Harman Patil (Editor)

Brown headed honeyeater

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Passeriformes

Genus
  
Higher classification
  
Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Meliphagidae

Scientific name
  
Melithreptus brevirostris

Rank
  
Species

Brown-headed honeyeater httpsphotossmugmugcomBIRDFAMILIESOFTHEWO

Similar
  
Honeyeater, White‑naped honeyeater, Bird, Melithreptus, White‑eared honeyeater

Australian native brown headed honeyeaters calling drinking and bathing


The brown-headed honeyeater (Melithreptus brevirostris) is a species of passerine bird in the family Meliphagidae. It is endemic to Australia. Its natural habitats are temperate forests and Mediterranean-type shrubby vegetation.

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Brown-headed honeyeater Brownheaded honeyeater Central Wheatbelt Visitor Centre

The brown-headed honeyeater was first described by Vigors & Horsfield in 1827. Its species name is derived from the Latin terms brevis "short", and rostrum "beak". Five subspecies have been described. The race magnirostris from Kangaroo Island has a noticeably larger bill.

Brown-headed honeyeater Brownheaded Honeyeater

It is a member of the genus Melithreptus with several species, of similar size and all black-headed apart from this species, in the honeyeater family Meliphagidae. Molecular markers show the brown-headed honeyeater is most closely related to the black-chinned honeyeater, with the strong-billed honeyeater an earlier offshoot between 6.7 and 3.4 million years ago.

Brown-headed honeyeater Brownheaded Honeyeater Canberra Birds

A small honeyeater ranging from 13 to 15 cm (5.2–6 in) in length, it is olive brown above and buff below, with a brown head, nape and throat, with a cream or orange patch of bare skin over the eye and a white crescent-shaped patch on the nape. The legs and feet are orange. It makes a scratchy chwik-chwik-chwik call.

Brown-headed honeyeater David Kleinert Photography Brownheaded Honeyeater Nature

The brown-headed honeyeater ranges from central-southern Queensland, down through central and eastern New South Wales (though generally west of the Great Dividing Range), across Victoria and into eastern South Australia, where it is found in the Flinders Ranges and around the lower Murray River region. It occurs in southern Western Australia.

Brown-headed honeyeater Brownheaded Honeyeater

Insects form the bulk of the diet, and like its close relatives the black-chinned and strong-billed honeyeaters, the brown-headed honeyeater forages by probing in bark of trunks and branches of trees.

Brown-headed honeyeater Brownheaded Honeyeater BIRDS in BACKYARDS

Brown-headed honeyeaters may nest from July to December, breeding once or twice during this time. The nest is a thick-walled bowl of grasses and bits of bark lined with softer plant material hidden in the outer foliage of a tall tree, usually a eucalypt. Two or three eggs are laid, 16 x 13 mm and shiny buff-pink sparsely spotted with red-brown (more on larger end).

Brown headed honeyeater bird watching in australia with ej birdwaching


References

Brown-headed honeyeater Wikipedia