Most birdwatching was done along Lee Breakwater Road, and at the breakwater itself. Around the breakwater were many black-faced cormorants and silvergulls. A lone Pacific gull was also seen on the breakwater. We visited the breakwater 4 times, but were unable to find the skua. We later heard from a local fisherman that the skua hadn't been seen for a while. The foreshore around the breakwater held masked lapwings, kelp gulls, crested terns, little black cormorants, little pied cormorants and Australian pied oystercatchers.
The crested tern is Victoria's commonest species of tern
Kelp gulls are a recent arrival to Australia, colonising southern Victoria in the 1940s
This immature kelp gull looks totally different to the adult
The Australian pied oystercatcher is one of two oystercatchers in Australia
Black-faced cormorants are endemic to Australia
We also visited the gannet colony at Point Danger, where we saw large numbers of Australasian gannets, both at the colony and at a distance on Lawrence Rocks.
Point Danger has Victoria's only mainland colony of Australasian gannets
Thousands of Australasian gannets were resting on Lawrence Rocks
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