Restless flycatcher

Restless flycatcher

Restless myiagra, Razor grinder, Scissors grinder

Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Family
Genus
SPECIES
Myiagra inquieta

The restless flycatcher (Myiagra inquieta ) or the restless myiagra, is a passerine bird in the family Monarchidae; it is also known as the razor grinder or scissors grinder because of its distinctive call. It is a native of eastern and southern Australia. Populations in New Guinea and northern Australia, which were at one time considered to be a subspecies, are now accepted as a separate species, the paperbark flycatcher (Myiagra nana). It is a small to medium-sized bird and has similar colouring to the willie wagtail.

Appearance

It is about 20 cm (8 in) long, with a glossy dark blue crest, a grey-blue back and white underparts. It is similar to the willie wagtail, though the lack of a black throat, crest on head, white eyebrow and slenderer body shape are distinguishing features.

Distribution

Geography

Countries
Biogeographical realms

The Restless Flycatcher is found throughout east, south-east and south-west Australia and Papua New Guinea. From Cairns in Far North Queensland into west of Central Queensland and most of New South Wales, Victoria, southern South Australia and south-west of Western Australia. During winter many south and south-eastern populations move further north. Its habitat is usually open and wooded forests, in river red gums near water, inland and coastal scrubs and some semi-urban environments.

Habits and Lifestyle

Bird's call

Diet and Nutrition

The restless flycatcher feeds on insects, as well as other invertebrates such as spiders and centipedes and will feed alone or in pairs. It often hovers with its head and tail pointed downwards as it picks insects off from leaves, and it rarely goes to the ground, preferring to hunt insects from mid-canopy.

Mating Habits

The restless flycatcher builds a cup-shaped nest from shredded bark and grasses, matted and bound with spider-webbing. Linings used are soft bark, grasses, hair or feathers. It is often decorated with lichen, strips of bark or spiders' egg sacs. The nest site is in the fork of a well-foliaged tree mostly near or overhanging water, though it can be up to twenty or more metres above the ground. They will lay three, light-grey to white glossy eggs with brown or dark spots at the larger end.

Population

Conservation

Despite being described as of least concern by the IUCN, their population is decreasing. The exact number of individuals is unknown.

References

1. Restless flycatcher Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restless_flycatcher
2. Restless flycatcher on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/103711768/112352391
3. Xeno-canto bird call - https://xeno-canto.org/689361

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