The pied currawong is a medium-sized black passerine bird native to eastern Australia and Lord Howe Island. It is a robust crowlike bird averaging around 48 cm in length, black or sooty grey-black in plumage with white undertail and wing patches. Six subspecies are currently recognised, characterised principally by differences in size and plumage.
About Pied currawong in brief

Other common names include pied chillawong, Currawang, charawack, kurrawack, tallawong and tullawong. There is a steady change to the birds’ morphology and size the further south they are encountered, with lighter and more greyish plumage, larger body size and a shorter bill. Southerly populations also show more white plumage in the tail, with less whiteness on the wing. The male and female are similar in appearance. The birds are generally a black bird with white in the wing, undertail coverts, the base of the tail and most visibly, the tip of the Tail. The upperparts are darker brown with scallops over the head and neck, and the underside is darker brown under the eyes. The wings are long and broad and the bill is about one half times as long as the head. Older birds have similar markings to adults but have softer and brownish overall plumage but the white band on the tail is narrower. The males average around 320g, females around 280 g. The eyes are dark brown and the head is a prominent yellow with a yellow tip ape. The gape is prominent and darker brown and dark brown, with dark brown eyes under the neck, under the head, and under the tail. The sexes are similar, although the males are a bit smaller than the females, with the females having a narrower yellow tip and a yellow gape at the end of the gape.
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This page is based on the article Pied currawong published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 14, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






