ||||||||||||||
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Pardalotus striatus ornatus
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Pardalotus striatus (Gmelin, 1789) |
The Striated Pardalote (Pardalotus striatus) is the least colourful and most common of the four pardalote species. It is a very small, short-tailed bird that is more often heard than seen, foraging noisily for lerps and other small creatures in the treetops.
Striated Pardalotes occupy a vast range of habitat types, from tall mountain rainforest to arid scrubland, and are found in all parts of Australia except some of the Western Australian deserts.
Four full species were originally named, and are clearly recognisable in the field. They are now classified as merely well-defined subspecies instead.
- The Yellow-tipped Pardalote (race striatus) is, found mainly in Tasmania, but crosses the 200 miles of Bass Strait to the mainland each winter in a migration.
- The Striated Pardalote, race substriatus, central and western Australia.
- The Eastern Striated or Red-tipped Pardalote, race ornatus, from the sub-tropical east coast, including the Sydney region.
- Two races of the Black-headed Pardalote, melanocephalus and uropygialis, from north-eastern New South Wales to north-eastern Queensland, and across the Top End to the Kimberley.
All five forms have a black cap which may be striated but never spotted, a white wing stripe and a small, conspicuous wing spot—bright red in all except striatus, which has a yellow spot.
[edit] References
- BirdLife International (2005). Pardalotus striatus. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. Retrieved on 12 May 2006. Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
[edit] External links
- Striated Pardalote videos on the Internet Bird Collection