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White Throated Nightjar ( Nesting )

Eurostopodus mystacalis

Description:

Of Australia's three nightjar species, the white-throated nightjar is the biggest and darkest. Its streaked feathers - black, brown, fawn and grey, with just a small area of white on the throat enables it to blend in well with leaves and twigs as it rests on the ground during the day. White-throated nightjars have a black bill, brown eyes and are 30-35 cm in length.

Habitat:

Though rarely seen, the white-throated nightar is common in the forests and woodlands of eastern Australia's coastal ranges, from central Queensland to Melbourne.

Notes:

Heard but not often seen - that's how it is with many Australian nocturnal birds. The white-throated nightjar’s call is a rising ‘whook whook whook’ accelerating to ‘laughter’ and also a low crooning. The nightjar comes out at night (and occasionally during the day) to feed on insects close to the ground. Look for them feeding on insects in campsites or along quiet country roads. White-throated nightjars breed between October and December, but breeding may occur in September and January if conditions are favourable. White-throated nightjars normally lay a single egg on the ground in leaf litter, stones and bark – no real nest is made. Both parents incubate the egg and care for the chick, with fledging occurring at just over four weeks old.

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11 Comments

MacChristiansen
MacChristiansen 11 years ago

Thanks Leanne & Shanna, this one was a lucky spot

ShannaB
ShannaB 11 years ago

Very very cool, Mac.

LeanneGardner
LeanneGardner 11 years ago

Wow! How incredibly cute!

MacChristiansen
MacChristiansen 11 years ago

Added information

MacChristiansen
MacChristiansen 11 years ago

Thanks Reiko

RiekoS
RiekoS 11 years ago

Beautiful shots.

MacChristiansen
MacChristiansen 11 years ago

Thanks Argy, I photographed it tonight while spotlighting, I think Goannas would be a major concern though

Mark Ridgway
Mark Ridgway 11 years ago

Nice shots MacC and good find. I'm surprised they nest on the ground - I suppose they avoid tree snakes that way. It looks a puzzled by your presence :)

Gerardo Aizpuru
Gerardo Aizpuru 11 years ago

:)

MacChristiansen
MacChristiansen 11 years ago

Thanks Gerardo, this one was a lucky spot

Gerardo Aizpuru
Gerardo Aizpuru 11 years ago

Wow extraordinary spot and shots :)

MacChristiansen
Spotted by
MacChristiansen

New South Wales, Australia

Spotted on Dec 30, 2012
Submitted on Dec 30, 2012

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