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Red wattlebird

The red wattlebird (Anthochaera carunculata) is a passerine bird native to southern Australia. At 33–37 cm (13–14+12 in) in length, it is the second largest species of Australian honeyeater. It has mainly grey-brown plumage, with red eyes, distinctive pinkish-red wattles on either side of the neck, white streaks on the chest and a large bright yellow patch on the lower belly. The sexes are similar in plumage. Juveniles have less prominent wattles and browner eyes. John White described the red wattlebird in 1790. Three subspecies are recognized.

Red wattlebird
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Meliphagidae
Genus: Anthochaera
Species:
A. carunculata
Binomial name
Anthochaera carunculata
(Shaw, 1790)
Distribution map of the red wattlebird

The species is found in southeast Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and southwest Western Australia in open forest and woodlands, and is a common visitor to urban gardens and parks. Loud and conspicuous, the red wattlebird is generally found in trees, where it gets most of its food; occasionally it forages on the ground. It is one of the largest nectarivorous birds in the world, feeding from a wide variety of flowering plants. Insects also comprise part of its diet. It is territorial and at times aggressive towards birds of other species, often defending rich sources of nectar. Breeding throughout its range, the red wattlebird builds a cup-shaped nest in a tree and raises one or two broods a year. Although it has declined in places from land-clearing, it is classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List.

Taxonomy Edit

The red wattlebird was first described as the wattled bee-eater by the Irish surgeon and naturalist John White in his Journal of a Voyage to New South Wales, which was published in 1790.[1] He wrote that it was the "size of a missel thrush, but much larger in proportion".[2] The taxonomic descriptions in White's book are believed to have been written by the English naturalist George Shaw,[3][4] who is generally credited as the author by subsequent authorities.[5][6] The specific epithet, carunculata, was introduced later in the same year by John Latham.[7][8] The word is derived from caruncula, Latin for 'a small piece of flesh'.[9] Both Shaw and Latham assigned the red wattlebird to the genus Merops. The species was moved to Anthochaera in 1827 by the naturalists Nicholas Aylward Vigors and Thomas Horsfield.[10][11] The generic name derives from the Ancient Greek anthos 'flower, bloom' and khairō 'enjoy'.[12]

Common names include gillbird,[13] gilly warbler, barkingbird, muttonbird, butcherbird, what's o clock, and chock.[14] Unlike many species in southwestern Australia, the red wattlebird was given names by the local indigenous people that were onomatopoeic (sounding like the calls they make). Names recorded include wodjalok, durdal, doongorok, and djoongong (this last name is also applied to the western wattlebird).[15] In the Eyre Peninsula in South Australia, the local Barngarla people knew it as ngarkarko or ngarkabukko.[16] The local people of Denial Bay in South Australia called it noggal,[17] and the Ngarrindjeri people of the Lower Murray region in South Australia knew it as rungkan.[18]

There are three recognised subspecies,[19] though there is a zone of intermediate birds across western Victoria and eastern South Australia, bordered by western Port Phillip Bay to the east, Mount Lofty Ranges to the west, and Little and Big Desert national parks to the north.[20] The differences in plumage are not generally prominent enough to be noticeable in the field.[14]

  • A. c. carunculata (Shaw, 1790) – found in southeast Australia, namely Victoria, eastern New South Wales, and southeastern Queensland.[20]
  • A. c. clelandi (Mathews, 1923) – Kangaroo Island (South Australia). Of a similar size to the nominate subspecies, it tends to have darker plumage, a longer bill, and shorter tarsus.[21]
  • A. c. woodwardi Mathews, 1912 – southwest and south-central Australia, west of the Mount Lofty Ranges. This subspecies is a little smaller than the nominate subspecies and has shorter wings. Its plumage is similar, though the yellow patch on the belly is more prominent.[20]

Analysis of DNA showed that the closest relative of the red wattlebird is the yellow wattlebird of Tasmania, the pair splitting from the ancestor of the regent honeyeater—their next closest relative.[22] Honeyeaters are related to the Pardalotidae (pardalotes), Acanthizidae (Australian warblers, scrubwrens, thornbills, etc.), and Maluridae (Australian fairy-wrens) in the large superfamily Meliphagoidea.[23]

Description Edit

 
At a bird bath in Canberra, with wattles easily visible

The sexes of the red wattlebird are similar in size and plumage, the length of the adult male ranging from 33 to 37 centimetres (13 to 15 in) and the adult female from 34 to 37 centimetres (13 to 15 in).[14] With an average weight of 100–120 grams (3.5–4.2 oz),[20] the red wattlebird is one of the largest nectar-feeding birds in the world,[24] and the second largest species of honeyeater native to Australia, eclipsed only by the yellow wattlebird.[25] The crown, forehead and upper lores (area between the eyes and nostrils) are dark brown, streaked with pale brown at the front of the crown and white at the rear of the crown. The nape (back of the neck) is slightly paler brown, with white streaks. A whitish triangular marking covers the lower lores and anterior ear covert feathers, bordered below by a dark brown stripe from the lower mandible down to the wattle and around to behind the eye. The throat is dark brown streaked with white.[26] The iris of the eye is orange-red to crimson.[27] The distinctive pinkish-red wattles dangle from the lower rear corner of the ear coverts on either side of the neck, and there is a sliver of pink bare skin at the lower border of the white patch on the face.[14] The chest and belly are streaked white, and there is a bright yellow patch towards the tail.[28] The strong legs and feet are pink or pinkish-brown, and the downward-curving bill is black.[29] The average dimensions of the bill are 23.5 millimetres (0.93 in) long, 6.7 millimetres (0.26 in) wide, and 6.8 millimetres (0.27 in) high at its base.[24] The gape is grey-black, while the inside of the mouth is orange.[14] In common with other honeyeaters, the red wattlebird has a long, specialized tongue to extract nectar from flowers.[30] The tongue can extend well beyond the tip of the bill, and is divided at the end to form a brush-like structure with over a hundred bristles that soak up nectar by capillary action.[31]

The red wattlebird begins moulting after the breeding season, starting with the primary flight feathers in November or December, and finishing between the following March and May. The feathers of the breast, back, median and lesser covert feathers are moulted before those of the crown, remiges, and rectrices.[27]

Immature red wattlebirds are generally less flamboyant.[28] Juveniles have much less prominent wattles, brown irises, a pale crown, and much less yellow on the belly. They moult into first immature plumage within a few months of leaving the nest. First immature birds are more similar to adults overall, having red irises with brown rings, wattles larger but still smaller than adults, and a greyish pink gape.[20]

The red wattlebird is hard to confuse with any other species, though in poor visibility it might be mistaken for the spiny-cheeked honeyeater, or little or western wattlebirds.[14]

 
Red wattlebird

Call Edit

Red wattlebirds are noisy animals, producing a range of raucous calls. Pairs of birds appear to duet, particularly at food sources, with the male producing a loud cackle and the female a whistling call.[28] The male's cackle is loudest between 1 and 3 kHz frequency. A guttural-sounding call, it has been variously described as having a squawking, coughing or hiccuping sound. Males cackle when foraging by themselves, when with other birds, or when declaring their territory to other birds. The whistling call consists of up to five rapid whistles that may or may not ascend in tone, and are repeated 3–4 times.[32] Both sexes commonly utter a single chock note that may be harsh and guttural or have 4–5 harmonics. This is thought to be a contact call.[33] These calls all carry over long distances.[34]

Red wattlebirds utter two types of alarm calls, alternating between them while mobbing other animals. One is a harsh call over a wide frequency (1.3 to 5.9 kHz) that is louder at lower frequencies. The other is a lower-pitched staccato call with a frequency of 1.1–2.2 kHz.[34] They give a harsh call when trying to distract intruders from the vicinity of the nest or when picked up, often trying to flap or peck the handler.[33]

Distribution and habitat Edit

 
Adult feeding on grey box (Eucalyptus microcarpa) flowers

The red wattlebird is found in southeast Queensland, where it occurs south of Noosa and Cooloola, becoming more common south of Brisbane and Toowoomba. Further south into New South Wales it is found most places east of (and including) the Great Dividing Range and stretching west to the southern North-West Plain, Central Western Slopes and eastern Riverina, and is an occasional visitor to points along the Murray River valley. It is found across Victoria, though is uncommon in the northwest of the state. In South Australia, Devonborough Downs Station, Manunda, Wilpena Pound and Nullarbor Station mark the northern limits of its range. There are scattered records from the Nullarbor Plain, but the species is common in Western Australia west of 125 °E and south of 29 °S.[35] The yellow wattlebird replaces it in Tasmania.[25] The red wattlebird has become more common in some localities, such as the Sunraysia district in the 1960s, and Nambucca Heads and Lefevre Peninsula in the 1980s.[35] Breeding numbers have increased in Sydney and Adelaide.[36] The red wattlebird is a rare vagrant to New Zealand, with confirmed records at Matakana in 1865 and Rohutu, Taranaki, in 1885, and a third unconfirmed report from Motupiko in 1938.[35]

The red wattlebird appears to be a permanent resident in much of its range, though its movements are poorly known. It appears to be partly migratory in Western Australia and the north coast of New South Wales. In southeastern New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory, it appears to move to lower altitudes for winter.[37] For instance, birds vacate the Brindabella Range over the cooler months.[38] Overall, little pattern is discernible in the species' movements, though red wattlebirds appear to move to feed on populations of flowering banksias and eucalypts, such as winter-flowering banksias in Perth over the cooler months.[37] Large numbers arrive in time to feed on flowering native apples (Angophora) in Mudgee and Cobbora districts in central-western New South Wales, and on white box (Eucalyptus albens) at Barrington in central-northern New South Wales.[38] A mainly resident population on the Swan Coastal Plain near Perth is supplemented during winter by more arriving from inland areas. South of Perth, red wattlebirds are more locally nomadic, moving to new patches of blooming wildflowers. East of Perth in areas around Kellerberin, Kwolyin, and Nangeenan, the red wattlebird is present from late autumn to spring, breeding in August and September. Around Lake Grace, the red wattlebird is present year-round.[38]

Open sclerophyll forest and woodland, generally dominated by eucalypts, is the most common habitat of the species. It is more common in forests with ample shrubby or grassy understory. It is less commonly encountered in shrubland, heath, or margins of wet sclerophyll forest. It is rarely found in mature pine plantations. Within urban areas, it is abundant in parks and reserves, gardens and golf courses, as well as orchards and vineyards. It occasionally ventures into subtropical, semi-arid or subalpine regions, and has been found up to 1,900 m (6,000 ft) above sea level.[35] The red wattlebird is rarer in forests that have been affected by dieback (infection by the pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi).[39]

Behaviour Edit

A loud and active bird, the red wattlebird is found in pairs, in a small family group, or alone during the breeding season, and gathers in larger groups of up to several hundred birds over winter. It flies straight or with a slightly undulating pattern, alternating between gliding and flapping its wings with quick shallow beats, at or slightly above the level of the tree canopy.[40] The red wattlebird moves on the ground by hopping, cocking its tail upwards slightly.[14]

Aggressive and territorial, the red wattlebird defends its nest and sources of food against other birds. It either calls at, snaps at the tails of, or flies at other birds, sometimes scuffling with members of the same species or other large honeyeaters in the air.[41] Displacement is a dominant display in which a red wattlebird will land on a perch that has been immediately vacated by another bird. A smaller red wattlebird adopts a horizontal appeasement posture side-on to the aggressor in which it lowers its head, flutters its wings and edges closer to the other bird.[42]

As well as smaller bird species, red wattlebirds can mob and chase larger species, such as the Australian magpie (Gymnorhina tibicen), butcherbirds, currawongs, the black-faced cuckooshrike (Coracina novaehollandiae), the olive-backed oriole (Oriolus sagittatus), crows, ravens, the laughing kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae), and even small raptors like the collared sparrowhawk (Accipiter cirrocephalus).[43]

Breeding Edit

 
Chick, Victoria

The red wattlebird breeds throughout its range, with nesting taking place between July and December, though occasionally outside these months, if conditions are favourable. One or two broods are laid each year.[44]

Red wattlebirds generally nest as solitary pairs.[33] The nest is a cup-shaped structure formed from sticks and leaves, lined with bark, grass, and hair,[44] between 2 and 16 metres (7 and 50 ft) above ground, usually in the forked branches of a tree—generally a eucalypt.[44] The nest is usually located centrally rather than on the periphery of a tree.[45] A study in Eastwood State Forest, near Armidale in New South Wales, found that red wattlebirds preferred to nest in manna gum (Eucalyptus viminalis) and apple box (E. bridgesiana).[45]

A clutch of two or three pale brown- and lavender-spotted pinkish eggs are normally laid. They measure 33 mm × 22 mm (1+14 in × 78 in), and are a tapered oval in shape.[44] The eggs are normally incubated by both parents, but sometimes just by the female. They hatch after 16–21 days.[28] The chicks are born almost naked, with a small amount of grey down on their head and body.[46] They are mostly brooded by the female, but sometimes the male will also brood. The nestlings are fed by both parents, and occasionally immature birds will contribute. Their eyes open at around 7 days.[47] They fledge 15–20 days after hatching, and both parents continue to feed them for a further 2–3 weeks.[28] Young are given manna (crystallised plant sap) and insects, such as beetles, bugs, and flies.[48]

Feeding Edit

 
Subspecies woodwardii feeding on eucalypt in Perth
 
Subspecies carunculata feeding on exotic flowers in Melbourne

The red wattlebird is predominantly a nectar-feeder,[49] foraging mostly in trees; in particular, climbing along branches (rather than the trunk) and probing flower-heads with its bill.[50] One study in Bondi State Forest in southern New South Wales revealed that the species foraged at a height of 5.9 ± 5.8 m (19 ± 19 ft).[51] They seldom look for food on the ground, though do so to feed on shrubs such as the cats paw (Anigozanthos humilis).[52] The red wattlebird prioritises visiting flowers that produce a lot of nectar, such as those of eucalypts, banksias, grasstrees (Xanthorrhoea), and emu bushes (Eremophila).[50] It often prefers plants with easy access to nectar, rather than those with tubular flowers (and thus difficult-to-access nectar).[24] The red wattlebird seeks out yellow flower-heads of holly-leaved banksia (Banksia ilicifolia), which have much higher nectar content than the more mature red flower-heads.[53] The species forages much more often in native than exotic plants,[54] though the introduced coral tree (Erythrina) is popular.[38] In addition to nectar, it takes insects and other small creatures, usually by hawking, and it also feeds on berries and other fruit.[28] A field study in the Mount Lofty Ranges found that it spent twice as much time feeding on nectar compared to insects.[55]

One field study found that red wattlebirds foraged for longer periods when nectar concentrations in flowers were low, and consumed fewer insects at this time. However, this could have been because the temperature was lower and hence insects were less active.[56] In Gingin, Western Australia, 97% of red wattlebirds at a site of two mixed kangaroo paw species were observed feeding on a single species at its peak flowering: cats paw in August and red-and-green kangaroo paw (A. manglesii) in September, with very few visits to the other species or hybrids.[52]

In central New South Wales, the red wattlebird forages more often on the foliage of the grey gum (Eucalyptus punctata) over other trees, though it does also show some preference for narrow-leaved ironbark (E. crebra), if grey gum is not present. Red wattlebirds tend to oust noisy friarbirds (Philemon corniculatus) where both species are present.[57] The red wattlebird often forages alongside the New Holland honeyeater (Phylidonyris novaehollandiae), little friarbird (P. citreogularis), western and little wattlebirds, rainbow lorikeet (Trichoglossus moluccanus), purple-crowned lorikeet (Glossopsitta porphyrocephala), satin bowerbird (Ptilonorhynchus violaceus), pied currawong (Strepera graculina), and crimson rosella (Platycercus elegans), though they generally chase other nectar-feeding birds away from a horde of eucalypt flowers.[49]

A field study, conducted in winter 1978 on Kangaroo Island, found red wattlebirds to be territorial around a rich source of nectar, namely a large cup gum (Eucalyptus cosmophylla), driving off smaller honeyeaters. This indicated that the species would exclude other species, if food was scarce.[58] In New England National Park, red wattlebirds would be more aggressive when there were moderate amounts of nectar in groves of flowering banksias, but were less so at lean or abundant times.[56]

The red wattlebird has a brush-tipped tongue, with a 17 mm (58 in) long segment bearing around 120 individual bristles. It feeds by placing the bill in a flower and inserting the tongue into its nectar chamber, drawing the nectar up by capillary action. The bristles increase the surface area of the tongue available for the uptake of nectar.[59]

Predators and parasites Edit

The nests of red wattlebirds are often parasitized by the pallid cuckoo (Cacomantis pallidus), and less commonly by the Pacific koel (Eudynamys orientalis). Nest predators include the brown goshawk (Accipiter fasciatus), black falcon (Falco subniger), pied currawong (Strepera graculina), Australian raven (Corvus coronoides), common brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula), domestic cat, and snakes.[26]

Isospora anthochaerae is an Apicomplexan parasite that has been isolated from the red wattlebird in Western Australia, from oocytes collected from faecal samples.[60] Species of bird louse that have been recorded on the red wattlebird include Menacanthus eurysternus, and members of the genera Brueelia, Myrsidea and Philopterus.[61]

Interactions with people Edit

Red wattlebirds are adversely impacted by land and undergrowth clearing, and have vanished from some habitats thus altered.[36] Despite this, they are classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List, as they occur over a wide range, have a large population, and the population decline is not rapid.[1] Red wattlebirds are regularly killed by cats and dogs, as well as being hit by cars on roads.[36] In 1924 in northern Victoria, the red wattlebird was described as very wary, on account of being highly regarded (and shot) for its meat.[62] Indeed, it was shot widely for food or sport,[13] or because it was held to be a pest of vineyards or orchards.[36] On occasion, red wattlebirds have raided vineyards and orchards for grapes, stone fruit, figs, olives, loquats, apples, pears, and berries, which they puncture and extract the juice or flesh from.[63]

The red wattlebird has been kept as an aviary bird in Sydney. It is not difficult to look after, but can be very aggressive to other cage birds. Grevillea 'Robyn Gordon' is a useful companion shrub as it bears flowers all year round.[64]

References Edit

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  64. ^ Shephard 1989, p. 241.

Cited texts Edit

  • Beruldsen, Gordon (2003). Australian Birds: Their Nests and Eggs. Kenmore Hills, Queensland: self-published. ISBN 978-0-646-42798-0.
  • Ford, Hugh A. (2001). "Family Meliphagidae honeyeaters and Australian chats" (PDF). In Higgins, Peter J.; Peter, Jeffrey M.; Steele, W.K. (eds.). Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic Birds. Volume 5: Tyrant-flycatchers to Chats. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. pp. 457–61. ISBN 978-0-19-553258-6.
  • Higgins, Peter J.; Peter, Jeffrey M.; Steele, W. K., eds. (2001). "Anthochaera carunculata Red Wattlebird" (PDF). Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic Birds. Volume 5: Tyrant-flycatchers to Chats. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. pp. 463–81. ISBN 978-0-19-553258-6.
  • Jobling, James A. (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London: Christopher Helm. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  • Latham, John (1790). Index Ornithologicus, Sive Systema Ornithologiae: Complectens Avium Divisionem In Classes, Ordines, Genera, Species, Ipsarumque Varietates (Volume 1) (in Latin). London: Leigh & Sotheby.
  • Salomonsen, F. (1967). "Family Meliphagidae, Honeyeaters". In Paynter, R.A. Jnr. (ed.). Check-list of birds of the world (Volume 12). Vol. 12. Cambridge, Mass.: Museum of Comparative Zoology. pp. 338–450.
  • Shephard, Mark (1989). Aviculture in Australia: Keeping and Breeding Aviary Birds. Prahran, Victoria: Black Cockatoo Press. ISBN 978-0-9588106-0-9.
  • Vigors, N.A.; Horsfield, T. (1827). "A description of the Australian birds in the collection of the Linnean Society; with an attempt at arranging them according to their natural affinities (Part 1)". Transactions of the Linnean Society of London. 15 (1): 170–331. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.1826.tb00115.x. The title page of the issue has the year 1826.
  • White, John (1790). Journal of a Voyage to New South Wales with Sixty-five Plates of Non-descript Animals, Birds, Lizards, Serpents, Curious Cones of Trees and Other Natural Productions. Vol. 1790. London: J. Debrett.

External links Edit

  • Holotype of the red wattlebird Anthochaera carunculata in the collection of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa
  • Internet Bird Collection: videos, photos and sound recordings of the red wattlebird
  • Xeno-canto: Sound recordings of the red wattlebird

wattlebird, wattlebird, anthochaera, carunculata, passerine, bird, native, southern, australia, length, second, largest, species, australian, honeyeater, mainly, grey, brown, plumage, with, eyes, distinctive, pinkish, wattles, either, side, neck, white, streak. The red wattlebird Anthochaera carunculata is a passerine bird native to southern Australia At 33 37 cm 13 14 1 2 in in length it is the second largest species of Australian honeyeater It has mainly grey brown plumage with red eyes distinctive pinkish red wattles on either side of the neck white streaks on the chest and a large bright yellow patch on the lower belly The sexes are similar in plumage Juveniles have less prominent wattles and browner eyes John White described the red wattlebird in 1790 Three subspecies are recognized Red wattlebirdConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade DinosauriaClass AvesOrder PasseriformesFamily MeliphagidaeGenus AnthochaeraSpecies A carunculataBinomial nameAnthochaera carunculata Shaw 1790 Distribution map of the red wattlebirdThe species is found in southeast Queensland New South Wales Victoria South Australia and southwest Western Australia in open forest and woodlands and is a common visitor to urban gardens and parks Loud and conspicuous the red wattlebird is generally found in trees where it gets most of its food occasionally it forages on the ground It is one of the largest nectarivorous birds in the world feeding from a wide variety of flowering plants Insects also comprise part of its diet It is territorial and at times aggressive towards birds of other species often defending rich sources of nectar Breeding throughout its range the red wattlebird builds a cup shaped nest in a tree and raises one or two broods a year Although it has declined in places from land clearing it is classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Call 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour 4 1 Breeding 4 2 Feeding 5 Predators and parasites 6 Interactions with people 7 References 8 Cited texts 9 External linksTaxonomy EditThe red wattlebird was first described as the wattled bee eater by the Irish surgeon and naturalist John White in his Journal of a Voyage to New South Wales which was published in 1790 1 He wrote that it was the size of a missel thrush but much larger in proportion 2 The taxonomic descriptions in White s book are believed to have been written by the English naturalist George Shaw 3 4 who is generally credited as the author by subsequent authorities 5 6 The specific epithet carunculata was introduced later in the same year by John Latham 7 8 The word is derived from caruncula Latin for a small piece of flesh 9 Both Shaw and Latham assigned the red wattlebird to the genus Merops The species was moved to Anthochaera in 1827 by the naturalists Nicholas Aylward Vigors and Thomas Horsfield 10 11 The generic name derives from the Ancient Greek anthos flower bloom and khairō enjoy 12 Common names include gillbird 13 gilly warbler barkingbird muttonbird butcherbird what s o clock and chock 14 Unlike many species in southwestern Australia the red wattlebird was given names by the local indigenous people that were onomatopoeic sounding like the calls they make Names recorded include wodjalok durdal doongorok and djoongong this last name is also applied to the western wattlebird 15 In the Eyre Peninsula in South Australia the local Barngarla people knew it as ngarkarko or ngarkabukko 16 The local people of Denial Bay in South Australia called it noggal 17 and the Ngarrindjeri people of the Lower Murray region in South Australia knew it as rungkan 18 There are three recognised subspecies 19 though there is a zone of intermediate birds across western Victoria and eastern South Australia bordered by western Port Phillip Bay to the east Mount Lofty Ranges to the west and Little and Big Desert national parks to the north 20 The differences in plumage are not generally prominent enough to be noticeable in the field 14 A c carunculata Shaw 1790 found in southeast Australia namely Victoria eastern New South Wales and southeastern Queensland 20 A c clelandi Mathews 1923 Kangaroo Island South Australia Of a similar size to the nominate subspecies it tends to have darker plumage a longer bill and shorter tarsus 21 A c woodwardi Mathews 1912 southwest and south central Australia west of the Mount Lofty Ranges This subspecies is a little smaller than the nominate subspecies and has shorter wings Its plumage is similar though the yellow patch on the belly is more prominent 20 Analysis of DNA showed that the closest relative of the red wattlebird is the yellow wattlebird of Tasmania the pair splitting from the ancestor of the regent honeyeater their next closest relative 22 Honeyeaters are related to the Pardalotidae pardalotes Acanthizidae Australian warblers scrubwrens thornbills etc and Maluridae Australian fairy wrens in the large superfamily Meliphagoidea 23 Description Edit nbsp At a bird bath in Canberra with wattles easily visibleThe sexes of the red wattlebird are similar in size and plumage the length of the adult male ranging from 33 to 37 centimetres 13 to 15 in and the adult female from 34 to 37 centimetres 13 to 15 in 14 With an average weight of 100 120 grams 3 5 4 2 oz 20 the red wattlebird is one of the largest nectar feeding birds in the world 24 and the second largest species of honeyeater native to Australia eclipsed only by the yellow wattlebird 25 The crown forehead and upper lores area between the eyes and nostrils are dark brown streaked with pale brown at the front of the crown and white at the rear of the crown The nape back of the neck is slightly paler brown with white streaks A whitish triangular marking covers the lower lores and anterior ear covert feathers bordered below by a dark brown stripe from the lower mandible down to the wattle and around to behind the eye The throat is dark brown streaked with white 26 The iris of the eye is orange red to crimson 27 The distinctive pinkish red wattles dangle from the lower rear corner of the ear coverts on either side of the neck and there is a sliver of pink bare skin at the lower border of the white patch on the face 14 The chest and belly are streaked white and there is a bright yellow patch towards the tail 28 The strong legs and feet are pink or pinkish brown and the downward curving bill is black 29 The average dimensions of the bill are 23 5 millimetres 0 93 in long 6 7 millimetres 0 26 in wide and 6 8 millimetres 0 27 in high at its base 24 The gape is grey black while the inside of the mouth is orange 14 In common with other honeyeaters the red wattlebird has a long specialized tongue to extract nectar from flowers 30 The tongue can extend well beyond the tip of the bill and is divided at the end to form a brush like structure with over a hundred bristles that soak up nectar by capillary action 31 The red wattlebird begins moulting after the breeding season starting with the primary flight feathers in November or December and finishing between the following March and May The feathers of the breast back median and lesser covert feathers are moulted before those of the crown remiges and rectrices 27 Immature red wattlebirds are generally less flamboyant 28 Juveniles have much less prominent wattles brown irises a pale crown and much less yellow on the belly They moult into first immature plumage within a few months of leaving the nest First immature birds are more similar to adults overall having red irises with brown rings wattles larger but still smaller than adults and a greyish pink gape 20 The red wattlebird is hard to confuse with any other species though in poor visibility it might be mistaken for the spiny cheeked honeyeater or little or western wattlebirds 14 nbsp Red wattlebirdCall Edit Red wattlebirds are noisy animals producing a range of raucous calls Pairs of birds appear to duet particularly at food sources with the male producing a loud cackle and the female a whistling call 28 The male s cackle is loudest between 1 and 3 kHz frequency A guttural sounding call it has been variously described as having a squawking coughing or hiccuping sound Males cackle when foraging by themselves when with other birds or when declaring their territory to other birds The whistling call consists of up to five rapid whistles that may or may not ascend in tone and are repeated 3 4 times 32 Both sexes commonly utter a single chock note that may be harsh and guttural or have 4 5 harmonics This is thought to be a contact call 33 These calls all carry over long distances 34 Red wattlebirds utter two types of alarm calls alternating between them while mobbing other animals One is a harsh call over a wide frequency 1 3 to 5 9 kHz that is louder at lower frequencies The other is a lower pitched staccato call with a frequency of 1 1 2 2 kHz 34 They give a harsh call when trying to distract intruders from the vicinity of the nest or when picked up often trying to flap or peck the handler 33 Distribution and habitat Edit nbsp Adult feeding on grey box Eucalyptus microcarpa flowersThe red wattlebird is found in southeast Queensland where it occurs south of Noosa and Cooloola becoming more common south of Brisbane and Toowoomba Further south into New South Wales it is found most places east of and including the Great Dividing Range and stretching west to the southern North West Plain Central Western Slopes and eastern Riverina and is an occasional visitor to points along the Murray River valley It is found across Victoria though is uncommon in the northwest of the state In South Australia Devonborough Downs Station Manunda Wilpena Pound and Nullarbor Station mark the northern limits of its range There are scattered records from the Nullarbor Plain but the species is common in Western Australia west of 125 E and south of 29 S 35 The yellow wattlebird replaces it in Tasmania 25 The red wattlebird has become more common in some localities such as the Sunraysia district in the 1960s and Nambucca Heads and Lefevre Peninsula in the 1980s 35 Breeding numbers have increased in Sydney and Adelaide 36 The red wattlebird is a rare vagrant to New Zealand with confirmed records at Matakana in 1865 and Rohutu Taranaki in 1885 and a third unconfirmed report from Motupiko in 1938 35 The red wattlebird appears to be a permanent resident in much of its range though its movements are poorly known It appears to be partly migratory in Western Australia and the north coast of New South Wales In southeastern New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory it appears to move to lower altitudes for winter 37 For instance birds vacate the Brindabella Range over the cooler months 38 Overall little pattern is discernible in the species movements though red wattlebirds appear to move to feed on populations of flowering banksias and eucalypts such as winter flowering banksias in Perth over the cooler months 37 Large numbers arrive in time to feed on flowering native apples Angophora in Mudgee and Cobbora districts in central western New South Wales and on white box Eucalyptus albens at Barrington in central northern New South Wales 38 A mainly resident population on the Swan Coastal Plain near Perth is supplemented during winter by more arriving from inland areas South of Perth red wattlebirds are more locally nomadic moving to new patches of blooming wildflowers East of Perth in areas around Kellerberin Kwolyin and Nangeenan the red wattlebird is present from late autumn to spring breeding in August and September Around Lake Grace the red wattlebird is present year round 38 Open sclerophyll forest and woodland generally dominated by eucalypts is the most common habitat of the species It is more common in forests with ample shrubby or grassy understory It is less commonly encountered in shrubland heath or margins of wet sclerophyll forest It is rarely found in mature pine plantations Within urban areas it is abundant in parks and reserves gardens and golf courses as well as orchards and vineyards It occasionally ventures into subtropical semi arid or subalpine regions and has been found up to 1 900 m 6 000 ft above sea level 35 The red wattlebird is rarer in forests that have been affected by dieback infection by the pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi 39 Behaviour EditA loud and active bird the red wattlebird is found in pairs in a small family group or alone during the breeding season and gathers in larger groups of up to several hundred birds over winter It flies straight or with a slightly undulating pattern alternating between gliding and flapping its wings with quick shallow beats at or slightly above the level of the tree canopy 40 The red wattlebird moves on the ground by hopping cocking its tail upwards slightly 14 Aggressive and territorial the red wattlebird defends its nest and sources of food against other birds It either calls at snaps at the tails of or flies at other birds sometimes scuffling with members of the same species or other large honeyeaters in the air 41 Displacement is a dominant display in which a red wattlebird will land on a perch that has been immediately vacated by another bird A smaller red wattlebird adopts a horizontal appeasement posture side on to the aggressor in which it lowers its head flutters its wings and edges closer to the other bird 42 As well as smaller bird species red wattlebirds can mob and chase larger species such as the Australian magpie Gymnorhina tibicen butcherbirds currawongs the black faced cuckooshrike Coracina novaehollandiae the olive backed oriole Oriolus sagittatus crows ravens the laughing kookaburra Dacelo novaeguineae and even small raptors like the collared sparrowhawk Accipiter cirrocephalus 43 Breeding Edit nbsp Chick VictoriaThe red wattlebird breeds throughout its range with nesting taking place between July and December though occasionally outside these months if conditions are favourable One or two broods are laid each year 44 Red wattlebirds generally nest as solitary pairs 33 The nest is a cup shaped structure formed from sticks and leaves lined with bark grass and hair 44 between 2 and 16 metres 7 and 50 ft above ground usually in the forked branches of a tree generally a eucalypt 44 The nest is usually located centrally rather than on the periphery of a tree 45 A study in Eastwood State Forest near Armidale in New South Wales found that red wattlebirds preferred to nest in manna gum Eucalyptus viminalis and apple box E bridgesiana 45 A clutch of two or three pale brown and lavender spotted pinkish eggs are normally laid They measure 33 mm 22 mm 1 1 4 in 7 8 in and are a tapered oval in shape 44 The eggs are normally incubated by both parents but sometimes just by the female They hatch after 16 21 days 28 The chicks are born almost naked with a small amount of grey down on their head and body 46 They are mostly brooded by the female but sometimes the male will also brood The nestlings are fed by both parents and occasionally immature birds will contribute Their eyes open at around 7 days 47 They fledge 15 20 days after hatching and both parents continue to feed them for a further 2 3 weeks 28 Young are given manna crystallised plant sap and insects such as beetles bugs and flies 48 Feeding Edit nbsp Subspecies woodwardii feeding on eucalypt in Perth nbsp Subspecies carunculata feeding on exotic flowers in MelbourneThe red wattlebird is predominantly a nectar feeder 49 foraging mostly in trees in particular climbing along branches rather than the trunk and probing flower heads with its bill 50 One study in Bondi State Forest in southern New South Wales revealed that the species foraged at a height of 5 9 5 8 m 19 19 ft 51 They seldom look for food on the ground though do so to feed on shrubs such as the cats paw Anigozanthos humilis 52 The red wattlebird prioritises visiting flowers that produce a lot of nectar such as those of eucalypts banksias grasstrees Xanthorrhoea and emu bushes Eremophila 50 It often prefers plants with easy access to nectar rather than those with tubular flowers and thus difficult to access nectar 24 The red wattlebird seeks out yellow flower heads of holly leaved banksia Banksia ilicifolia which have much higher nectar content than the more mature red flower heads 53 The species forages much more often in native than exotic plants 54 though the introduced coral tree Erythrina is popular 38 In addition to nectar it takes insects and other small creatures usually by hawking and it also feeds on berries and other fruit 28 A field study in the Mount Lofty Ranges found that it spent twice as much time feeding on nectar compared to insects 55 One field study found that red wattlebirds foraged for longer periods when nectar concentrations in flowers were low and consumed fewer insects at this time However this could have been because the temperature was lower and hence insects were less active 56 In Gingin Western Australia 97 of red wattlebirds at a site of two mixed kangaroo paw species were observed feeding on a single species at its peak flowering cats paw in August and red and green kangaroo paw A manglesii in September with very few visits to the other species or hybrids 52 In central New South Wales the red wattlebird forages more often on the foliage of the grey gum Eucalyptus punctata over other trees though it does also show some preference for narrow leaved ironbark E crebra if grey gum is not present Red wattlebirds tend to oust noisy friarbirds Philemon corniculatus where both species are present 57 The red wattlebird often forages alongside the New Holland honeyeater Phylidonyris novaehollandiae little friarbird P citreogularis western and little wattlebirds rainbow lorikeet Trichoglossus moluccanus purple crowned lorikeet Glossopsitta porphyrocephala satin bowerbird Ptilonorhynchus violaceus pied currawong Strepera graculina and crimson rosella Platycercus elegans though they generally chase other nectar feeding birds away from a horde of eucalypt flowers 49 A field study conducted in winter 1978 on Kangaroo Island found red wattlebirds to be territorial around a rich source of nectar namely a large cup gum Eucalyptus cosmophylla driving off smaller honeyeaters This indicated that the species would exclude other species if food was scarce 58 In New England National Park red wattlebirds would be more aggressive when there were moderate amounts of nectar in groves of flowering banksias but were less so at lean or abundant times 56 The red wattlebird has a brush tipped tongue with a 17 mm 5 8 in long segment bearing around 120 individual bristles It feeds by placing the bill in a flower and inserting the tongue into its nectar chamber drawing the nectar up by capillary action The bristles increase the surface area of the tongue available for the uptake of nectar 59 Predators and parasites EditThe nests of red wattlebirds are often parasitized by the pallid cuckoo Cacomantis pallidus and less commonly by the Pacific koel Eudynamys orientalis Nest predators include the brown goshawk Accipiter fasciatus black falcon Falco subniger pied currawong Strepera graculina Australian raven Corvus coronoides common brushtail possum Trichosurus vulpecula domestic cat and snakes 26 Isospora anthochaerae is an Apicomplexan parasite that has been isolated from the red wattlebird in Western Australia from oocytes collected from faecal samples 60 Species of bird louse that have been recorded on the red wattlebird include Menacanthus eurysternus and members of the genera Brueelia Myrsidea and Philopterus 61 Interactions with people EditRed wattlebirds are adversely impacted by land and undergrowth clearing and have vanished from some habitats thus altered 36 Despite this they are classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List as they occur over a wide range have a large population and the population decline is not rapid 1 Red wattlebirds are regularly killed by cats and dogs as well as being hit by cars on roads 36 In 1924 in northern Victoria the red wattlebird was described as very wary on account of being highly regarded and shot for its meat 62 Indeed it was shot widely for food or sport 13 or because it was held to be a pest of vineyards or orchards 36 On occasion red wattlebirds have raided vineyards and orchards for grapes stone fruit figs olives loquats apples pears and berries which they puncture and extract the juice or flesh from 63 The red wattlebird has been kept as an aviary bird in Sydney It is not difficult to look after but can be very aggressive to other cage birds Grevillea Robyn Gordon is a useful companion shrub as it bears flowers all year round 64 References Edit a b c BirdLife International 2018 Anthochaera carunculata IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T22704466A130382437 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T22704466A130382437 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 White 1790 p 144 White 1790 p 240 Nelson E Charles 1998 John White A M M D F LS c 1756 1832 Surgeon General of New South Wales a new biography of the messenger of the echidna and waratah Archives of Natural History 25 2 149 211 doi 10 3366 anh 1998 25 2 149 Australian Biological Resources Study 30 August 2011 SubspeciesAnthochaera Anthochaera carunculata carunculata Shaw 1790 Retrieved 24 January 2017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Gill Frank Donsker David eds 11 January 2017 IOC World Bird List 7 1 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 24 January 2017 Salomonsen 1967 pp 446 447 Latham 1790 p 276 Jobling 2010 p 92 Vigors amp Horsfield 1827 pp 320 321 Salomonsen 1967 pp 444 445 Jobling 2010 p 49 a b Gilbert P A 1928 Notes on Honeyeaters Emu 23 2 109 18 doi 10 1071 MU923109 a b c d e f g Higgins 2001 p 463 Abbott Ian 2009 Aboriginal names of bird species in south west Western Australia with suggestions for their adoption into common usage PDF Conservation Science Western Australia Journal 7 2 213 78 262 Schurmann Clamor Wilhelm 1844 A vocabulary of the Parnkalla language spoken by the natives inhabiting the western shores of Spencer s Gulf to which is prefixed a collection of grammatical rules hitherto ascertained Adelaide South Australia George Dehane p 45 Sullivan Charles 1929 Bird Notes from the West Coast PDF South Australian Ornithologist 9 164 69 Clarke P A 2003 Twentieth Century Aboriginal Harvesting Practices in the Rural Landscape of the Lower Murray South Australia Records of the South Australian Museum 36 1 83 107 Gill Frank Donsker David eds Honeyeaters World Bird List Version 5 4 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 26 December 2015 a b c d e Higgins 2001 p 478 Higgins 2001 p 479 Driskell Amy C Christidis Les 2004 Phylogeny and evolution of the Australo Papuan honeyeaters Passeriformes Meliphagidae Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 31 3 943 60 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2003 10 017 PMID 15120392 Barker F Keith Cibois Alice Schikler Peter Feinstein Julie Cracraft Joel 2004 Phylogeny and diversification of the largest avian radiation Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 101 30 11040 45 Bibcode 2004PNAS 10111040B doi 10 1073 pnas 0401892101 PMC 503738 PMID 15263073 a b c Paton David C Ford Hugh A 1977 Pollination by birds of native plants in South Australia Emu 77 2 73 85 doi 10 1071 MU9770073 a b Red Wattlebird Birds in Backyards Birdlife Australia Retrieved 25 December 2016 a b Higgins 2001 p 476 a b Higgins 2001 p 477 a b c d e f Higgins P Christidis Les Ford Hugh A 2020 Red Wattlebird Anthochaera carunculata In del Hoyo J Elliott A Sargatal J Christie D A de Juana E eds Handbook of the Birds of the World Alive Lynx Edicions doi 10 2173 bow redwat1 01 S2CID 216251179 Higgins 2001 pp 463 469 Ford 2001 p 457 Higgins 2001 p 469 Higgins 2001 p 473 74 a b c Higgins 2001 p 474 a b Jurisevic Mark A Sanderson Ken J 1994 The vocal repertoires of six honeyeater Meliphagidae species from Adelaide South Australia Emu 94 3 141 48 doi 10 1071 MU9940141 a b c d Higgins 2001 p 464 a b c d Higgins 2001 p 465 a b Higgins 2001 p 466 a b c d Keast Allen 1968 Seasonal movements in the Australian honeyeaters Meliphagidae and their ecological significance Emu 67 3 159 209 doi 10 1071 MU967159 Ford Hugh A Bell Harry 1981 Density of birds in Eucalypt woodland affected to varying degrees by dieback Emu 81 4 202 08 doi 10 1071 MU9810202 Higgins 2001 p 463 64 Higgins 2001 p 471 72 Higgins 2001 p 472 Higgins 2001 p 472 73 a b c d Beruldsen 2003 pp 319 20 a b Ford Hugh A 1999 Nest site selection and breeding success in large Australian honeyeaters Are there benefits from being different Emu 99 2 91 99 doi 10 1071 MU99012 Higgins 2001 pp 475 76 Higgins 2001 p 475 Higgins 2001 p 470 a b Higgins 2001 p 467 a b Higgins 2001 p 468 Recher H F Holmes R T Schulz M Shields J Kavanagh R 1985 Foraging patterns of breeding birds in eucalypt forest and woodland of southeastern Australia Australian Journal of Ecology 10 4 399 419 doi 10 1111 j 1442 9993 1985 tb00902 x ISSN 0307 692X a b Hopper Stephen D Burbidge Allan H 1978 Assortative pollination by Red Wattlebirds in a hybrid population of Anigozanthos Labill Australian Journal of Botany 26 3 335 50 doi 10 1071 BT9780335 Lamont Byron B Collins Brian G 1988 Flower colour change in Banksia ilicifolia a signal for pollinators Austral Ecology 13 2 129 35 doi 10 1111 j 1442 9993 1988 tb00962 x Green Ronda J 1984 Native and exotic birds in a suburban habitat Australian Wildlife Research 11 1 181 90 doi 10 1071 WR9840181 Ford Hugh A Paton David C 1977 The comparative ecology of ten species of honeyeaters in South Australia Australian Journal of Ecology 4 2 399 407 doi 10 1111 j 1442 9993 1977 tb01155 x a b McFarland David C 1986 The organization of a honeyeater community in an unpredictable environment Australian Journal of Ecology 11 2 107 20 doi 10 1111 j 1442 9993 1986 tb01382 x Saunders Anthony S J Burgin Shelley 2001 Selective foliage foraging by Red Wattlebirds Anthochaera carunculata and Noisy Friarbirds Philemon corniculatus Emu 101 2 163 66 doi 10 1071 MU00007 S2CID 82157738 Ford Hugh A Paton David C 1976 Resource partitioning and competition in honeyeaters of the genus Meliphaga Australian Journal of Ecology 1 4 281 87 doi 10 1111 j 1442 9993 1976 tb01118 x Paton D C Collins B G 1989 Bills and tongues of nectar feeding birds A review of morphology function and performance with intercontinental comparisons Australian Journal of Ecology 14 4 473 506 doi 10 1111 j 1442 9993 1989 tb01457 x Yang Rongchang Brice Belinda Ryan Una 2014 Isospora anthochaerae n sp Apicomplexa Eimeriidae from a Red wattlebird Anthochaera carunculata Passeriformes Meliphagidae in Western Australia PDF Experimental Parasitology 140 1 7 doi 10 1016 j exppara 2014 02 011 PMID 24602873 Stranger R H Palma R L 1998 Lice Insecta Phthiraptera from some Australian birds PDF Records of the Western Australian Museum 19 169 86 Leach Hugh A C 1928 The birds of Central Northern Victoria Emu 28 2 83 99 doi 10 1071 MU928083 Department of Primary Industries Agriculture Fact Sheets for Breeders PDF Managing bird damage to fruit and other horticultural crops New South Wales Government p 167 Archived from the original PDF on 16 June 2016 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Shephard 1989 p 241 Cited texts EditBeruldsen Gordon 2003 Australian Birds Their Nests and Eggs Kenmore Hills Queensland self published ISBN 978 0 646 42798 0 Ford Hugh A 2001 Family Meliphagidae honeyeaters and Australian chats PDF In Higgins Peter J Peter Jeffrey M Steele W K eds Handbook of Australian New Zealand and Antarctic Birds Volume 5 Tyrant flycatchers to Chats Melbourne Oxford University Press pp 457 61 ISBN 978 0 19 553258 6 Higgins Peter J Peter Jeffrey M Steele W K eds 2001 Anthochaera carunculata Red Wattlebird PDF Handbook of Australian New Zealand and Antarctic Birds Volume 5 Tyrant flycatchers to Chats Melbourne Oxford University Press pp 463 81 ISBN 978 0 19 553258 6 Jobling James A 2010 The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London Christopher Helm ISBN 978 1 4081 2501 4 Latham John 1790 Index Ornithologicus Sive Systema Ornithologiae Complectens Avium Divisionem In Classes Ordines Genera Species Ipsarumque Varietates Volume 1 in Latin London Leigh amp Sotheby Salomonsen F 1967 Family Meliphagidae Honeyeaters In Paynter R A Jnr ed Check list of birds of the world Volume 12 Vol 12 Cambridge Mass Museum of Comparative Zoology pp 338 450 Shephard Mark 1989 Aviculture in Australia Keeping and Breeding Aviary Birds Prahran Victoria Black Cockatoo Press ISBN 978 0 9588106 0 9 Vigors N A Horsfield T 1827 A description of the Australian birds in the collection of the Linnean Society with an attempt at arranging them according to their natural affinities Part 1 Transactions of the Linnean Society of London 15 1 170 331 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8339 1826 tb00115 x The title page of the issue has the year 1826 White John 1790 Journal of a Voyage to New South Wales with Sixty five Plates of Non descript Animals Birds Lizards Serpents Curious Cones of Trees and Other Natural Productions Vol 1790 London J Debrett External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anthochaera carunculata nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Anthochaera carunculata Holotype of the red wattlebird Anthochaera carunculata in the collection of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa Internet Bird Collection videos photos and sound recordings of the red wattlebird Xeno canto Sound recordings of the red wattlebird Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Red wattlebird amp oldid 1178990267, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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