Magpie Goose with chick

In May I visited Port Douglas in Far North Queensland. Strolling along a quiet road was this Magpie Goose and its chick:

These are large birds, at around 80 cm long with a wingspan of 1.5 metres in an adult. Even the chick is a large bird. Magpie Geese are easy to recognise, because of the weird knob on the top of their heads. I see that the baby doesn’t have a head knob yet.

Magpie Geese are found only in Australia and New Guinea. Evidently they’re not “true geese”. Their family branched off earlier than other ducks and geese, and so they’re considered to be a more ancient lineage. They do look a little prehistoric! Their feet are only partially webbed, they have strong claws, and they don’t moult all their flight feathers at the same time. As a result, they can fly all through their moulting.

Common name: Magpie Goose
Scientific name: Anseranas semipalmata
Approximate length: 75-90 cm
Date spotted: 17 May 2022 (dry season)
Location: Port Douglas, Far North Queensland, Australia: 16°30’42.2″S 145°27’44.2″E

About Sarah Maddox

Technical writer, author and blogger in Sydney

Posted on 2022/06/26, in Birds and tagged , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.