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Magpie-lark (also known as Peewee, Mudlark, and Little Magpie)
Flight feather (Rectrix), specifically an outer tail feather

Magpie-lark (also known as Peewee, Mudlark, and Little Magpie)

Kingdom: Animalia; Phylum: Chordata; Class: Aves; Order: Passeriformes; Family: Monarchidae; Genus: Grallina; Species: G. cyanoleuca

Family: Monarchidae (Monarch Flycatchers)

Shape
Asymmetrical, elongated, with a somewhat rounded tip and a slight taper towards the base
Size
Approximately 10-12 cm in length; consistent with mid-sized passerine tail feathers
Rarity
Very Common; one of Australia's most ubiquitous and recognizable birds
Learn more about Magpie-lark (also known as Peewee, Mudlark, and Little Magpie) in the encyclopedia →

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Description

This is a tail feather from a Magpie-lark, a bold black-and-white monarch flycatcher. The bird grows to about 25-30cm and is famous for its complex antiphonal duets and its bowl-shaped mud nests. Both sexes share the black and white motif, but males have a black throat while females have a white throat

Colour & Pattern

Distinctive bicoloration: the basal two-thirds are a deep, matte black-sooty charcoal, while the distal third (tip) is a stark, clean white. This high-contrast pattern is a diagnostic trait for the species

Barb Structure

Pennaceous and tightly interlocked along the distal half; plumulaceous (downy) at the very base for insulation; barbs appear intact with minor fraying

Texture & Surface

Smooth, somewhat stiff, and matte; the white tip has a slightly softer visual texture compared to the melanin-rich black portion

Key Features

The sharp, clean demarcation between the black base and the white tip on an asymmetrical tail feather is the primary identifier

Habitat

Varied: urban parks, gardens, wetlands, and open grasslands; requires bare soft ground for mud-nesting

Geographic Range

Resident across mainland Australia and southern New Guinea; essentially sedentary but moves toward water during dry seasons

Ecological Role

Predatory insectivore; helps control lawn grubs and garden pests. They are territorial and will aggressively defend their nests from intruders

Similar Species

Australian Magpie feathers (much larger, different white placement), Pied Currawong feathers (white at base, not the tip), Willie Wagtail (smaller, mostly black)

Interesting Facts

Magpie-larks are one of the few birds in the world that sing in perfectly synchronized duets, where the male and female alternate notes so quickly it sounds like a single bird

Condition Notes

Good condition; slight mechanical wear (fraying) on the trailing edge suggests it was naturally molted late in the season