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Food: Tends to take rather more vegetable matter than C. coronoides and feed mainly on the ground but is probably omnivorous to a similar extent to other Corvus species when opportunity arises. Food: Tends to take rather more vegetable matter than C. coronoides and feed mainly on the ground but is probably omnivorous to a similar extent to other Corvus species when opportunity arises.


Nest: Often in a loose colony of up to fifteen nests. It has often been recorded as having several nests within the nesting territory of a single C. coronoides which presumably due to different food preferences didn't consider them a threat to their own food resources. Nest: Often in a loose colony of up to fifteen nests. It has often been recorded as having several nests within the nesting territory of a single C. coronoides which presumably due to different food preferences don't consider them a threat to their own food resources.


Voice: A gutteral kar-kar-kar-kar or ark-ark-ark-ark. Voice: A gutteral kar-kar-kar-kar or ark-ark-ark-ark.

Revision as of 23:04, 17 April 2003

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Corvidae
Genus:Corvus
Species:mellori
Binomial name

Corvus mellori

The little raven (Corvus mellori) has only been separated relatively recently from the Australian Raven (1967) as a distinct species significantly (but not solely) by the differences in it's voice. Averaging slightly smaller than the Australian Raven, (sizes do sometimes overlap), it tends to be a more sociable species, often forming large flocks that roam freely over wide areas in search of food.

Range: South eastern Australia from southern South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales in scrub, agricultural areas and grazing pasture.

Food: Tends to take rather more vegetable matter than C. coronoides and feed mainly on the ground but is probably omnivorous to a similar extent to other Corvus species when opportunity arises.

Nest: Often in a loose colony of up to fifteen nests. It has often been recorded as having several nests within the nesting territory of a single C. coronoides which presumably due to different food preferences don't consider them a threat to their own food resources.

Voice: A gutteral kar-kar-kar-kar or ark-ark-ark-ark.