Your search
for honeyeater
returned 59 results
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Mistaken identity?
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/myna-or-miner/Which is the greater threat to bird biodiversity: the introduced Common Myna or the Australian native Noisy Miner?
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Noisy Friarbird
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/noisy-friarbird/Large bird, black head, strong bill with prominent bump, dark brown grey above, white underneath.
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New bird species named after AM ornithologist
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/new-bird-species-named-after-am-ornithologist/An extinct species of bristlebird has been discovered in 18-million-year-old rocks in northwestern Queensland
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Bats, birds and bones: a view to a kill
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/bats-birds-and-bones-a-view-to-a-kill/Songbird fossils from Queensland reveal the diet of an ancient population of the carnivorous Ghost Bat.
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Little hope of rescue for an endangered bird population in Sydney
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/amri-little-hope-of-rescue-bird/An endangered population of White-fronted Chats now appears to be isolated from all others.
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Brown Treecreeper
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/brown-treecreeper/Brown Treecreepers are highly sociable birds, living and breeding communally. Each year, the previous year's offspring will remain to help the breeding male feed the female and rear new chicks. Interestingly, it is usually only males which remain to perform this duty.
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White-winged Triller
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/white-winged-triller/Like other members of the Family Campephagidae, White-winged Trillers have an undulating flight and often shuffle re-fold their wings after landing on a branch.
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Lilian Medland
https://australian.museum/about/history/people/lilian-medland/Lilian lived quietly in the suburbs and painted bird illustrations that were both exquisite and accurate enough to use in a field guide.
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Garden Orb Weaving Spiders
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/spiders/garden-orb-weaving-spiders/The commonly seen Garden Orb Weavers are stout, reddish-brown or grey spiders with a leaf-shaped pattern on their fat, roughly triangular abdomens, which also have two noticeable humps towards the front.
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White-fronted Chat
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/white-fronted-chat/Although they are classified as honeyeaters, White-fronted Chats do not feed on nectar. Instead, they run along the ground feeding on insects. However, they have the same brush-tipped tongues as other members of their family.
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