Pied Currawong

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Pied Currawong
Pied Currawong Swifts Creek, Victoria
Pied Currawong
Swifts Creek, Victoria
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Artamidae
Genus: Strepera
Species: S. graculina
Binomial name
Strepera graculina
Shaw, 1790
Pied Currawong range
Pied Currawong range

The Pied Currawong, Strepera graculina is a common omnivorous songbird of eastern Australia. Its specific name is derived from the Latin graculina, resembling a Jackdaw, though Grackles of the genus Gracula are members of the Sturnidae.

Though crow-like in appearance and habits, it is only distantly related to true crows, instead it belongs to the family Artamidae, together with the closely related Australian Magpie and the butcherbirds. Like all these birds, it has adapted very well to urbanization.

Contents

The Pied Currawong is generally a black bird with white in the wing, undertail covets, the base of the tail and (most visibly) the tip of the tail. It also has yellow eyes. Size is about 40 to 50 cm. Along with magpies and butcherbirds, it has one of the most hauntingly beautiful caroling calls of any Australian songbird, and is eclipsed, perhaps, only by the Grey Shrike-thrush and the lyrebirds.

Six subspecies are currently recognised:

  • S. graculina graculina
  • S. graculina ashbyi - Western Victorian Pied Currawong
  • S. graculina crissalis - (Vulnerable) - The Lord Howe Island Currawong appears to have adapted well to human habitation on Lord Howe Island, though the population is small overall, somewhere around 70 birds.[1]
  • S. graculina magnirostris
  • S. graculina robinsoni
  • S. graculina nebulosa

It is common in woodland, rural and semi-urban environments throughout eastern Australia, from Cape York to western Victoria and Lord Howe Island Lord Howe Island, where it occurs as an endemic subspecies. It seems to have adapted well to European presence, and has become more common in some urban areas such as Sydney.

Pied Currawong and berries of introduced plant in Lindfield, New South Wales.
Pied Currawong and berries of introduced plant in Lindfield, New South Wales.

Unlike many birds, Pied Currawongs have suffered little from European occupation of the land. Settlers and successive generations have replaced much of the natural woodland and forest with vast artificial grasslands, where Currawongs are seldom seen. Scattered patches of remaining bush appear to be sufficient for their needs and the provision of irrigated waypoints along their rambling migration routes has encouraged them to take up residence in areas where they previously only overflew.

The effect of this on smaller birds that are vulnerable to nest predation is controversial: several studies have suggested that Pied Currawongs have become a serious problem, but the truth of this widely held perception remains to be established. They appear to thrive on berries of some introduced species, some of which themselves are pests, such as the Camphor laurel (Cinnamomum camphora).

Pied Currawongs are generally tree dwelling, hunting and foraging some metres above the ground, and thus able to share territory with the ground-foraging Australian Magpie.

Pied Currawongs are omnivorous and opportunistic - picnic time, Carnarvon Gorge
Pied Currawongs are omnivorous and opportunistic - picnic time, Carnarvon Gorge

The Pied Currawong is omnivorous, eating fruit and berries as well as preying on many smaller birds and animals. They will often scavenge, eating scraps and rubbish and can be quite bold when seeking food from people.

Pied Currawongs build nests of sticks high in trees in spring, laying three eggs.

The loud distinctive call has been translated as Kadow-Kadang or Curra-wong. Birds also have a high-pitched but loud whistle. The endemic Lord Howe Island subspecies has a distinct, more melodious call.

  1. ^ Garnett, S. (1993) Threatened and Extinct Birds Of Australia. RAOU. National Library, Canberra. ISSN 0812-8014

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