Australian White Ibis
Black Shouldered Kite
Blue Faced Honeyeater
Cuckoos - Storm Birds
Crested Pigeon
Eastern Whipbird
Fig Bird
Friar Bird

Noisy Miner
Pale Headed Rosella
Pardalote
Pied Butcher Bird
Plover
Rainbow Bee Eater
Rainbow Lorikeet
Spangled Drongo
Galah
Grey Butcher Bird
Kookaburra
Little Corella
Little Wattle Bird
Magpie
Mud Lark
Straw Necked Ibis
Sulphur Crested Cockatoo
Torresian Crow
Welcome Swallow
Willie Wagtail
Main Page
Email Us

Willie Wagtail (Rhipidura leucophrys 

"We have wagtails at our school. They have long black tails that they wag all the time. They are territorial and will escort you until you leave their territory. They eat insects and have a sweet voice. You can hear them call on moonlight nights."
by Iain, 2W
 

General Information

Description: The Willie Wagtail belongs to the Fantail family and is the largest, and possibly most well-known, of that family. They grow from 18.5 to 21.5 cm. Their feathers are black on top with a white tummy. The Willie Wagtail is different from other similar sized black and white birds because it has a black throat and white
eyebrows and whisker marks. It is called a "wagtail" because it constantly wags its tail in a sideways motion. Young birds look like its parents, but have paler, slightly rusty edges on the feathers of their wings.

Voice:  The Willie Wagtail's call is well-known, often being made constantly throughout the night, and is interpreted as "sweet-pretty-creature", though it also makes other calls that have more scolding and chattering notes. Its alarm note is a cranky sound.

Habitat:  Willie Wagtails are found in open forests and woodlands. They prefer the wetter areas, with lots of leaf-litter, for feeding, and  mud that is available for building their nest. They are found throughout
most of the Eastern and South-eastern mainland of Australia, but are not found in Northern Queensland.
The Willie Wagtail lives almost any habitat except for very dense forests, and is commonly seen where people live. It is widely distributed in Australia and northern Tasmania.  Although the Willie Wagtail is most often seen singly or in pairs, they may form flocks in Winter and often mix with other types of birds.

Food:  Willie Wagtails are very active when they feed, darting around lawns as they hunt for insects on the ground with their tails wagging from side to side. Insects are also captured in the air, in active chases.  Willie Wagtails are often seen with domestic and farm animals, like cattle and sheep, where they may run behind them while they are moving and snatch the insects as they are disturbed. Sometimes they sit on the back of the animal, and dart off to capture a flying insect before returning to its mobile perch.

Breeding: Willie Wagtails are active in defending their territory, but they are very tolerant and tame around humans, often feeding and nesting close to houses and human activity. Willie Wagtails can nest at any time of the year, but breeding season is mainly from August to February. The nest is a neatly woven cup made of grasses, covered with spider's web on the outside and lined inside with soft grasses, hair or fur. The soft lining of the
nest, if not found elsewhere, is often taken directly from an animal as they ride along looking for food.

Willie Wagtails may be re-use their nest in successive years, or an old nest is often destroyed and the materials used in the construction of a new nest. The nests are normally built on a horizontal branch of a tree, or other similar structure. The female lays three, cream-coloured eggs, which are speckled with grey and brown. Both male and female sit on the eggs and the young birds hatch after about 14 days. They leave the nest after a further two weeks but stay with the parents until the eggs from the next clutch start to hatch. Then they are driven away by the parents. If conditions are favourable, the couple may raise up to four clutches in a row, in a single season.

Reference: Information -  Australian Museum Fact Sheet
                   Photo: © Richard Major

Some information and pictures were taken from children's charts and where credited to that child does not claim to be original information. Where possible, permission to reproduce has been sought and ownership credited. Any infringement of copyright is purely unintentional and ownership of pictures and information used is freely acknowledged.

Click here to return to Rochedale State School.
Pages - G. Crew 2003