How well do you know birds?

Some birds have compound names made from two nouns. Can you name two which have the nouns reversed? A semi-bird example would be Barnacle Goose and Goose Barnacle. (For the example I can think of, one version is shared by several species).
 
Which Australian bird species was once known as the, "Jardine Caterpillar-eater"?
Hint: It is a passerine, and to my knowledge, it is not often kept in captivity.
 
Somewhere in the back of my mind I seem to recall Cuckoo-Shrikes being called Caterpillar eaters; Jardine? Total stab in the dark, Ground Cuckoo-Shrike?
 
Somewhere in the back of my mind I seem to recall Cuckoo-Shrikes being called Caterpillar eaters; Jardine? Total stab in the dark, Ground Cuckoo-Shrike?
You have the family right.
Also, a small amendment to the question; the species is not endemic to Australia, in case that was implied.
 
I had no further ideas, might have guessed it from your clue that it is not an Australian endemic, but took the Google route instead. Any idea why “Jardine”? I won’t give the answer to give others the chance; don’t give the reason either until you have decided the question is over.
 
I had no further ideas, might have guessed it from your clue that it is not an Australian endemic, but took the Google route instead. Any idea why “Jardine”? I won’t give the answer to give others the chance; don’t give the reason either until you have decided the question is over.
According to Wiktionary, "Jardine", is a French word that is a form of the verb, "Jardiner", which means, "to garden; to do some gardening". So, in the context of the bird's name, I think that, "Jardine", means either:

1. The bird is found in gardens.

Or,

2. The bird "gardens" by methodically removing caterpillars that destroy plants.
 
According to Wiktionary, "Jardine", is a French word that is a form of the verb, "Jardiner", which means, "to garden; to do some gardening". So, in the context of the bird's name, I think that, "Jardine", means either:

1. The bird is found in gardens.

Or,

2. The bird "gardens" by methodically removing caterpillars that destroy plants.
It's a bit less interesting than that - the species was described by Sir William Jardine.
 
If no one is asking a new question, I might as well ask this:
What bird has been recorded to eat faster than Coyote Peterson?
 
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