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Partly prepared take-away |
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The veranda looked like someone had stabbed a pillow and shaken its body over the boards. That bird plucking a bird of the same size was mostly dull brown but the beak was unmistakable. The killer, disturbed, left off plucking and started dragging its prize away. (That evening, it air-freighted the body up to a fork of the nearest tree.)
The killer was a young Pied Butcherbird (
Cracticus nigrogularis) and the lovely prize, with breast feathers of black-scalloped white—a Bassian (Ground) Thrush that had been feeding on the ground for the past week or so.
The butcherbird doesn't need the collective noun to be called a 'murder', but the invaluable
Simpson & Day Field Guide to the Birds of Australia accurately describes it as having a "beautiful flute-like song".
The Bassian Thrush, however, has a scientific name that is music itself:
Zoothera lunulata.