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Blue-faced honeyeater

The blue-faced honeyeater (Entomyzon cyanotis), also colloquially known as the Bananabird, is a passerine bird of the honeyeater family, Meliphagidae. It is the only member of its genus, and it is most closely related to honeyeaters of the genus Melithreptus. Three subspecies are recognised. At around 29.5 cm (11.6 in) in length, the blue-faced species is large for a honeyeater. Its plumage is distinctive, with olive upperparts, white underparts, and a black head and throat with white nape and cheeks. Males and females are similar in external appearance. Adults have a blue area of bare skin on each side of the face readily distinguishing them from juveniles, which have yellow or green patches of bare skin.

Blue-faced honeyeater
Subspecies cyanotis, Queensland
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Meliphagidae
Genus: Entomyzon
Swainson, 1825
Species:
E. cyanotis
Binomial name
Entomyzon cyanotis
(Latham, 1801)
Range
subspecies indicated
Synonyms

Melithreptus cyanotis
Gracula cyanotis
Turdus cyanous
Merops cyanops

Blue-faced honeyeater - Canungra - Queensland - Australia

Found in open woodland, parks and gardens, the blue-faced honeyeater is common in northern and eastern Australia, and southern New Guinea. It appears to be sedentary in parts of its range, and locally nomadic in other parts; however, the species has been little studied. Its diet is mostly composed of invertebrates, supplemented with nectar and fruit. They often take over and renovate old babbler nests, in which the female lays and incubates two or rarely three eggs.

Taxonomy and naming edit

The blue-faced honeyeater was first described by ornithologist John Latham in his 1801 work, Supplementum Indicis Ornithologici, sive Systematis Ornithologiae. However, he described it as three separate species, seemingly not knowing it was the same bird in each case: the blue-eared grackle (Gracula cyanotis), the blue-cheeked bee-eater (Merops cyanops), and the blue-cheeked thrush (Turdus cyanous).[2][3] It was as the blue-cheeked bee-eater that it was painted between 1788 and 1797 by Thomas Watling, one of a group known collectively as the Port Jackson Painter.[4]

 
Blue-faced honeyeater (Intermediate) - Fogg Dam - Middle Point - Northern Territory - Australia

It was reclassified in the genus Entomyzon, which was erected by William Swainson in 1825. He observed that the "Blue-faced Grakle" was the only insectivorous member of the genus, and posited that it was a link between the smaller honeyeaters and the riflebirds of the genus Ptiloris.[5] The generic name is derived from the Ancient Greek ento-/εντο- 'inside' and myzein/μυζειν 'to drink' or 'suck'. The specific epithet, cyanotis, means 'blue-eared', and combines cyano-/κυανο 'blue' with otis (a Latinised form of ωτος, the Greek genitive of ous/ους) 'ear'.[6] Swainson spelt it Entomiza in an 1837 publication,[7] and George Gray wrote Entomyza in 1840.[8]

The blue-faced honeyeater is generally held to be the only member of the genus, although its plumage suggests an affinity with honeyeaters of the genus Melithreptus. It has been classified in that genus by Glen Storr,[9][10] although others felt it more closely related to wattlebirds (Anthochaera) or miners (Manorina).[11] A 2004 molecular study has resolved that it is closely related to Melithreptus after all.[12] Molecular clock estimates indicate that the blue-faced honeyeater diverged from the Melithreptus honeyeaters somewhere between 12.8 and 6.4 million years ago, in the Miocene epoch. It differs from them in its much larger size, brighter plumage, more gregarious nature, and larger patch of bare facial skin.[13]

Molecular analysis has shown honeyeaters to be related to the Pardalotidae (pardalotes), Acanthizidae (Australian warblers, scrubwrens, thornbills, etc.), and the Maluridae (Australian fairy-wrens) in the large superfamily Meliphagoidea.[14]

"Blue-faced honeyeater" has been designated as the official common name for the species by the International Ornithologists' Union (IOC).[15] Early naturalist George Shaw had called it the blue-faced honey-sucker in 1826.[16] Other common names include white-quilled honeyeater, and blue-eye.[17] Its propensity for feeding on the flowers and fruit of bananas in north Queensland has given it the common name of banana-bird.[17] A local name from Mackay in central Queensland is pandanus-bird, as it is always found around Pandanus palms there.[18] It is called morning-bird from its dawn calls before other birds of the bush. Gympie is a Queensland bushman's term.[19] Thomas Watling noted a local indigenous name was der-ro-gang.[3] John Hunter recorded the term gugurruk (pron. "co-gurrock"), but the term was also applied to the black-shouldered kite (Elanus axillaris).[20] It is called (minha) yeewi in Pakanh, where minha is a qualifier meaning 'meat' or 'animal', and (inh-)ewelmb in Uw Oykangand and Uw Olkola, where inh- is a qualifier meaning 'meat' or 'animal', in three aboriginal languages of central Cape York Peninsula[21]

Three subspecies are recognised:

  • E. c. albipennis was described by John Gould in 1841[22] and is found in north Queensland, west through the Gulf of Carpentaria, in the Top End of the Northern Territory, and across into the Kimberley region of Western Australia. It has white on the wings and a discontinuous stripe on the nape. The wing-patch is pure white in the western part of its range, and is more cream towards the east.[23] It has a longer bill and shorter tail than the nominate race. The blue-faced honeyeater also decreases in size with decreasing latitude, consistent with Bergmann's rule.[24] Molecular work supports the current classification of this subspecies as distinct from the nominate subspecies cyanotis.[13]
  • E. c. cyanotis, the nominate form, is found from Cape York Peninsula south through Queensland and New South Wales, into the Riverina region, Victoria, and southeastern South Australia.[17]
  • E. c. griseigularis is found in southwestern New Guinea and Cape York, and was described in 1909 by Dutch naturalist Eduard van Oort.[25] It is much smaller than the other subspecies. The original name for this subspecies was harteri, but the type specimen, collected in Cooktown, was found to be an intergrade form. The new type was collected from Merauke. This subspecies intergrades with cyanotis at the base of the Cape York Peninsula, and the zone of intermediate forms is narrow.[24] The white wing-patch is larger than that of cyanotis and smaller than that of albipennis.[23] Only one bird (from Cape York) of this subspecies was sampled in a molecular study, and it was shown to be genetically close to cyanotis.[13]

Description edit

 
Subspecies cyanotis, juvenile, near Eumundi, Queensland

A large honeyeater ranging from 26 to 32 cm (10 to 12.5 in) and averaging 29.5 cm (11.6 in) in length. The adult blue-faced honeyeater has a wingspan of 44 cm (17.5 in) and weighs around 105 g (3.7 oz).[17] In general shape, it has broad wings with rounded tips and a medium squarish tail. The sturdy, slightly downcurved bill is shorter than the skull, and measures 3 to 3.5 cm (1.2 to 1.4 in) in length.[24] It is easily recognised by the bare blue skin around its eyes. The head and throat are otherwise predominantly blackish with a white stripe around the nape and another from the cheek. The upperparts, including mantle, back and wings, are a golden-olive colour, and the margins of the primary and secondary coverts a darker olive-brown, while the underparts are white. Juveniles that have just fledged have grey head, chin, and central parts of their breasts, with brown upperparts, and otherwise white underparts. After their next moult, they more closely resemble adults and have similar plumage, but are distinguished by their facial patches.[26] The bare facial skin of birds just fledged is yellow, sometimes with a small patch of blue in front of the eyes, while the skin of birds six months and older has usually become more greenish, and turns darker blue beneath the eye, before assuming the adult blue facial patch by around 16 months of age.[24] The blue-faced honeyeater begins its moult in October or November, starting with its primary flight feathers, replacing them by February. It replaces its body feathers anywhere from December to June, and tail feathers between December and July.[26] 422 blue-faced honeyeaters have been banded between 1953 and 1997 to monitor movements and longevity. Of these, 109 were eventually recovered, 107 of which were within 10 km (6.2 mi) of their point of banding.[27] The record for longevity was a bird banded in May 1990 in Kingaroy in central Queensland, which was found dead on a road after 8 years and 3.5 months in September 1998, around 2 km (1.2 mi) away.[28]

The blue-faced honeyeater produces a variety of calls, including a piping call around half an hour before dawn, variously described as ki-owt,[29] woik, queet, peet, or weet. Through the day, it makes squeaking noises while flying, and harsh squawks when mobbing. Its calls have been likened to those of the yellow-throated miner (Manorina flavigula), but are deeper. Blue-faced honeyeaters make a soft chirping around nestlings and family members.[30]

A distinctive bird, the blue-faced honeyeater differs in coloration from the duller-plumaged friarbirds, miners and wattlebirds, and it is much larger than the similarly coloured Melithreptus honeyeaters. Subspecies albipennis, with its white wing-patch, has been likened to a khaki-backed butcherbird in flight.[17]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Subspecies albipennis, Katherine, Northern Territory

The blue-faced honeyeater is found from the Kimberleys in northwestern Australia eastwards across the Top End and into Queensland, where it is found from Cape York south across the eastern and central parts of the state, roughly east of a line connecting Karumba, Blackall, Cunnamulla and Currawinya National Park.[31] It has a patchy distribution in New South Wales, occurring in the Northern Rivers and Northern Tablelands regions, and along the coast south to Nambucca Heads. To the south, it is generally absent from the Central and South Coast, and is instead found west of the Great Divide across the South West Slopes and Riverina to the Murray River. It is common in northern Victoria and reaches Bordertown in southeastern South Australia, its range continuing along the Murray. It is also found in the Grampians region, particularly in the vicinity of Stawell, Ararat and St Arnaud, with rare reports from southwestern Victoria. The species occasionally reaches Adelaide, and there is a single record from the Eyre Peninsula.[32] The altitude ranges from sea level to around 850 m (2,790 ft), or rarely 1,000 m (3,300 ft).[31]

In New Guinea, it is found from Merauke in the far southeast of Indonesia's Papua province and east across the Trans-Fly region of southwestern Papua New Guinea.[31] It has also been recorded from the Aru Islands.[33]

The blue-faced honeyeater appears to be generally sedentary within its range, especially in much of the Northern Territory, Queensland and New South Wales. However, in many places (generally south of the Tropic of Capricorn), populations may be present or absent at different times of the year, although this appears to result from nomadic, rather than seasonal, migratory movements.[27] Around Wellington in central New South Wales, birds were recorded over winter months,[34] and were more common in autumn around the Talbragar River.[35] Birds were present all year round near Inverell in northern New South Wales, but noted to be flying eastwards from January to May, and westwards in June and July.[36] In Jandowae in southeastern Queensland, birds were regularly recorded flying north and east from March to June, and returning south and west in July and August, and were absent from the area in spring and summer.[37]

They live throughout rainforest, dry sclerophyll (Eucalyptus) forest, open woodland, Pandanus thickets, paperbarks, mangroves, watercourses, and wetter areas of semi-arid regions, as well as parks, gardens, and golf courses in urban areas.[17] The understory in eucalypt-dominated woodland, where the blue-faced honeyeater is found, is most commonly composed of grasses, such as Triodia, but sometimes it is made up of shrubs or small trees, such as grevilleas, paperbarks, wattles, Cooktown ironwood (Erythrophleum chlorostachys) or billygoat plum (Terminalia ferdinandiana).[31] One study in Kakadu National Park found that blue-faced honeyeaters inhabited mixed stands of eucalypts and Pandanus, but were missing from pure stands of either plant.[38]

Behaviour edit

The social organisation of the blue-faced honeyeater has been little studied to date. Encountered in pairs, family groups or small flocks, blue-faced honeyeaters sometimes associate with groups of yellow-throated miners (Manorina flavigula). They mob potential threats, such as goshawks (Accipiter spp.), rufous owls (Ninox rufa), and Pacific koels (Eudynamys orientalis). There is some evidence of cooperative breeding, with some breeding pairs recorded with one or more helper birds. Parents will dive at and harass intruders to drive them away from nest sites, including dogs, owls, goannas,[30] and even a nankeen night-heron (Nycticorax caledonicus).[39] A study published in 2004 of remnant patches of forest in central Queensland, an area largely cleared for agriculture, showed a reduced avian species diversity in areas frequented by blue-faced honeyeaters or noisy miners. This effect was more marked in smaller patches. The study concluded that conserved patches of woodland containing the two aggressive species should be larger than 20 ha (44 acres) to preserve diversity.[40]

 
Blue-faced honeyeater at Edinburgh Zoo

Social birds, blue-faced honeyeaters can be noisy when they congregate.[30] When feeding in groups, birds seem to keep in contact with each other by soft chirping calls.[30] In Mackay, a bird would fly up 10 or 12 metres (33 or 39 ft) above the treetops calling excitedly to its flock, which would follow and fly around in what was likened to an aerial corroboree, seemingly at play.[18] A single bird was recorded aping and playing with an immature Australian magpie (Gymnorhina tibicen) in Proserpine, Queensland.[30] The blue-faced honeyeater has been reported to be fond of bathing;[41] a flock of 15–20 birds was observed diving into pools one bird at a time, while others were perched in surrounding treetops preening.[42]

The parasite Anoncotaenia globata (a worldwide species not otherwise recorded from Australia) was isolated from a blue-faced honeyeater collected in North Queensland in 1916.[43] The habroneme nematode, Cyrnea (Procyrnea) spirali, has also been isolated from this among other honeyeater species.[44] The nasal mite, Ptilonyssus philemoni, has been isolated from the noisy friarbird (Philemon corniculatus) and blue-faced honeyeater.[45]

Breeding edit

At Dayboro, Queensland, Australia

The blue-faced honeyeater probably breeds throughout its range.[32] The breeding season is from June to January, with one or two broods raised during this time. The nest is an untidy, deep bowl of sticks and bits of bark in the fork of a tree, Staghorn or bird's nest ferns,[46] or grasstree.[30] Pandanus palms are a popular nest site in Mackay.[18] They often renovate and use the old nests of other species, most commonly the grey-crowned babbler (Pomatostomus temporalis), but also the chestnut-crowned babbler (P. ruficeps), other honeyeaters, including noisy (Philemon corniculatus), little (P. citreogularis) and silver-crowned friarbirds (P. argenticeps), the noisy miner (Manorina melanocephala) and the red wattlebird (Anthochaera carunculata), and artamids, such as the Australian magpie and butcherbird species, and even the magpie-lark.[30] In Coen, an old babbler nest in a paperbark (Melaleuca), which had been lined with messmate bark, had been occupied by blue-faced honeyeaters and re-lined with strips of paperbark.[47] Two or, rarely, three eggs are laid, 22 × 32 mm (1 × 1⅓ in) and buff-pink splotched with red-brown or purplish colours.[46] The female alone incubates the eggs over a period of 16 or 17 days.[48]

Like those of all passerines, the chicks are altricial; they are born blind and covered only by sparse tufts of brown down on their backs, shoulders and parts of the wings. By four days they open their eyes, and pin feathers emerge from their wings on day six, and the rest of the body on days seven and eight.[48] Both parents feed the young, and are sometimes assisted by helper birds.[30] The Pacific koel (Eudynamys orientalis) and pallid cuckoo (Cuculus pallidus) have been recorded as brood parasites of the blue-faced honeyeater, and the laughing kookaburra recorded as preying on broods.[49]

Feeding edit

The blue-faced honeyeater generally forages in the branches and foliage of trees, in small groups of up to seven birds. Occasionally, larger flocks of up to 30 individuals have been reported,[41] and the species has been encountered in a mixed-species foraging flock with the little friarbird (Philemon citreogularis).[39] The bulk of their diet consists of insects, including cockroaches, termites, grasshoppers, bugs such as lerps, scale (Coccidae) and shield bugs (Pentatomidae), beetles such as bark beetles, chafers (subfamily Melolonthinae), click beetles (genus Demetrida), darkling beetles (genera Chalcopteroides and Homotrysis), leaf beetles (genus Paropsis), ladybirds of the genus Scymnus, weevils such as the pinhole borer (Platypus australis), and members of the genera Mandalotus, Polyphrades and Prypnus, as well as flies, moths, bees, ants, and spiders.[50] Blue-faced honeyeaters have been reported preying on small lizards.[51] Prey are caught mostly by sallying, although birds also probe and glean.[51] In Kakadu National Park, birds prefer to hunt prey between the leaf bases of the screw palm (Pandanus spiralis).[38]

 
Subspecies cyanotis feeding, southeastern Australia

The remainder of their diet is made up of plant material, such as pollen, berries, and nectar, from such species as grasstrees (Xanthorrhoea) and scarlet gum (Eucalyptus phoenicea), and from cultivated crops, such as bananas or particularly grapes.[50] In general, birds prefer feeding at cup-shaped sources, such as flowers of the Darwin woollybutt (Eucalyptus miniata), Darwin stringybark (E. tetrodonta) and long-fruited bloodwood (Corymbia polycarpa), followed by brush-shaped inflorescences, such as banksias or melaleucas, gullet-shaped inflorescences such as grevilleas, with others less often selected.[51]

Usually very inquisitive and friendly birds, they will often invade a campsite, searching for edible items, including fruit, insects, and remnants from containers of jam or honey, and milk is particularly favoured.[19] Parent birds feed the young on insects, fruit and nectar, and have been recorded regurgitating milk to them as well.[19]

Aviculture edit

Keeping blue-faced honeyeaters in an aviary in New South Wales requires a Class 2 Licence. Applicants must show they have appropriate housing, and at least two years' experience of keeping birds.[52] Blue-faced honeyeaters are exhibited at Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago,[53] Philadelphia Zoo,[54] Columbus Zoo and Aquarium (Ohio), Birmingham Zoo (Alabama), and Tracy Aviary (Utah),[55] Woodland Park Zoo (Seattle)[56] Children's Zoo at Celebration Square (Michigan) in the United States,[57] Marwell Zoo in England, Edinburgh Zoo in Scotland and Taronga Zoo in Sydney, Australia.[58]

References edit

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  46. ^ a b Beruldsen, Gordon (2003). Australian Birds: Their Nests and Eggs. Kenmore Hills, Qld: self. p. 314. ISBN 0-646-42798-9.
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  50. ^ a b Barker, Robin Dale; Vestjens, Wilhelmus Jacobus Maria (1984). The Food of Australian Birds: Volume 2 – Passerines. Melbourne University Press. pp. 195–96. ISBN 0-643-05006-X.
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  52. ^ Wildlife Licensing Section; Biodiversity Management Unit (October 2003). (PDF). National Parks and Wildlife Service, New South Wales Government. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 April 2011.
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Cited text edit

  • Higgins, Peter J.; Peter, Jeffrey M.; Steele, W. K., eds. (2001). Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic Birds. Volume 5: Tyrant-flycatchers to Chats. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-553258-9.

External links edit

  • Blue-faced honeyeater videos, photos and sounds on the Internet Bird Collection
  • Sound recording of blue-faced honeyeater on Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology's Macaulay Library website
  • Meliphagoidea – Highlighting relationships of Meliphagidae on Tree of Life Web Project

blue, faced, honeyeater, blue, faced, honeyeater, entomyzon, cyanotis, also, colloquially, known, bananabird, passerine, bird, honeyeater, family, meliphagidae, only, member, genus, most, closely, related, honeyeaters, genus, melithreptus, three, subspecies, r. The blue faced honeyeater Entomyzon cyanotis also colloquially known as the Bananabird is a passerine bird of the honeyeater family Meliphagidae It is the only member of its genus and it is most closely related to honeyeaters of the genus Melithreptus Three subspecies are recognised At around 29 5 cm 11 6 in in length the blue faced species is large for a honeyeater Its plumage is distinctive with olive upperparts white underparts and a black head and throat with white nape and cheeks Males and females are similar in external appearance Adults have a blue area of bare skin on each side of the face readily distinguishing them from juveniles which have yellow or green patches of bare skin Blue faced honeyeaterSubspecies cyanotis QueenslandConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PasseriformesFamily MeliphagidaeGenus EntomyzonSwainson 1825Species E cyanotisBinomial nameEntomyzon cyanotis Latham 1801 Rangesubspecies indicated cyanotis griseigularis intergrade zone albipennisSynonymsMelithreptus cyanotisGracula cyanotisTurdus cyanousMerops cyanopsBlue faced honeyeater Canungra Queensland AustraliaFound in open woodland parks and gardens the blue faced honeyeater is common in northern and eastern Australia and southern New Guinea It appears to be sedentary in parts of its range and locally nomadic in other parts however the species has been little studied Its diet is mostly composed of invertebrates supplemented with nectar and fruit They often take over and renovate old babbler nests in which the female lays and incubates two or rarely three eggs Contents 1 Taxonomy and naming 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour 4 1 Breeding 4 2 Feeding 5 Aviculture 6 References 6 1 Cited text 7 External linksTaxonomy and naming editThe blue faced honeyeater was first described by ornithologist John Latham in his 1801 work Supplementum Indicis Ornithologici sive Systematis Ornithologiae However he described it as three separate species seemingly not knowing it was the same bird in each case the blue eared grackle Gracula cyanotis the blue cheeked bee eater Merops cyanops and the blue cheeked thrush Turdus cyanous 2 3 It was as the blue cheeked bee eater that it was painted between 1788 and 1797 by Thomas Watling one of a group known collectively as the Port Jackson Painter 4 nbsp Blue faced honeyeater Intermediate Fogg Dam Middle Point Northern Territory AustraliaIt was reclassified in the genus Entomyzon which was erected by William Swainson in 1825 He observed that the Blue faced Grakle was the only insectivorous member of the genus and posited that it was a link between the smaller honeyeaters and the riflebirds of the genus Ptiloris 5 The generic name is derived from the Ancient Greek ento ento inside and myzein myzein to drink or suck The specific epithet cyanotis means blue eared and combines cyano kyano blue with otis a Latinised form of wtos the Greek genitive of ous oys ear 6 Swainson spelt it Entomiza in an 1837 publication 7 and George Gray wrote Entomyza in 1840 8 The blue faced honeyeater is generally held to be the only member of the genus although its plumage suggests an affinity with honeyeaters of the genus Melithreptus It has been classified in that genus by Glen Storr 9 10 although others felt it more closely related to wattlebirds Anthochaera or miners Manorina 11 A 2004 molecular study has resolved that it is closely related to Melithreptus after all 12 Molecular clock estimates indicate that the blue faced honeyeater diverged from the Melithreptus honeyeaters somewhere between 12 8 and 6 4 million years ago in the Miocene epoch It differs from them in its much larger size brighter plumage more gregarious nature and larger patch of bare facial skin 13 Molecular analysis has shown honeyeaters to be related to the Pardalotidae pardalotes Acanthizidae Australian warblers scrubwrens thornbills etc and the Maluridae Australian fairy wrens in the large superfamily Meliphagoidea 14 Blue faced honeyeater has been designated as the official common name for the species by the International Ornithologists Union IOC 15 Early naturalist George Shaw had called it the blue faced honey sucker in 1826 16 Other common names include white quilled honeyeater and blue eye 17 Its propensity for feeding on the flowers and fruit of bananas in north Queensland has given it the common name of banana bird 17 A local name from Mackay in central Queensland is pandanus bird as it is always found around Pandanus palms there 18 It is called morning bird from its dawn calls before other birds of the bush Gympie is a Queensland bushman s term 19 Thomas Watling noted a local indigenous name was der ro gang 3 John Hunter recorded the term gugurruk pron co gurrock but the term was also applied to the black shouldered kite Elanus axillaris 20 It is called minha yeewi in Pakanh where minha is a qualifier meaning meat or animal and inh ewelmb in Uw Oykangand and Uw Olkola where inh is a qualifier meaning meat or animal in three aboriginal languages of central Cape York Peninsula 21 Three subspecies are recognised E c albipennis was described by John Gould in 1841 22 and is found in north Queensland west through the Gulf of Carpentaria in the Top End of the Northern Territory and across into the Kimberley region of Western Australia It has white on the wings and a discontinuous stripe on the nape The wing patch is pure white in the western part of its range and is more cream towards the east 23 It has a longer bill and shorter tail than the nominate race The blue faced honeyeater also decreases in size with decreasing latitude consistent with Bergmann s rule 24 Molecular work supports the current classification of this subspecies as distinct from the nominate subspecies cyanotis 13 E c cyanotis the nominate form is found from Cape York Peninsula south through Queensland and New South Wales into the Riverina region Victoria and southeastern South Australia 17 E c griseigularis is found in southwestern New Guinea and Cape York and was described in 1909 by Dutch naturalist Eduard van Oort 25 It is much smaller than the other subspecies The original name for this subspecies was harteri but the type specimen collected in Cooktown was found to be an intergrade form The new type was collected from Merauke This subspecies intergrades with cyanotis at the base of the Cape York Peninsula and the zone of intermediate forms is narrow 24 The white wing patch is larger than that of cyanotis and smaller than that of albipennis 23 Only one bird from Cape York of this subspecies was sampled in a molecular study and it was shown to be genetically close to cyanotis 13 Description edit nbsp Subspecies cyanotis juvenile near Eumundi QueenslandA large honeyeater ranging from 26 to 32 cm 10 to 12 5 in and averaging 29 5 cm 11 6 in in length The adult blue faced honeyeater has a wingspan of 44 cm 17 5 in and weighs around 105 g 3 7 oz 17 In general shape it has broad wings with rounded tips and a medium squarish tail The sturdy slightly downcurved bill is shorter than the skull and measures 3 to 3 5 cm 1 2 to 1 4 in in length 24 It is easily recognised by the bare blue skin around its eyes The head and throat are otherwise predominantly blackish with a white stripe around the nape and another from the cheek The upperparts including mantle back and wings are a golden olive colour and the margins of the primary and secondary coverts a darker olive brown while the underparts are white Juveniles that have just fledged have grey head chin and central parts of their breasts with brown upperparts and otherwise white underparts After their next moult they more closely resemble adults and have similar plumage but are distinguished by their facial patches 26 The bare facial skin of birds just fledged is yellow sometimes with a small patch of blue in front of the eyes while the skin of birds six months and older has usually become more greenish and turns darker blue beneath the eye before assuming the adult blue facial patch by around 16 months of age 24 The blue faced honeyeater begins its moult in October or November starting with its primary flight feathers replacing them by February It replaces its body feathers anywhere from December to June and tail feathers between December and July 26 422 blue faced honeyeaters have been banded between 1953 and 1997 to monitor movements and longevity Of these 109 were eventually recovered 107 of which were within 10 km 6 2 mi of their point of banding 27 The record for longevity was a bird banded in May 1990 in Kingaroy in central Queensland which was found dead on a road after 8 years and 3 5 months in September 1998 around 2 km 1 2 mi away 28 The blue faced honeyeater produces a variety of calls including a piping call around half an hour before dawn variously described as ki owt 29 woik queet peet or weet Through the day it makes squeaking noises while flying and harsh squawks when mobbing Its calls have been likened to those of the yellow throated miner Manorina flavigula but are deeper Blue faced honeyeaters make a soft chirping around nestlings and family members 30 A distinctive bird the blue faced honeyeater differs in coloration from the duller plumaged friarbirds miners and wattlebirds and it is much larger than the similarly coloured Melithreptus honeyeaters Subspecies albipennis with its white wing patch has been likened to a khaki backed butcherbird in flight 17 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Subspecies albipennis Katherine Northern TerritoryThe blue faced honeyeater is found from the Kimberleys in northwestern Australia eastwards across the Top End and into Queensland where it is found from Cape York south across the eastern and central parts of the state roughly east of a line connecting Karumba Blackall Cunnamulla and Currawinya National Park 31 It has a patchy distribution in New South Wales occurring in the Northern Rivers and Northern Tablelands regions and along the coast south to Nambucca Heads To the south it is generally absent from the Central and South Coast and is instead found west of the Great Divide across the South West Slopes and Riverina to the Murray River It is common in northern Victoria and reaches Bordertown in southeastern South Australia its range continuing along the Murray It is also found in the Grampians region particularly in the vicinity of Stawell Ararat and St Arnaud with rare reports from southwestern Victoria The species occasionally reaches Adelaide and there is a single record from the Eyre Peninsula 32 The altitude ranges from sea level to around 850 m 2 790 ft or rarely 1 000 m 3 300 ft 31 In New Guinea it is found from Merauke in the far southeast of Indonesia s Papua province and east across the Trans Fly region of southwestern Papua New Guinea 31 It has also been recorded from the Aru Islands 33 The blue faced honeyeater appears to be generally sedentary within its range especially in much of the Northern Territory Queensland and New South Wales However in many places generally south of the Tropic of Capricorn populations may be present or absent at different times of the year although this appears to result from nomadic rather than seasonal migratory movements 27 Around Wellington in central New South Wales birds were recorded over winter months 34 and were more common in autumn around the Talbragar River 35 Birds were present all year round near Inverell in northern New South Wales but noted to be flying eastwards from January to May and westwards in June and July 36 In Jandowae in southeastern Queensland birds were regularly recorded flying north and east from March to June and returning south and west in July and August and were absent from the area in spring and summer 37 They live throughout rainforest dry sclerophyll Eucalyptus forest open woodland Pandanus thickets paperbarks mangroves watercourses and wetter areas of semi arid regions as well as parks gardens and golf courses in urban areas 17 The understory in eucalypt dominated woodland where the blue faced honeyeater is found is most commonly composed of grasses such as Triodia but sometimes it is made up of shrubs or small trees such as grevilleas paperbarks wattles Cooktown ironwood Erythrophleum chlorostachys or billygoat plum Terminalia ferdinandiana 31 One study in Kakadu National Park found that blue faced honeyeaters inhabited mixed stands of eucalypts and Pandanus but were missing from pure stands of either plant 38 Behaviour editThe social organisation of the blue faced honeyeater has been little studied to date Encountered in pairs family groups or small flocks blue faced honeyeaters sometimes associate with groups of yellow throated miners Manorina flavigula They mob potential threats such as goshawks Accipiter spp rufous owls Ninox rufa and Pacific koels Eudynamys orientalis There is some evidence of cooperative breeding with some breeding pairs recorded with one or more helper birds Parents will dive at and harass intruders to drive them away from nest sites including dogs owls goannas 30 and even a nankeen night heron Nycticorax caledonicus 39 A study published in 2004 of remnant patches of forest in central Queensland an area largely cleared for agriculture showed a reduced avian species diversity in areas frequented by blue faced honeyeaters or noisy miners This effect was more marked in smaller patches The study concluded that conserved patches of woodland containing the two aggressive species should be larger than 20 ha 44 acres to preserve diversity 40 nbsp Blue faced honeyeater at Edinburgh ZooSocial birds blue faced honeyeaters can be noisy when they congregate 30 When feeding in groups birds seem to keep in contact with each other by soft chirping calls 30 In Mackay a bird would fly up 10 or 12 metres 33 or 39 ft above the treetops calling excitedly to its flock which would follow and fly around in what was likened to an aerial corroboree seemingly at play 18 A single bird was recorded aping and playing with an immature Australian magpie Gymnorhina tibicen in Proserpine Queensland 30 The blue faced honeyeater has been reported to be fond of bathing 41 a flock of 15 20 birds was observed diving into pools one bird at a time while others were perched in surrounding treetops preening 42 The parasite Anoncotaenia globata a worldwide species not otherwise recorded from Australia was isolated from a blue faced honeyeater collected in North Queensland in 1916 43 The habroneme nematode Cyrnea Procyrnea spirali has also been isolated from this among other honeyeater species 44 The nasal mite Ptilonyssus philemoni has been isolated from the noisy friarbird Philemon corniculatus and blue faced honeyeater 45 Breeding edit source source source source At Dayboro Queensland AustraliaThe blue faced honeyeater probably breeds throughout its range 32 The breeding season is from June to January with one or two broods raised during this time The nest is an untidy deep bowl of sticks and bits of bark in the fork of a tree Staghorn or bird s nest ferns 46 or grasstree 30 Pandanus palms are a popular nest site in Mackay 18 They often renovate and use the old nests of other species most commonly the grey crowned babbler Pomatostomus temporalis but also the chestnut crowned babbler P ruficeps other honeyeaters including noisy Philemon corniculatus little P citreogularis and silver crowned friarbirds P argenticeps the noisy miner Manorina melanocephala and the red wattlebird Anthochaera carunculata and artamids such as the Australian magpie and butcherbird species and even the magpie lark 30 In Coen an old babbler nest in a paperbark Melaleuca which had been lined with messmate bark had been occupied by blue faced honeyeaters and re lined with strips of paperbark 47 Two or rarely three eggs are laid 22 32 mm 1 1 in and buff pink splotched with red brown or purplish colours 46 The female alone incubates the eggs over a period of 16 or 17 days 48 Like those of all passerines the chicks are altricial they are born blind and covered only by sparse tufts of brown down on their backs shoulders and parts of the wings By four days they open their eyes and pin feathers emerge from their wings on day six and the rest of the body on days seven and eight 48 Both parents feed the young and are sometimes assisted by helper birds 30 The Pacific koel Eudynamys orientalis and pallid cuckoo Cuculus pallidus have been recorded as brood parasites of the blue faced honeyeater and the laughing kookaburra recorded as preying on broods 49 Feeding edit The blue faced honeyeater generally forages in the branches and foliage of trees in small groups of up to seven birds Occasionally larger flocks of up to 30 individuals have been reported 41 and the species has been encountered in a mixed species foraging flock with the little friarbird Philemon citreogularis 39 The bulk of their diet consists of insects including cockroaches termites grasshoppers bugs such as lerps scale Coccidae and shield bugs Pentatomidae beetles such as bark beetles chafers subfamily Melolonthinae click beetles genus Demetrida darkling beetles genera Chalcopteroides and Homotrysis leaf beetles genus Paropsis ladybirds of the genus Scymnus weevils such as the pinhole borer Platypus australis and members of the genera Mandalotus Polyphrades and Prypnus as well as flies moths bees ants and spiders 50 Blue faced honeyeaters have been reported preying on small lizards 51 Prey are caught mostly by sallying although birds also probe and glean 51 In Kakadu National Park birds prefer to hunt prey between the leaf bases of the screw palm Pandanus spiralis 38 nbsp Subspecies cyanotis feeding southeastern AustraliaThe remainder of their diet is made up of plant material such as pollen berries and nectar from such species as grasstrees Xanthorrhoea and scarlet gum Eucalyptus phoenicea and from cultivated crops such as bananas or particularly grapes 50 In general birds prefer feeding at cup shaped sources such as flowers of the Darwin woollybutt Eucalyptus miniata Darwin stringybark E tetrodonta and long fruited bloodwood Corymbia polycarpa followed by brush shaped inflorescences such as banksias or melaleucas gullet shaped inflorescences such as grevilleas with others less often selected 51 Usually very inquisitive and friendly birds they will often invade a campsite searching for edible items including fruit insects and remnants from containers of jam or honey and milk is particularly favoured 19 Parent birds feed the young on insects fruit and nectar and have been recorded regurgitating milk to them as well 19 Aviculture editKeeping blue faced honeyeaters in an aviary in New South Wales requires a Class 2 Licence Applicants must show they have appropriate housing and at least two years experience of keeping birds 52 Blue faced honeyeaters are exhibited at Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago 53 Philadelphia Zoo 54 Columbus Zoo and Aquarium Ohio Birmingham Zoo Alabama and Tracy Aviary Utah 55 Woodland Park Zoo Seattle 56 Children s Zoo at Celebration Square Michigan in the United States 57 Marwell Zoo in England Edinburgh Zoo in Scotland and Taronga Zoo in Sydney Australia 58 References edit BirdLife International 2016 Entomyzon cyanotis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T103685011A93968048 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T103685011A93968048 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Latham John 1801 Supplementum Indicis Ornithologici sive Systematis Ornithologiae in Latin London G Leigh J amp S Sotheby pp 29 34 42 a b Sharpe Richard Bowdler 1904 The history of the collections contained in the natural history departments of the British Museum London British Museum p 126 The Natural History Museum London 2007 Blue cheeked Bee Eater native name Der ro gang First Fleet Artwork Collection The Natural History Museum London Retrieved 3 September 2010 Swainson William 1825 Art LX On The Characters and Natural Affinities of several New Birds from Australasia including some Observations of the Columbidae Zoological Journal 1 463 484 Liddell Henry George Scott Robert 1980 1871 A Greek English Lexicon Abridged ed Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press pp 397 507 ISBN 0 19 910207 4 Swainson William 1837 On the Natural History and Classification of Birds In Lardner D ed The Cabinet Cyclopaedia Vol 2 London Longman Rees Orme Brown Green amp Longman and John Taylor p 328 Gray George Robert 1840 A List of the Genera of Birds with an indication of the typical species of each genus London R amp J E Taylor p 21 Storr Glen Milton 1977 Birds of the Northern Territory Fremantle Western Australia Western Australian Museum Special Publication No 7 ISBN 0 7244 6281 3 Storr Glen Milton 1984 Revised List of Queensland birds Perth Western Australia Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement No 19 ISBN 0 7244 8765 4 Schodde Richard Mason Ian J 1999 The Directory of Australian Birds Passerines A taxonomic and zoogeographic atlas of the biodiversity of birds of Australia and its territories Melbourne CSIRO Publishing pp 273 75 ISBN 0 643 06456 7 Driskell Amy C Christidis Les 2004 Phylogeny and evolution of the Australo Papuan honeyeaters Passeriformes Meliphagidae Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 31 3 943 60 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2003 10 017 PMID 15120392 a b c Toon Alicia Hughes Jane M Joseph Leo 2010 Multilocus analysis of honeyeaters Aves Meliphagidae highlights spatio temporal heterogeneity in the influence of biogeographic barriers in the Australian monsoonal zone Molecular Ecology 19 14 2980 94 doi 10 1111 j 1365 294X 2010 04730 x PMID 20609078 S2CID 25346288 Barker F Keith Cibois Alice Schikler Peter Feinstein Julie Cracraft Joel 2004 Phylogeny and diversification of the largest avian radiation Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 101 30 11040 45 Bibcode 2004PNAS 10111040B doi 10 1073 pnas 0401892101 PMC 503738 PMID 15263073 Gill Frank Donsker David eds 2021 Honeyeaters World Bird List Version 11 1 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 3 April 2021 Shaw George Stephens James Francis 1826 General zoology or Systematic natural history Volume 14 Part 1 G Kearsley p 260 a b c d e f Higgins p 598 a b c Harvey William G Harvey Robert C 1919 Bird Notes from Mackay Queensland Emu 19 1 34 42 doi 10 1071 MU919034 a b c Lord E A R 1950 Notes on the Blue faced Honeyeater Emu 50 2 100 01 doi 10 1071 MU950100 Troy Jakelin 1993 The Sydney language Canberra Jakelin Troy p 53 ISBN 0 646 11015 2 Hamilton Philip 1997 blue faced honeyeater Entomyzon cyanotis Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Archived from the original on 20 October 2009 Retrieved 19 August 2010 Gould John 1841 Entomyza albipennis Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 8 169 Issue is inscribed 1840 but published in 1841 a b Higgins p 608 a b c d Higgins p 607 Van Oort Eduard D 1909 Birds from south western and southern New Guinea Nova Guinea Resultats de l Expedition Scientifique Neerlandaise a la Nouvelle Guinee 9 51 107 97 a b Higgins p 606 a b Higgins p 601 ABBBS Database Search Entomyzon cyanotis Blue faced Honeyeater Australian Bird amp Bat Banding Scheme ABBBS Canberra Australia Australian Government Department of the Environment Water Heritage and the Arts Commonwealth of Australia 13 April 2007 Simpson Ken Day Nicolas Trusler Peter 1993 Field Guide to the Birds of Australia Ringwood Victoria Viking O Neil p 392 ISBN 0 670 90478 3 a b c d e f g h Higgins p 604 a b c d Higgins p 599 a b Higgins p 600 Gannon Gilbert Roscoe 1962 Distribution of Australian Honeyeaters Emu 62 3 145 66 doi 10 1071 MU962145 Althofer George W 1934 Birds of Wellington District Emu 34 2 105 12 doi 10 1071 MU934105b Austin Thomas B 1907 Notes on Birds from Talbragar River New South Wales Emu 7 1 28 32 doi 10 1071 MU907028 Baldwin Merle 1975 Birds of Inverell District Emu 75 2 113 20 doi 10 1071 MU9750113 Nielsen Lloyd 1966 Migration of the Blue faced Honeyeater Emu 65 4 305 09 doi 10 1071 MU965305 a b Verbeek Nicholas A M Braithwaite Richard W Boasson Rosalinda 1993 The Importance of Pandanus spiralis to Birds Emu 93 1 53 58 doi 10 1071 MU9930053 a b Wolstenholme H 1925 Notes on the Birds observed during the Queensland Congress and Camp out 1924 Pt II Emu 24 4 243 251 doi 10 1071 MU924243 Chan Ken 2004 Effect of patch size and bird aggression on bird species richness A community based project in tropical subtropical eucalypt woodland Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland 111 1 11 ISSN 0080 469X a b Longmore N Wayne 1978 Avifauna of the Rockhampton area Queensland Sunbird 9 25 53 Rix Cecil E 1970 Birds of the Northern Territory South Australian Ornithologist 25 147 91 Schmidt Gerald D 1972 Cyclophyllidean Cestodes of Australian Birds with Three New Species The Journal of Parasitology 58 6 1085 94 doi 10 2307 3278142 JSTOR 3278142 PMID 4641876 Mawson Patricia M 1968 Habronematidae Nematoda Spiruridae from Australian Birds with Three New Species Parasitology 58 4 745 67 doi 10 1017 S0031182000069559 S2CID 86403736 Domrow Robert 1964 Fourteen species of Ptilonyssus from Australian birds Acarina Laelapidae Acarologia 6 595 623 a b Beruldsen Gordon 2003 Australian Birds Their Nests and Eggs Kenmore Hills Qld self p 314 ISBN 0 646 42798 9 White Henry J 1922 An abnormal clutch of Blue face Honey Eater s eggs Entomyza cyanotis harterti Emu 22 1 3 doi 10 1071 mu922003 a b Atchison N 1992 Breeding blue faced honeyeaters at Taronga Zoo Australian Aviculture 46 29 35 Higgins p 605 a b Barker Robin Dale Vestjens Wilhelmus Jacobus Maria 1984 The Food of Australian Birds Volume 2 Passerines Melbourne University Press pp 195 96 ISBN 0 643 05006 X a b c Higgins p 602 Wildlife Licensing Section Biodiversity Management Unit October 2003 New South Wales Bird Keeping Licence Species Lists October 2003 PDF National Parks and Wildlife Service New South Wales Government Archived from the original PDF on 1 April 2011 Blue faced Honeyeater Lincoln Park Zoo website Chicago Illinois Lincoln Park Zoo Archived from the original on 26 November 2010 Retrieved 30 August 2010 McNeil Avian Center Philadelphia Zoo website Philadelphia Pennsylvania Philadelphia Zoo 2010 Tracy Aviary Expedition Kea Retrieved 20 June 2018 Animals at Woodland Park Zoo Woodland Park Zoo Seattle WA www zoo org Retrieved 20 May 2022 List of Animals Birmingham Zoo website Birmingham Zoo Inc Archived from the original on 2 September 2010 Retrieved 30 August 2010 Animals at Taronga Zoo Taronga Zoo website Mosman New South Wales 2010 Archived from the original on 28 August 2010 Cited text edit Higgins Peter J Peter Jeffrey M Steele W K eds 2001 Handbook of Australian New Zealand and Antarctic Birds Volume 5 Tyrant flycatchers to Chats Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 553258 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Entomyzon cyanotis nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Entomyzon cyanotis Blue faced honeyeater videos photos and sounds on the Internet Bird Collection Sound recording of blue faced honeyeater on Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology s Macaulay Library website Meliphagoidea Highlighting relationships of Meliphagidae on Tree of Life Web Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Blue faced honeyeater amp oldid 1193473142, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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