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ipswich.qld.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0006/113001/Bird-Places-of-Ipswich-Brochure.pdf Explore
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19 May 2019: Australian Wood Duck • Masked Lapwing • Rock Dove • Spotted Dove • Crested Pigeon • Laughing Kookaburra • Rainbow Bee-eater • Red-backed Fairywren • Superb Fairywren • Galah • Sulphur-crested Cockatoo • Rainbow Lorikeet •
ipswich.qld.gov.au/live/animals/birds-poultry-pigeons Cached Explore
29 Sep 2022: Birds include birds (e.g canaries, parrots and finches etc.), poultry (e.g chickens, geese and ducks etc.) and pigeons (domestic). ... all birds, poultry or pigeons must be kept in an enclosure suited to the number, size and breed of bird.
ipswich.qld.gov.au/live/healthy_lifestyle/recreation/birdwatching Cached Explore
22 Dec 2020: 23 Chelmsford Avenue or Quarry Street. Easy paths and tracks. Bush birds including king parrots, variegated fairy-wrens and honeyeaters can be seen. ... 39 Haig Street, Brassall. Easy paths. Bush birds including wrens, honeyeaters and speckled warblers
ipswich.qld.gov.au/live/healthy_lifestyle/active-and-healthy-ipswich/recreation/birdwatching Cached Explore
22 Dec 2020: 23 Chelmsford Avenue or Quarry Street. Easy paths and tracks. Bush birds including king parrots, variegated fairy-wrens and honeyeaters can be seen. ... 39 Haig Street, Brassall. Easy paths. Bush birds including wrens, honeyeaters and speckled warblers
ipswich.qld.gov.au/about_council/media/media-releases/articles/2022/swooping-season-has-begun Cached Explore
27 Jul 2022: Environment and Sustainability Committee Chairperson Councillor Russell Milligan said Ipswich City Council’s successful Aggressive Native Bird program has provided increased community safety and better outcomes for our native birds. ... Since
ipswich.qld.gov.au/about_council/media/media-releases/articles/2021/calling-all-sticky-beaks-for-citizen-science Cached Explore
12 Oct 2021: These colourful birds have finished on top every year since the Aussie Bird Count began in 2014,” Mr Dooley said. ... Almost 950,000 birds were counted in Queensland in 2020, with the most common being the Rainbow Lorikeet, Noisy Miner and Torresian
ipswich.qld.gov.au/about_council/initiatives/environment/wildlife/swooping_season Cached Explore
9 Jan 2024: Other swooping birds include the Pied Butcherbird (Cracticus nigrogularis), grey Butcherbird (Cracticus torquatus), Laughing Kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguinae), Torresian Crow (Corvus orru), Pied Currawong (Strepera graculina) and Magpie-lark/Peewee
ipswich.qld.gov.au/about_council/media/media-releases/articles/2021/bespoke-trophies-add-special-touch-for-ipswich-australia-day-awards-winners Cached Explore
20 Jan 2021: Senior Citizen of the Year Award. “This award has a Superb Fairy Wren. ... I see these striking little birds all over Ipswich. They are a favourite bird of my mother who is a senior citizen and who loves to watch these little wrens bathing
ipswich.qld.gov.au/about_council/media/media-releases/articles/2023/tis-the-season-for-swooping-birds Cached Explore
17 Aug 2023: 17 August 2023. As spring approaches so does the peak of swooping bird season. ... Maintain eye contact with the bird if you have to enter the defence zone.
ipswich.qld.gov.au/about_council/initiatives/environment/wildlife/significant-flora-and-fauna Cached Explore
2 Feb 2024: Animal (raptor). Special least concern. Merops ornatus (rainbow bee eater). Animal (near passerine bird). ... Biziura lobata (musk duck). Bird (waterbird). Deep freshwater lakes, lagoons and swamp with dense reed beds and open waters, also estuaries.
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