Tasmania’s endemic birds are a living link to the state’s history and there is no greater example of this connection than the dusky robin. The robin made itself known to the first settlers as they set about clearing the land of native forest. It was, in fact, known as the “stump robin” for its habit of using the stumps of felled trees as a convenient perch to pounce on insects on the ground. No doubt it also hung around the encampments of the Aborigines during their own … [Read more...] about Dusky robin
Archives for April 2018
Tasmanian native hen
The native hen is one of those creatures that looks like it doesn’t belong to the world of nature. It’s not the product of evolution but the cartoonist’s pen. It joins the Roadrunner from Looney Tunes as being more at home on the screen than in the natural environment. I look at the native hen in the same way I look at the eastern rosella. The rosella’s mix of crimson, green, yellow and white in its plumage is a contradiction of colour. It appears too disarming, too … [Read more...] about Tasmanian native hen
Black currawong
The call of the black currawong is the sound of the mountains in Tasmania, the trumpet song ringing out from the highest peaks. Every time I receive requests from tourists, and their local hosts, to tell them where to find the species I wonder why it should be so high on the birders’ list, along with the yellow wattlebird. To me, another bird associated with the high country, the green rosella, is far more exciting, but perhaps that’s because I have a l fascination with … [Read more...] about Black currawong
Strong-billed honeyeater
The strong-billed honeyeater is an uncommon species which can be particularly difficult to find and identify in thick, wet forest. The strong-bill is especially interesting for both resident and visiting birders because it is a perfect example of what is termed convergent evolution in birds. Although the species belongs to the honeyeater family – and still retains the honeyeater brush-tipped tongue for extracting pollen and nectar from flowers – it has switched over time … [Read more...] about Strong-billed honeyeater
Black-headed honeyeater
Black-headed honeyeaters often go unnoticed but their song is the background music of the more leafier Hobart suburbs and on the lower slopes of kunanyi/Mt Wellington. It’s a gentle, incessant piping heard from dawn to dusk. Out of Tasmania’s four endemic honeyeater species the black-headed honeyeater is generally considered the least interesting and dramatic. It is not showy and flashy like some of the others, and goes about its honeyeater business in industrious fashion. … [Read more...] about Black-headed honeyeater