9th-11th September 2014
Tyto Wetlands, Queensland, Australia
Tyto Wetlands is an excellent little reserve on the outskirts of Ingham and it is definitely worth scheduling a stop here if you are travelling down the coastal highway between Cairns and Brisbane. I, personally, found it so productive that I decided to stay an extra couple of days!
Crimson Finch (Neochmia phaeton) |
Blue Waterlily (Nymphaea violacea) |
The marshy edges of the artificial ponds provide ample habitat for a number of species, and Crimson Finches are particularly common here.
Other birds regularly seen in the pond-side vegetation included Rufous-throated Honeyeater, White-gaped Honeyeater, Yellow Honeyeater and Golden-headed Cisticola.
On the main pond itself, a few Wandering Whistling-ducks were present, while several White-browed Crakes could usually be seen skulking around the reedbed edges in the early mornings, often at quite close range.
Agile Wallabies are very common on the reserve and their numbers are most obvious very early in the morning when large herds of them can be seen grazing on the grass playing fields of the adjacent leisure centre.
Small family groups of Bush Stone-curlews intermingle with the wallabies during the night and can sometimes be found roosting under nearby bushes during the day.
Bush Stone-curlew (Burhinus grallarius) |
Agile Wallaby (Macropus agilis) |
In drier parts of the reserve, Red-backed Fairywrens are common and they were busy feeding chicks on the nest while I was there.
It is not unusual to see a group of 6 or 7 fairywrens collecting food for a single clutch of chicks due to them have a cooperative breeding strategy with the young from the previous brood helping to raise the current clutch.
Green Tree Ants are very common in Northeastern Queensland, although their nests made of leaves woven together high in the canopy are usually the only obvious evidence of their presence.
male |
female |
After spending my final morning at Tyto Wetlands, I stopped off briefly at Jourama Falls in Paluma National Park (about 40km south of Ingham). Bird activity was practically zero due to it being the hottest time of the day by the time I got down there, so most of my time here was spent trying to get photos of a courting group of Orchard Swallowtails with two males competing for the attentions of a female...
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