Category Archives: Pigeon

Soft colours of the Crested Pigeon

A Crested Pigeon explores ground that was very recently underwater due to flooding. I like the lighting in this shot, and the way the pink of the uncovered roots echoes the colour of the bird’s feet:

The orange blush on the bird’s shoulders is a pretty accompaniment to the grey-blue of the head and breast feathers:

Common name: Crested Pigeon
Scientific name: Ocyphaps lophotes
Approximate length: 31-35 cm
Date spotted: 6 May 2024 (autumn)
Location: Manly Lagoon, New South Wales, Australia: 33°47’05.4″S 151°17’00.0″E

Brown pigeon in Sydney but not a Brown Cuckoo-Dove?

This lovely brown pigeon perched on a post at Pyrmont in Sydney. Does anyone know what type of pigeon it is?

Here’s a closeup of the bird:

It doesn’t look like a Brown Cuckoo-Dove (Macropygia amboinensis) — the colouring isn’t quite right. This bird has a light-coloured beak and a light ring around its eye. Its chest plumage is as dark as the wings. Also, I don’t think its tail is long enough for a cuckoo-dove.

This picture shows the bird from a different angle, so that you can see its back, wings and tail:

Here’s a picture of the bird flying off:

Common name: Pigeon
Scientific name: Unknown
Date spotted: 21 December 2022 (summer)
Location: Pyrmont, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia: 33°52’03.7″S 151°11’48.8″E

Common Bronzewing pigeon in Blue Mountains

This weekend I spent a day in the region of Kurrajong in the Blue Mountains area west of Sydney. On an early morning walk, I came across this large, colourful pigeon:

It’s a Common Bronzewing. I’d heard their calls from all round me in the bush: a deep, booming coo that sounds like something from Jurassic Park rather than from a pigeon!

Common name: Common Bronzewing
Scientific name: Phaps chalcoptera
Approximate length: 30-36cm
Date spotted: 31 October 2021 (spring)
Location: Grose Wold, New South Wales: 33°36’41.7″S 150°39’50.0″E

Crested Pigeon doing what pigeons do

This pretty little Crested Pigeon isn’t doing much. It’s pecking at food, as pigeons do. But I found the colouring of the scene attractive:

Common name: Crested Pigeon

Scientific name: Ocyphaps lophotes

Approximate length: 31-35 cm

Date spotted: 26 December 2019 (summer)

Location: Long Reef Headland, Collaroy, New South Wales, Australia: 33°44’37.0″S 151°18’20.2″E

Hybrid Spotted Turtle-Dove with Crested Pigeon?

Today I spotted a couple of interlopers in an area that’s the regular hangout for a group of Crested Pigeons. One of the interlopers looks like a regular Spotted Turtle-Dove. Here’s a Crested Pigeon on the left and the interloper on the right:

But nearby, on the same wire, is this rather interesting individual:

The bird looks like a Spotted Turtle-Dove but has a bit of feathery decoration on its head. Could it be a cross-breeding of a Spotted Turtle-Dove with a Crested Pigeon? Or is it just a Spotted Turtle-Dove having a bad hair day?

Here’s another pic of the same Crested Pigeon as in the first photo:

Crested Pigeons are native to Australia. When they take off, you hear the distinctive whistling noise from their wings that is characteristic of many pigeon types. When I first saw these birds, I thought how typical it is that even the common pigeons in Australia are different from those I’ve seen in other part of the world.

The group of birds later moved down to forage on the ground. Here’s one of the Crested Pigeons:

There was only one bird that looked like a Spotted Turtle-Dove with a vestigial crest. Here’s another pic of the same bird:

Spotted Turtle-Doves are not native to Australia. They were introduced in the late 1800s, and are seen as a pest in some regions of the country.

Pigeon or dove? The names “Crested Pigeon” and “Spotted Turtle-Dove” led me to wondering, not for the first time, what the difference is between a pigeon and a dove. I’ve asked various people over the years. Some say doves are white whereas pigeons are not. Other say that doves are smaller than pigeons. According to much of the internet, the two terms are interchangeable.

Here’s another view of the same bird with the miniscule crest (or perhaps it’s just a feather expressing its individual identity):

A wink, almost as if the bird knows that it’s presented me with a puzzle:

Spotted Turtle-Dove | Scientific name: Streptopelia chinensis | Approximate length: 30-32 cm

Crested Pigeon | Scientific name: Ocyphaps lophotes | Approximate length: 31-35 cm

Date spotted: 5 July 2019 (Winter)

Location: Allambie Heights, New South Wales, Australia