From Tropical Topics newsletter, No. 73 May 2002,
produced by Stella Martin from Queensland's Environmental
Protection Agency. Click on the PDF to read the whole issue.
 |
|
Bustards are large birds, over a metre in height
with a 2.3 m wingspan, and can be seen striding around grasslands
and grassy woodland
|
Bustards
Australian bustards are very similar to those in Africa, Arabia,
India and New Guinea. They are large birds, over a metre in height
with a 2.3m wingspan, and can be seen striding around grasslands
and grassy woodland. Bustards are nomadic, moving according to food
sources. They eat grass, fruit, seeds and large insects as well as
mice and reptiles, and are able to survive for long periods without
drinking. In north-west Australia they are very fond of
moonflowers.
Bustards are generally seen on foot but can fly. If disturbed,
they will at first freeze, then walk or run away, finally taking
off with a heavy strong flight. At breeding times the male puts on
an impressive display. He inflates his throat sac so that his long
neck feathers spread out in a fan, droops his wings and, with tail
splayed over his back, produces a series of roars. The female
rewards his efforts by taking full responsibility for incubation of
the eggs, on the ground.
There has been a massive decline in numbers of bustards in the
southern states of Australia where flocks of up to 1000 could once
be encountered. This has been blamed on a combination of intensive
agriculture, the invasion of pastoral land by woody weeds,
predation of nests by foxes, pesticides and hunting - they were
killed by the thousand from about 1860 until protected in 1935. The
presence of cattle, sheep and humans also leads the birds to desert
their nests. In the north, they have declined in some places,
possibly due to woody weed invasion, but in other areas seem to
have benefited from clearing. To see a list of research findings on
bustards click here .
Emus
 |
|
During the breeding season, the female developes
a pouch and fluffy feathers on her chest and struts about with the
pouch inflated
Illustration: Lynda Strahan, Interpretive Birding Bulletin
|
Emus in the wild are a dramatic
sight. Said to reach 70 km per hour at a sprint and able to cruise
at about 45 km per hour, they are nomadic travellers, moving
according to weather and food supplies. They have been observed
moving towards clouds and seem to be able to detect rain from great
distances. Records show that they can travel over 900 km in nine
months and one journey was clocked at 442 km in just 80 days.
Avoiding thick forest and settled areas, emus are found
throughout the rest of the Australian mainland, adapting to various
environments and feeding on whatever food they can find —
flowers, seeds, shoots, fruits, stems and insects, including
grasshoppers when they appear in plagues.They even eat their own
faeces to pick up nutrients which didn't get absorbed first time
round.
However, when the breeding season approaches emus go off their
food. As the days begin to shorten, after the summer solstice on
21–22 December, the skin on the birds' necks becomes a
brighter blue. It is the female who calls the shots. She develops a
chest, a pouch and bunch of fluffy feathers and struts about with
the pouch inflated (see above). This acts as a resonating chamber
amplifying her booming call so it can be heard 2 km away. Males
grunt in reply. She chooses her male and courts him, chasing away
other females who come near.
 |
|
Emus stretch tall during a confrontation
|
The female is presumably looking for a mate with stamina. Like
cassowaries, male emus do all the incubation and raising of the
chicks. His mate simply provides the dark green eggs —
up to 20 of them. Weighing 700–900 grams each, this is no
inconsiderable contribution on her part.
A male emu becomes obsessed with eggs, or paddy melons, oil
filters or stubbies, if he has no eggs to sit on. Once he has a
reasonable clutch (about seven eggs) the male can be quite
aggressive to his mate, or any other female, if they try to add
more eggs. He then squats, incubating the eggs non-stop for 56 days
without leaving to feed or drink. Stretching his neck along the
ground, he does his best to imitate a rock or pile of vegetation
and goes into a state of semi-torpor.
By the end of his ordeal he may have lost up to 25 percent of
his body weight but he then has to care for youngsters, herding
them with him for up to 18 months. Losses are high, with an average
of two chicks surviving to adulthood.
Although numbers of emus are high, they appear to have declined
in some areas, particularly inland and northern regions. The reason
for this is unclear. Emus are hardy and can survive drought, but
they may be affected by pollution, intensive farming, the effect of
changed fire regimes on food resources and hunting by farmers
protecting their crops. On the plus side, farming has benefited
emus by providing artificial watering holes.
Articles
Nomadic bird surveys
You can also check out Mark Ziembicki's reasearch page on the Australian Bustard Go to Bustard research page Read more stories about savanna birds in Savanna Links … [
read more...]