Like most birds that I see at night, this Azure Kingfisher (Alcedo azurea) was roosting strategically on the distal end of isolated vegetation, to forecast the vibrations of predators. In this instance, the climbing bamboo (Bambusa moreheadiana) provided safe harbour.
What was most unusual, though, was the sighting itself; being only my second of such a species in fourteen years of almost nightly scrutiny. The first, many years ago, was overhanging a section of Cooper Creek, where they are seen frequently throughout the day. In this sighting, the bird was quite a distance up an officially un-named tributary feeder creek, but perfectly positioned for a photograph.
I find it very significant that such a beautifully conspicuous plumage can remain so well hidden over the years. As an individual species, how can its part in the natural landscape be understood and appreciated when it is so adept at concealment? Its importance to other species and the interrelationships that define its ecological character are even less accessible.
The longer I persevere with my immersion into this ancient and secretive world, the more insurmountable its complexity becomes. Very clearly, one lifetime will not be enough. I take a degree of comfort from the obvious advantage of my children, benefiting from the contribution of the knowledge that their parents and grandparents are able to impart, but additionally, from the knowledge that they gain from their own observations and interrelationships. With only three generations I can see the growing accumulation of intellectual property.
Just imagine the intellectual insight of the thousand generations accrued by Australia’s indigenous people, the longest surviving human culture in the world.
gavin says
What a gem of a bird!
Paul Biggs says
Not unlike the British version – Alcedo atthis:
http://www.birdsofbritain.co.uk/bird-guide/kingfisher.asp
Sadly, I’ve never seen one, despite living next to a river.
frank luff says
I think “king fisher” an odd name?
I say this as my closest observations were made from my bed! The bird sat on the end of a dead “twig” and hawked in long grass for insects? I don’t understand it to be a night bird, for this was as is most bird behaviour, early morning.
Some previous observations were low flying over water, not for fish, but insects.
fluff4
Tim says
We were camped by a high country river over the last weekend (Anzac W/end). I was standing near the river and heard a ‘plop’ when i turned I saw this Kingfisher flying out of the water. He landed on a rock in the middle of the river and proceeded to smack a small fish held in his beak onto the rock. He entertained us for hours and donated a few good photos.
Tim