Summary A survey was undertaken lo assess 5 to 10-year-old rehabilitated bauxite minesite vegetation as suitable habitat for birds while breeding during spring in the jarrah (Eucalyptus marginata) and marri (E. calophylla) forest at Jarrahdale. Western Australia. The minesites had been rehabilitated and revegetated with local shrub species and a mix of local and eastern eucalypts resistant to the root rot fungus Phytophthora cinnamomi. Twenty-one species of birds used the former minesites for foraging or hunting while breeding; twelve of these were found nesting or rearing fledglings in the revegetation. Among the breeders were four understorey dwelling species which were otherwise uncommon in surrounding upland forest or (in two cases) confined in stream zone undergrowth. Total densities of all pairs or groups breeding in minesites were similar to those in nearby forest. Breeding territories often spanned areas of both minesite and forest around the edge of pits. Eleven other species were found breeding ...