Mammals:
1- European Rabbit
2- House Mouse
3- Brown Rat
4- Brown Hare
5- Eastern Grey Kangaroo
6- Red-necked Wallaby
7- Sugar Glider
8- Common Wallaroo
Mammals:
1- European Rabbit
2- House Mouse
3- Brown Rat
4- Brown Hare
5- Eastern Grey Kangaroo
6- Red-necked Wallaby
7- Sugar Glider
Herps
12. American Toad Anaxyrus americanus
HerpsFish
4. Largemouth Bass Micropterus salmoides
5/17/21
Birds:
29. Wild Turkey
MAMMALSBIRDS
313 - Black-breasted Buzzard (Hamirostra melanosternon)
REPTILES
28 - Burton's Legless Lizard (Lialis burtonis)
29 - Kimberley Long-necked Turtle (Chelodina walloyarrina)
One of nemesis birds finally seen!:Birds
277. Red-eyed Vireo Vireo olivaceus
278. Scarlet Tanager Piranga olivacea
279. Ruby-throated Hummingbird Archilochus colubris
280. Gray-cheeked Thrush Catharus minimus
281. Philadelphia Vireo Vireo philadelphicus
282. Blue-winged Warbler Vermivora cyanoptera
Invertebrates:
4. Eastern Carpenter Bee
5/19/21
Birds:
30. Barn Swallow
BirdsOne of nemesis birds finally seen!:
Birds
283. Mourning Warbler Geothlypis philadelphia
Welcome to the Walrus club!![]()
Is the mockingbird still there for you?Another interesting one to watch for twitcher movement is the Northern Mockingbird that has been present in Exmouth (Devon) for some weeks now. That's a massive rarity over here. With rules on travel in England set to change from Monday if it's still there then it'll be popular. The rules are only changing from 'stay at home' to 'stay local as much as possible' though - the mockingbird certainly won't be on my agenda (unless, I suppose, it sticks around until June, when all being well I should be in the area anyway..!).
Is the mockingbird still there for you?
He(?) has now relocated to Padstow in Cornwall. Unfortunately still roughly equi-distant from me as Tenby was.It is a young male isn't it? Some local press refer to it as 'she' despite its nickname.
It was. The same bird was identified from photos of it taken in Exmouth, Sussex(was it Newhaven) and then again 'up North'. It had the same broken feather(secondary or tertiary?) in all the shots.Long gone, I fear. There was one reported for a short time way up in the north of England but no idea if it was the same one.