The Australian magpie is a medium-sized black and white passerine bird. It is native to Australia and southern New Guinea and has nine recognised subspecies. The male and female are similar in appearance, and can be distinguished by differences in back markings. Over 1000 Australian magpies were introduced into New Zealand from 1864 to 1874.
About Australian magpie in brief

It was named for its similarity in colouration to the European magpie; it was a common practice for early settlers to name plants and animals after European counterparts. In Western Australia it is known as warndurla among the Yindjibarndi people of the central and western Pilbara, and koorlbardi amongst the south west Noongar peoples. Among the Kamilaroi, it is burrugaabu, galalu, or guluu. In New Zealand the birds are not considered an invasive species, where they have been introduced in the Solomon Islands and Fiji. The genus Gymnorhina was introduced by the English zoologist George Gray in 1840. The name is from the Ancient Greek gumnaked or rhumnaked, for rhnaked rhinoceros, or rhode rhino, and gumnak, or gumnack. The species is placed in its own monotypic genus, Cracticus, which is monosyllabic and monotyped with the clade of clade clade birds, the butcherbirds, and the woodswallows and woodpeckers. The Australian magpie’s inin and currawbirds were recognised on and the three were placed in the family Cracticini in 1914 by John Albert Leach after he studied the musculature of the musculli. However, in 1985, American ornithologists recognised the close relationship between woodswallow and butcherbirds and combined them into a Cracticus genera.
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This page is based on the article Australian magpie published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 07, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






