This individual bird is actually reasonably well known due to the distinctive, but atypical, patch of white feathers on its head. This patch due to leucism, a condition causing a loss of pigment in feathers that makes them appear white. This bird is regularly seen in the salt-marsh area around the hide at the mouth of the little river.
White-browed Scrubwrens feed mostly on insects, and I think this bird is carrying a beetle larva of some kind.
As a species, they are fast moving and very active: these pictures came from a single burst when, finally, this individual sat still and in the open.
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