| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Powerful, barking, or sooty, for example | Owl | 75%
|
| Bird known for its expert mimicry | Lyrebird | 71%
|
| Nocturnal bird related to swifts | Nightjar | 71%
|
| Also known as the snakebird due to its long, thin neck | Darter | 67%
|
| Familiar acrobatic parrot | Lorikeet | 58%
|
| Only species of roller found in Australia | Dollarbird | 54%
|
| Tiny bird named for its long, filamentous tail feathers | Emu-wren | 54%
|
| Australia has 3 contrasting species of this waterbird | Grebe | 54%
|
| Distinctive plover common in cities of eastern Australia | Lapwing | 54%
|
| Large, brightly coloured parrot | Rosella | 54%
|
| One of the only types of bird of paradise in Australia | Riflebird | 50%
|
| Small plover widespread across the country | Dotterel | 42%
|
| Glossy black bird with a long, distinctive tail | Drongo | 42%
|
| Gregarious mud-nester | Apostlebird | 38%
|
| Strongly sexually dimorphic cuckoo | Koel | 25%
|
| Large duck with striking markings | Shelduck | 25%
|
| Type of tern with uniform dark plumage | Noddy | 21%
|
| Two species of this plump brown bird occur in northern Australia | Rock-Pigeon | 21%
|
| Passerine bird named for its distinctive call | Triller | 17%
|
| Shorebird vagrant to Australia | Yellowlegs | 17%
|