30.5.17
Minnippi
29.5.17
27.5.17
Lake Samsonvale - cemetery side
25.5.17
Spotlighting Minnippi
25.5.17
Norman Creek, Holland Park West
24.5.17
Trotter re-visited
23.5.17
White Rock Conservation Park
20.5.17
J C Trotter
18.5.17
Minnippi
17.5.17
Norman Creek, Holland Park West
15.6.17
Oxley
8.5.17
Anstead & Moggill Swamp
6.5.17
Minnippi
3.5.17
Sandy Camp and Lindum
2.5.17
Update on Oxley's spider (27.4.17)
1.5.17
Minnippi
On site at 7.15 – still almost
a pre-dawn feeling as the sun was low and hidden behind cloud. However, I
plowed on. Spent quite a bit of time in the M1 track waiting until the sun
started to touch the treetops and picked up a few species, best of which was a Varied Triller and a Fan-tailed Cuckoo – probably the latter
the same bird Mr P and I had there a week or so ago. Up the Alley and it was
quiet all the way back to the lake.
An increase in Black Ducks to over 70 birds, 1 Hardhead, 1 Common Coot and a Great
Cormorant were best birds. A pair of Wood
Ducks protected 4 ducklings on the grassy slope above the pond as I trudged
over towards the Airfield Track.
It was mostly dead but near
the end I came across a pair of Double-barred
Finches and a single Red-browed,
my first on this track. I also had a Rufous
Fantail and 3 Mistletoebirds.
A Water Dragon Intellagama lesueurii and 3 Macquarie
Turtles Emydura macquarii showed along the low-tide creek bank on the way back to the car and
the Tawny Frogmouths were in their
usual tree.
Butterflies: 1 Monarch Danaus plexippus in a sheltered area on the
Airfield Track.
29.5.17
Needed a walk after a quiet,
not very well Sunday so off to Oxley. It was a bit better than recent visits
but still not very exciting. The usual stuff along the track with no surprises,
but it was a nice morning starting out at 16 degrees and warming up. An Australian Hobby put in a brief appearance
above the ponds, half-heartedly threatened a Feral Pigeon that went home with
wet pants, but other than that it was fairly average.
27.5.17
Lake Samsonvale - cemetery side
The first bird we heard as we
alighted from Mr D’s brand new Toyota chariot was a Striped Honeyeater. We made our way down to the lake’s edge through
soaking wet, chest-high-at-times grass to scan the mist shrouded water. A small
flock of Hardhead and Common Coots paddled anxiously away
with a single Great Crested Grebe
included. We watched the scenery unfold slowly in front of us, but not much
else made an appearance beyond the numerous Welcome Swallows hawking low over the lake’s edge picking off any early
morning insects foolish enough to raise their heads.
Back up towards the car and we
picked up the expected Grey Fantails
and Rufous Whistlers etc and a
flicking Rose Robin along the bush
line.
We went
through the fence line and sauntered slowly up towards the Hoop Pine plantation
encountering a mixed flock of Golden
Whistlers, Varied Triller, Spotted Pardalote, Eastern Yellow Robin,
Yellow-faced and White-throated
Honeyeaters, a second Rose Robin
and a silent Fan-tailed Cuckoo along
the way.
As we approached the
plantation a sudden burst of loud, raucous bird calls disturbed the otherwise
quiet morning and Mr D hurriedly finished his ablutions and caught up to catch
a quick view of a healthy looking Red
Fox moving through the shadows just inside the edge of the Hoop Pines. The
noise continued and when we investigated we discovered the source to be the
resident FERAL flock of Guineafowl looking harassed and concerned at the mammal’s
presence. Unfortunately it appeared to have declined to take one…..
Further on and a calling Long-billed Scrubwren was only our
third observation on site of this species. After that it was pretty quiet. We
had a perched up Whistling Kite – a
94% guarantee species here – and a single Rufous
Fantail before taking on the challenge of Stu’s Gate on our return to the
car after a two hour sortie - and a mission for breakfast in Samford village.
25.5.17
Spotlighting Minnippi
Mr P and I started out at
19.00. No moon, still, relatively warm night. Between the local soccer crowd,
decelerating planes overhead and the nearby highway it was very noisy – more noticeable
for being, still and ‘quiet’.
Overall not a lot – tried hard
for Owlet Nightjar but no luck. We did have several Common Brush-tail Possums and a Koala, possibly my first spotlit Koala. There were a number of spiders – all of the ‘aerial’ webs
being Garden Orb Weavers Eriophora transmarina of various sizes
and designs and a few Dark Wolf Spiders
Lycosa obscuroides running around in
the leaf litter.
We did the the usual circuit –
M1 track, Alley, pond and Airfield Track and found only two well-separated Tawny Frogmouths. Other than those it
was a bird-free two hours!
25.5.17
Norman Creek, Holland Park West
A sunny, bright morning, the
grass again heavily dew-laden and my pants soaked to the thigh. A bit of
activity, but the variety low. Three Grey
Fantails the first (on site) of the season, small numbers of Rainbow and Scaly-breasted Lorikeets, a single Noisy Friarbird, a couple of Superb
Fairy Wrens. Forty-five minutes of easy birding with no surprises.
24.5.17
Trotter re-visited
Following a conversation with
the EPA yesterday I decided to return to Trotter to confirm the GPS
co-ordinates and check on their claim that the dead turtles were, in fact,
gone.
I had planned to simply walk
in and walk out, but in the end did the circuit without going down to the lake,
apart from the immediate ‘dead turtle’ location. On the way I met a couple of
BCC workers checking the track. In conversation it was revealed that they had
seen fishermen on regular occasions catching and killing turtles on fishing
lines, but SEQ Water had been unable to catch them on site.
The turtles were gone. I
assume someone emptied the net, most likely on Sunday. I also assume the lake bed at
that point is strewn with empty shells and rotting carcases.
Moving on I took photos of a
tiny dragon/damsel fly, a small grasshopper and three species of fungi – only
one of which I have identified so far. I also saw the first Eastern Spinebills of the season, but
few other birds and only one butterfly, an Orange
Ringlet. I was only on site an hour or so.
23.5.17
White Rock Conservation Park
It had been a number of years
since I had visited Whiterock and I have only been there 3 times before. The
developing suburbs had changed the landscape considerably and it took me a
while to find my way through the new streets and under the Centennial Highway
to the carpark I remembered, so I didn’t start out until 7.45.
To add to the late start, the
local council were re-grading the car-wide track and the resulting noise and
activity did nothing to improve the situation.
I heard Brown Quail calling
despite the relatively heavy tree cover -
a new bird for site for me, but overall the birds were few and far
between. I did see a well coloured up Rose Robin, which has always been a
reliable bird at White Rock for me – but that was the extent of the excitement.
I resorted to taking pictures of fungi, moths, grasshoppers a skink and even a
tree and managed to get lost as always……
The tree appears to be Maiden’s Wattle Acacia maidenii, the fungi - Parasol
Mushroom Macrolepiota procera, the
grasshopper - Long-legged Bandwing Heteropternis obscurella, but, at this
stage, the moth only as a Plusiinae sp (family Noctuidae and I sent the skink
to the Museum for confirmation (I think it’s a Copper-tailed Skink Ctenotus taeniatus but I’m not sure.)
Possible Copper-tailed Skink Ctenotus taeniatus |
Parasol Mushroom Macrolepiota procera, |
Plusiinae sp |
Long-legged Bandwing Heteropternis obscurella |
Maiden’s Wattle Acacia maidenii, |
Butterflies - Evening Brown Melanitis leda, Orange Ringlet Hypocysta adiante and Glasswing Acraea andromacha.
I found my way out, surviving the three hour walk, and headed home for a much needed cup of coffee.
PPS. Regarding the dead
turtles I reported in Saturday’s post – I received a call from the EPA advising
that SEQ Water had been alerted and investigated my story. They had been unable
to find the net and turtles and he was calling re more info. Nice to see there
was a response and it appears to be an incident of illegal netting.
20.5.17
J C Trotter
I woke up expecting it to be
raining as forecast by the BOM, however, it was dry and sunny so I headed for
Trotter. I’ve always found the place frustrating, because, as I have discussed
endlessly before, there seems to be very little life for such a varied habitat.
BUT, I have a good list of birds and insects and it does throw up interesting
stuff at times.
This morning, however, wasn’t
really one of those times and I walked down to the lake shore without much
excitement. Birds were, as usual, few and far between and the most exciting
thing was a pair of juvenile Gull-billed
Terns patrolling backwards and forwards over the water.
A little further down the
shore and a smell caught my attention. From the lakeshore about 10 meters out
was, what appeared to be, a number of turtles caught in a net. All appeared
dead and the smell suggested it wasn’t a recent event. I took photos and tried
to establish a GPS location using my iPhone to report the incident to the EPA.
Moving on I found little else
apart from a few Orange Ringlets Hypocysta adiante and
a handful of Meadow Argus Junonia villida in the
grass under the pylons. On the return track I was photographing a dragonfly
when it swooped up, caught another insect and settled down to eat it –
something I had not witnessed before. I got it on film at quite close range –
it has been identified as a female Blue
Skimmer Orthetrum caledonicum.
PS I reported
the dead turtles to the EPA and have received a response advising they will be
looking into it. Hopefully, but not guaranteed, I’ll hear the outcome.
18.5.17
Minnippi
I picked up Mr P at 7 and we
arrived in the car park to a drizzly, overcast morning. The lake was almost
vacant – as it has been for the last few months – and birds were thin on the M1
track. We did have a flock of approx 20 Black-faced Cuckoo Shrikes which seemed
unusual and a calling Fan-tailed Cuckoo – although it took me about 5 minutes
before I heard it. Along the Alley and a mixed flock containing Grey and Rufous Fantails (1 each), Golden
and Rufous Whistler (one each, both
males), a single Brown Honeyeater, a
female Mistletoebird and a number of
Silvereyes held our attention. A
small flock of Chestnut-breasted
Mannikins as we worked through the grass strip, then back at the lake and
the usual stuff.
Down the Airfield Track and we
wondered why we bothered – a couple of Rainbow
Bee Eaters and White-throated
Honeyeaters near the end and a single Australian
Grebe on the airfield pond.
Back at the Raptor Lookout and no raptors.
On
the the final leg Mr P showed me a bush with Hibiscus Harlequin Bugs Tectocoris
diophthalmus and Common Spotted
Ladybird Harmonia conformis feeding
on it. Interesting stuff.
Hibiscus Harlequin Bug Tectocoris diophthalmus - Female |
Hibiscus Harlequin Bug Tectocoris diophthalmus - Male |
Hibiscus Harlequin Bug Tectocoris diophthalmus - instars or juveniles |
Common Spotted Ladybird Harmonia conformis |
Norman Creek, Holland Park West
Trying to ignore the
non-existent, but visual flock of ‘midges’ floating in front of my right eye –
the residual medicine from the injections of last week, now reduced to little
black specks – I headed down the road at 7. It’s weird – if I move my head
quickly it appears the ‘insects’ swarm. If I jerk my head it sometimes looks
like a distant flock of birds high in the sky – they also look like small birds
or insects darting out of the grass ahead of me which causes me to constantly
think I’m seeing something interesting. I had managed to get a contact lens
into my left eye which had settled in overnight so that eliminated the need for
glasses which was a blessing.
So, walking down the road jerking
and twitching like some sort of marionette I managed to safely negotiate
Birdwood Tce and stopped to check some real life Rainbow and Scaly-breasted
Lorikeets in the one flowering tree. On into the thigh high grass, watching
my visible breath for the first time this year – lovely! It was dew-heavy and
my legs were quickly soaked.
Overall it was fairly quiet
although I ended up with 18 species and one dragonfly - Common
Bluetail, Ischnura heterosticta which
I have had here before. An Intermediate
Egret and a Royal Spoonbill in
the creek were nice and a trio of Superb
Fairy-wrens, including a newly moulted male, were also very welcome.
15.6.17
Oxley
Following the cataract surgery
last Thursday I had taken it easy over the weekend, but decided an outing was
in order. I popped a contact in my left, good, eye and headed off arriving on
site at 8. I hadn’t had a contact lens in my eye for a week and unfortunately
my eye wasn’t happy. I spent the first half of the walk alternately rubbing my
eye and peering myopically into a distorted world – not the best for any sort of
birding and really f….king annoying. In the end I took the lens out again and
used my glasses, which was difficult because I needed to protect my right eye
from the glare and so had two pairs of glasses perched on my nose which didn’t help
either when it came to looking through my bins.
All in all it was a piss poor morning
and I really wanted to just give up and go home. There was f all around anyway
and it was only on the way back that I saw any butterflies. Two Monarchs Danaus plexippus– the first in a while – and half a dozen Large Grass-yellows Eurema hecabe which I hadn’t recorded before at Oxley. A tree in flower had
attracted a large number of flies, which turned out to be Steelblue Bluebottles Chrysomya
saffranea – a new one for me, but other than that there wasn’t anything of
note.
Large Grass-yellow Eurema hecabe |
Steelblue Bluebottles Chrysomya saffranea |
Anstead & Moggill Swamp
I might not almost have
bothered. A cloudy, still, slightly oppressive morning didn’t instil confidence
– and the wildlife must have seen it the same way.
I ended up with 28 species,
Twenty-eight??
The most exciting? 4 Double-barred Finches that I thought
might be new for site, but weren’t.
I did photograph a moth that I
can’t identify but that was it. No butterflies, not even a Monarch, nothing
else of interest at all.
On the plus side I felt pretty
good after wandering around for two and a half hours – much better than I did 4
weeks ago when I was f….d at the end.
On to Moggill swamp and in 25 minutes, 29 species. Nothing unusual
but a cross section of shallow water birds and a few other bits and pieces.
All in all a slooooooow
morning, but at least I got some exercise.
6.5.17
Minnippi
Been a week or so since and I
felt like an easy morning, having had a rather strenuous Friday, so off to the
ol’ Minnippi at 8.00 – late start again for the made up reasons listed on
previous posts…
Overall impression? Very
quiet, no flowering trees, hence no honey eaters – I mean eaters of honey
specifically. Along the M1 track a single female Australian Golden Whistler, several Striated Pardalotes, a quartet of White-throated Honeyeaters and a Varied Triller – note all insect eaters – and best bird of the day
and only my fourth record for site and my first on the M1 track – a single White-bellied Cuckooshrike.
White-bellied Cuckooshrike |
On the lake a Common Coot and
two Hardheads (the latter the first for ages) among the usual occupants. Not
much of note on the Airfield Track and no raptors at the lookout. The Tawny Frogmouths were perched up in
their favourite tree again, but, all in all a slow morning.
Butterflies: 6
Common Crows (yes, I count each
butterfly, therefore my life has purpose), an Evening Brown and a Lesser
Wanderer.
Other stuff: A
single Blue Skimmer (dragonfly) and a Crane Fly which I have identified as
a Long-black-nosed Crane Fly Leptotarsus (Phymatopsis) nigrirostris
Long-black-nosed Crane Fly Leptotarsus (Phymatopsis) nigrirostris |
Sandy Camp and Lindum
I again left it a bit later to
arrive on site figuring the birds would be much the same and the rising heat
would give the flowering trees a chance to open up and produce some nectar and
the butterflies and dragonflies would also be up and about (sometimes I think I make this shit up as I go
along….)
Anyway, I got to site at 8 and
it was humming with loads of Brown Honeyeaters,
and Noisy and Little Friarbirds feeding and squabbling around the flowering Flax-leaved Paperbark.
(I’m really hammering the one tree I’ve managed to
identify, aren’t I? – but there ya are, it’s the only flowering tree in sight
these days so…..that’s my excuse and I’m sticking to it)
Other than that it was a
pretty average, Sandy Camp-type of morning. Nothing exceptional, just more of
the usual stuff and less of some stuff – for example, 21 Wandering Whistle Ducks and not one egret of any species. I
wandered round the lakes, meeting Ken D and chatting for a while. Raptors
consisted of a distant Whistling Kite
and an individual Eastern Osprey
sitting on the nest, only head showing, not sure if it was an adult or a young
bird. Two very quiet Brown Quail
along the side of the track and a pair of Striped
Honeyeaters feeding were ‘highlights’ for what that’s worth.
I did see a few butterflies – Scarlet and Black Jezebels, Evening
Brown and Cabbage White.
Amphibians – several groups of
Striped Marsh Frogs clucked away,
mainly around the Bittern Pond.
On then to Fuller
and a walk in to find it almost empty – added a pair of Grey Teal and Intermediate,
Cattle and Great Egret to the morning’s list.
Lindum and no brown waders. 120+ White-headed
Stilts and a couple of Black-fronted
Dotterel. Moving my angle a bit, I ‘found’ 3 Glossy Ibis roosting in the far corner of the wet area.
Drove down Burnby Rd to the rear
of the swamp, and checked out the other water despite someone’s attempt to resurrect
the barbed wire fence across the gazetted road……. As I did so a mosquito
spraying helicopter arrived very low overhead and proceeded to dump its load
across the mangroves. I really find it hard to believe that the spray doesn’t
harm anything else. I guess when the local people start having two-headed
children we’ll find out then……the only advantage to me was that 6 Glossy Ibis appeared in flight, flushed
by the horrendous noise. I gave up and headed home.
2.5.17
Update on Oxley's spider (27.4.17)
The museum believe the spider I saw at Oxley - see photo below - is a member of the Clubionidae or Sac Spider family. Apparently there are numerous species across Australia and there is difficulty in identifying individual species and most likely, new ones to be discovered. I think mine is most likely a Small Garden Sac Spider Clubiona modesta but can't really be 100% sure, however, always nice to put a name to a face......
1.5.17
Norman Creek, Holland Park West
Bright, sunny, warmish
morning, very lovely.
Headed
down the road just after 7, hoping the slightly later start would generate some
activity. Was certainly better than last time but nothing particularly
startling. The usual victims plus a couple of Meadow Argus Junonia villida
sunning on a bare patch of rocky soil and a pair of male Scarlet Perchers Diplacodes
haematodes beside the creek. A single Noisy
Friarbird was the only bird novelty out of a total list of 16 species.
Scarlet Percher Diplacodes haematodes |
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