Babblers are surely among the most engaging of Australian birds, loud, rollicking highly communal larrikins, streaming across the ground between shrubs in the semi-arid scrublands. At night they pile into big stick sleeping nests and in the morning they tumble out like the impossible number of circus clowns from a small car.
Until quite recently, perhaps until the early 1980s, it was assumed that our babblers were in the same family as the Old World Babblers; in fact Timiilidae was, for much of the 20th century, used as a big grab-bag in which to stuff a whole range of 'difficult' bird groups.
The Old World Babblers as then understood are found across Africa and southern Asia.
Chestnut-rumped Babbler Stachyris maculata, Bako NP, Sarawak, Borneo. |
However modern DNA work has shaken the whole babbling world upside down, and the once-huge Timaliidae family is a mere shadow of its former self, being divided into five families. Many of the babblers and their close allies are now in the family Leiothrichidae, which has nearly 150 species. Here are some of its members, some called babblers, others bearing other names but still understood as 'babblers'.
Black-lored Babbler Turdoides sharpie, Tarangire NP, Tanzania. |
Northern Pied Babbler Turdoides hypoleuca, Thika, Kenya. |
Chestnut-hooded Laughing-thrush Pterorhinus treacheri, Mt Kinabalu, Sabah, Borneo. |
Rufous Chatterer Argya rubiginosa, Buffalo Springs Nature Reserve, northern Kenya |
Meanwhile however, back in Australia it was being realised by around 1980 that 'our' babblers, far from being a colonial offshoot of a widespread northern family, were in fact ancient Australians, totally unrelated to the 'other' babblers. It had been a shock when it was announced that Australian treecreepers were perhaps as old as, or older than, the lyrebirds; now it is proposed that the babblers could be even older.
Enough of the family tree though, let's just meet the babblers (and from now on by 'babblers', I mean only the Australian ones). There are four species in Australia, all in the genus Pomatostomus, and a fifth found only in New Guinea. Two of them have huge ranges across Australia. The White-browed Babbler which we met earlier is more southern, while the Grey-crowned Babbler P. temporalis is found right across the tropics (and to a limited extent across the Torres Strait on the nearest section of the New Guinea coast). In addition it follows the woodlands deep into the south-eastern interior. The other two - of which more anon - have more limited, though still substantial, ranges.
All live in groups of up to 20, feeding in a scattered flock but keeping together when they move on. They will search litter and low shrubs for invertebrates, often probing bark.
Grey-crowned Babblers P. temporalis foraging; on the ground in Alice Springs above, in low bushes at Longreach Waterhole, Northern Territory, below. |
All are strongly - and probably solely - cooperative breeders with a dominant pair supported by both male and female helpers. (This is a bit unusual, in that in most cooperative breeders allow only male helpers.) The helpers are mostly siblings or adult offspring of the dominant pair. Without them, breeding success is very low.
As mentioned, babblers are incorrigible avachats (if you're not Australian and unfamiliar with the term, just sound it out by syllable - you'll get it). Grey-crowneds are especially vociferous and the bellowed YA-HOO back and forth chorus (technically 'antiphonal duetting') between dominant male and female echoes through the woodlands. Here is a selection of their calls; the third is a good introduction. Click the arrow at the start of the row; sometimes you have to click it more than once.
This is a bold and familiar species (which is not true of all babblers), often found in close proximity to station homesteads. For this reason they have attracted possibly the greatest number of vernacular names of any Australian species. In our book (Australian Bird Names; origins and meanings, CSIRO Publishing, second edition 2019) Jeannie Gray and I list the following alternative names that we know to have been used in print. Temporal or Three-banded Pomatorhinus, Temporal Babbler, Apostlebird, Twelve Apostles, Happy Family, Barker, Cackler, Quackie, Cur-Cur, Catbird, Dog Bird, Chatterer, Grey-crowned Chatterer, Red-breasted Babbler, Rufous-breasted Chatterer, Yahoo, Pine Bird, Happy Jack, Fussy, Hopper, Hopping Dick, Hopping Jumper, Codlin-Moth-Eater. For a discussion of each of these you'll have to have a look at the book I'm afraid! Note though that Apostlebird is more usually used for an unrelated inland cooperative breeder.
There are two clearly different colour races of Grey-crowned Babbler; in central and northern Australia is the rufous-breasted form, subspecies rubeculus...
Rufous-breasted form, Alice Springs. |
... while elsewhere the 'nominate' form temporalis is white beneath except for the belly.
Southern, white-chested form, Lake Cargelligo, central western New South Wales. |
The species itself is readily identified; it is larger than the others and the narrow grey crown is sometimes almost crowded out by the hugely flaring eyebrows. When it flies the rufous panels in the wings are obvious. And it yahoos...
Grey-crowned Babbler, Longreach Waterhole, Northern Territory. The eyebrows almost meet in the middle. |
White-browed Babbler, Shark Bay, Western Australia. |
Babblers to me are one of the delights of any trip inland. The first ones, flying off the road or streaming alongside the car in roadside vegetation, are a welcome affirmation that we really are finally heading west and north again.
And their cheerful larrikinism is definitely appealing; of course we might expect that (if we were shamelessly anthropomorphic) given that they are perhaps the most ancient of Australian songbirds.
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3 comments:
One of my favourite bird groups. We had lots of grey-crowneds on the property when I was in my early teens in SE Qld. Btw, I think my father and godfather might have been involved in helping the museums solve their collections problems. Not with Harold Hall if that was the 60s, but earlier, in the late 50s. They had just finished their 'nasho' and were at a loose end. Probably through the mother of my godfather, the bird artist Betty Temple Watts, they got a job going out into the bush to shoot birds for specimens. Of course, this is all before my time, so I'm a bit hazy on the details.
That's a fascinating little piece of history which I'd not heard from Kathy - thanks Susan. And did you meet Betty TW? How wonderful (or at least I hope it was).
Yes I met Betty, known to me as Aunt Betty. She lived with us for a while, when she was having a granny flat built at her son's. I can just barely remember meeting Hal, her husband too, who was the first head of the Department of the Environment in Australia.
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