Leaden Flycatcher Myiagra rubecula |
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Click on image to hear call
They have a typical summer migrant twin-peak pattern. They are almost absent from May to September, then quickly become conspicuous in October. Numbers decline slightly as some birds move into woodland reserves to breed, then rise again to an even higher post-breeding peak in January and February before declining again during March and April as most birds migrate north for the winter. Proximity of woodland reserves has a strong effect on the occurrence of Leaden Flycatchers in the suburbs, and records suggest that once arrived, they tend to stay in the general area. Numbers have fluctuated over the survey period but no general trend is apparent. All breeding records are from near bushland reserves, with nesting activity in late November and December and dependent young from December to early March. R=59. BR=48.
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