Not a misnomer
We surmised that Hume and Hovell, who named the King Parrot Creek when they crossed it on their epic journey in 1824, may have misidentified the birds they saw – perhaps they were young Crimson Rosellas, we thought, birds that are common in the valley today. The explorers birding skills, or lack thereof, may have matched their questionable navigation skills – after all, they thought they had reached Westernport Bay when in fact they were at Corio Bay, almost 100 km to the east!
Anyway, that was until the early 2000s, when we became aware of a few reports of King Parrots turning up in the valley. We recorded our first visitor in September 2003 and have had intermittent visits ever since, like the superb male shown above that landed in a nectarine tree in our garden a few days ago. Numbers of KPs are now regularly seen or heard around Strath Creek and Flowerdale. No doubt they have been encouraged by the supplementary feed left out by some residents, but it is fair to assume that the extensive revegetation, encouraged by Landcare, that has occurred in the last 25 years or so, especially along the creek banks, is a significant factor in the return of King Parrots to the eponymous valley. They are, after all, essentially a bird of forested habitats, as well as being opportunists.
So, apologies to Hume and Hovell, their naming of the creek was most likely quite appropriate, or at least it is now.
Their most common call is a series of high-pitched whistles, a recording of which can be heard by clicking on the audio below. They also make a harsher contact call in flight that we’ve not yet managed to record.
Hidden treasures

We’re used to seeing small bats whizzing around at dusk over the summer period, but at this time of year you are more likely to come across one hiding sleepily in a wood-pile or even up the sleeve of a hanging overcoat, as we found a few years ago.
The microbat pictured here was one of a pair rudely disturbed from a state of torpor in a pile of wool-packs in our shed. It’s a Lesser Long-eared Bat (Nyctophilus geoffroyi) with its long ears curled down much more than if it were active.
The Lesser Long-eared Bat is at home in a variety of habitats and has a wide distribution covering most of Australia. It has adapted well to both agricultural and urban environments, with a willingness to use a range of different roost sites. However, tree hollows and bark fissures are its main natural roosts and, as with other microbats, scattered paddock trees and bush remnants play an important role as both roosting and foraging sites.
Below is another bat (we think also a Lesser Long-eared) found among some stored timber in the shed at almost the same time last year.
Thanks to Lindy Lumsden from the Arthur Rylah Institute for the identification.
The Kraken Wakes
The book (or was it the movie?) which most influenced my childhood was Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham. Even today I keep one eye closed when I watch meteorite showers just in case the story is portentous. Another book by the same author is The Kraken Wakes, the kraken being a mythical sea monster.
Well, you don’t have to go as far as the sea to encounter voracious aquatic predators. You have to look no further than your nearby lagoon or in this case horse trough. Judy from Limestone, the individual who recently brought us the maggot eating insects found in carrion has just sent in a photo of a water beetle devouring the floating body of a European Honeybee (Apis mellifera). This water beetle appears to be a Diving Beetle (Dytiscidae sp.).
Diving Beetles are regarded as beneficial insects as they predate on flies and mosquitos as well as their larvae. The adults eat a variety of insects, frogs and small fish and also keep the water clean by scavenging dead bodies (of animals!). The young of this beetle are known as Water Tigers and have been mentioned in a previous post. The back legs have a number of hairs on them so they can effectively swim and catch prey.
Enough about the beetle – I am hanging out to see which dead-devouring creature Judy comes up with next.
I won’t tell – part II
Last month I wrote a post describing how, for a number of reasons, I had secretly released some newly hatched insects into my wife’s vegetable garden. Of course my cover was blown when she happened to read the post in question (who would have thought!). However I got into serious trouble when soon afterwards the little critters which had initially disappeared turned up in great numbers as instars of the vegetable pest, the Southern Green Shield Bug (Nezara viridula) and proceeded to damage our tomato crop.
The term instar is used to describe the larval form of insects that moult several times before becoming an adult. The number of instar states differs with species. This shield bug has 5 instar states (some are pictured) each of which last about a week. The lifecycle from the egg to hatching the adult is between four to five weeks.
Like all bugs the Southern Green Shield Bug has piercing-sucking mouthparts. They pierce the plant or fruit and pump digestive enzymes into it allowing the bug to suck out the liquefied food. The surface area of the fruit around the puncture mark becomes brownish or black in colour and very often sunken, causing a dimpled appearance – not good for the market value of the fruit.
As we are not selling the tomatoes I feel that there has been no harm done and we have progressed the field of science by identifying what insect the eggs were from.
That opinion is not shared in this household.
The Lady’s many costumes
Until recently Ladybird Beetles all looked the same to me but a closer look shows the lady has a number of outfits.
Ladybirds are a family of beetles (Coccinellidae) commonly found on roses and in vegetable gardens. They are considered beneficial insects as the adults and their young are voracious feeders of soft-bodied invertebrates such as aphids and mites but also consume flower nectar, water and honeydew from aphids.
The majority of ladybirds are red/orange and black but there are a variety of designs. Pictured are three such beetles found in our vegetable garden at the moment – the 23-spotted Common Spotted Ladybird (Harmonia conformis), the Transverse Ladybird (Coccinella transversalis) and the White-collared or Spotted Amber Ladybird (Hippodamia variegata).
Of course as any lady knows, if you want to stand out in the crowd you have to dress differently. Also in our vegie garden is the yellow and black Fungus-eating Ladybird (Illeis glabula), pictured right. As the name suggests it feeds on fungus and black mold on leaves.
Vegetarians always stand out in a crowd!
Cute, but …
And they are extremely wary, flying off in a swirling flock to the nearest tree when disturbed. This makes photographing them difficult, with our limited zoom capacity – thus the poor long-distance shots shown here.
Introduced as far back as the 1860s, the Europeant Goldfinch has not been as successful as some other introduced birds in spreading across the country, and they are mostly confined to south-eastern Australia.
It’s hard not to like these pretty little birds with their tinkling song (click on the audio bar below to hear it). Perhaps in recognition of this, the collective name for goldfinches is a “charm”.
So we feel a bit ambivalent about these birds – cute to look at and listen to, but, as with many other introduced species, we’d probably be better off without them.
For more information on the goldfinch, and a much clearer picture, go to BirdLife Australia’s Birds in Backyards website.
Searching for the Greeblies
A neighbour of mine has a farm dam. It has no fringing vegetation and therefore there is no place to hide for the hunted…and for that matter the hunter. Every year a pair of Australasian Grebes (Tachybaptus novaehollandiae) build a floating nest in the middle of the dam and successfully rear chicks. This year was no different.
Recently the call came through that the eggs had hatched. The approach to the dam is tricky if you don’t want to alert the subject. One has to walk up the dam wall and peer over the top. On doing so I saw two incredibly small chicks splashing around on the dam. All it took was one squawk from the parent and the chicks disappeared. It took a while to find them but both chicks had hidden under the wings of the floating adult bird (see photos).
Australasian Grebes are widespread throughout Australia. Still, shallow fresh water provides the ideal habitat. The scientific name Tachybaptus is derived from two Greek words tachys meaning fast and bapto meaning to dip in water i.e. fast-dipper. This perfectly describes the bird’s response when startled of diving under the water rather than flying away. If the young are under the wing when this happens they go for the dive as well.
I am not sure that Greeblies is the official name for young Grebes but it seems to fit.
Bubbling
At the moment Flowering Gums are swarming with insect pollinators. The greatest in number are the Honey Bee (genus Apis) but if you look carefully there are many smaller insects also buzzing around. Many of these are Australian native bees.
There are over 1600 species of native bee. Unlike honey bees which live in large colonies, many of the native bees are solitary. The female bee constructs a burrow either in wood or the earth. A single egg is laid in a cell which is then sealed. This process is repeated until the burrow is filled.
The egg is laid on a mound of pollen and nectar which acts as the food source when the egg hatches. Different native bees collect this pollen in different ways. Some collect it on combs on their legs whilst others collect it on the hairs on their abdomens. Certain types of native bee swallow the pollen and nectar. To concentrate this food source they undertake ‘bubbling’ – regurgitating the liquid mixture into a bubble to evaporate off the water (see photo below).

It is a great opportunity to observe native bees because they remain stationary to do this, and they are usually such flighty critters.
I wonder if I could employ the bubbling technique at an all-you-can-eat smorgasbord restaurant?
It’s a wrap
A few minutes later it had transferred the package to the edge of its web, on a stalk of oregano, where it rested with its legs drawn under its body and stayed there all through the heat of the day. Although predominately nocturnal hunters, these spiders are clearly not going to knock back the chance of a good daytime meal.
At another web, we thought the spider had achieved a double whammy with a grasshopper and a European Wasp (Vespula germanica), apparently both caught together in the web. Closer inspection revealed that the wasp was not trapped but was in fact feasting on the grasshopper right under the nose of the spider, so to speak!
A third web nearby had ensnared a different grasshopper with the amazing name of Giant Green Slantface (Acrida conica), an insect we had come across previously. So although maybe not making a big dent in the grasshopper population, the spiders are certainly being well-fed.
Click on any of the photos for a better look.






















