The Victorian Naturalist Volume 130 (1) February 2013 Published by The Field Naturalists Club of Victoria since 1884 From the Editors This year began with a January that was not excessively hot, and while February has indeed been warm with temperatures consistently rising into the low thirties, the over-arching weather feature in Victoria has been the lack of rain. This summer 2012/13 must be one of the driest on record. We have had fires, both deliberately lit and naturally sparked, which have caused widespread havoc in some of our more natural bushland areas. But the bush is remarkable for its ability to renew itself after fires through regeneration. As long as fires occur infrequently we can expect to maintain the biodiversity of these areas. At The Victorian Naturalist our year begins with a substantial issue of the Journal containing pa- pers on a wide spectrum of subjects with species from the Animal Kingdom, both vertebrate and invertebrate, strongly represented. Also we pay tribute to and farewell Dorothy Mahler, a faithful servant of the Club. The Victorian Naturalist is published six times per year by the Field Naturalists Club of Victoria Inc Registered Office: FNCV, 1 Gardenia Street, Blackburn, Victoria 3130, Australia. Postal Address: FNCV, Locked Bag 3, Blackburn, Victoria 3130, Australia. Phone/Fax (03) 9877 9860; International Phone/Fax 61 3 9877 9860. email: admin@fncv.org.au www.fncv.org.au Patron: His Excellency, the Governor of Victoria Address correspondence to: The Editors, The Victorian Naturalist , Locked Bag 3, Blackburn, Victoria, Australia 3130. Phone: (03) 9877 9860. Email: vicnat@fncv.org.au The opinions expressed in papers and book reviews published in The Victorian Naturalist are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the FNCV. Copyright of all original material published in The Victorian Naturalist remains with the author. 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Email: admin@fncv.org.au Volume 130 (1) 2013 Victorian Naturalist February Editors: Anne Morton, Gary Presland, Maria Gibson Editorial Assistant: Virgil Hubregtse From the Editors 2 Research Reports Birds of Seal Rocks in northern Bass Strait over 40 years (1965-2005), by Robert M Warneke and Peter Dann 4 Sleeping aggregations of bees in relation to the risk of fire at their roosting sites in a forested, suburban landscape in eastern Australia, by PJ Kubiak 22 Contributions Koalas Phascolarctos cinereus in Framlingham Forest, south-west Victoria: Introduction, translocation and the effects of a bushfire, by Robert L Wallis 37 A rare sighting of the Eastern Pygmy-possum Cercartetus nanus in north-central Victoria, by Anna K Flanagan-Moodie 40 The rare collembolan genus, Temeritas (Symphypleona: Sminthuridae), in southern Australia: systematics, distribution and conservation status, by Penelope Greenslade 45 Naturalist Note Leech predation of frog spawn, by Grant S Turner 49 Tribute Dorothy Mahler 28 February 1941 - 12 December 2012 53 Book Reviews Wetland Weeds: Causes, Cures and Compromises by Nick Romanowski , reviewed by Mary Gibson 54 Kangaroos by Terence Dawson, reviewed by Rob L Wallis 56 Australia’s Amazing Kangaroos: their conservation, unique biology and coexistence with humans by Ken Richardson reviewed by Rob L Wallis 57 A Natural History of Australian Bats - Working the Night Shift by Greg Richards and Les Hall, reviewed by Tanja Straka 59 A Guide to Australia’s Spiny Freshwater Crayfish by Robert B. McCormack, reviewed by Gary CB Poore 60 Australian High Country Owls by Jerry Olsen, reviewed by Raylene Cooke 62 Australian Natural History Medallion Trust Fund 63 ISSN 0042-5184 Front cover: Lipotriches australica sleeping aggregation, December 2006. Photo by P Kubiak. Back cover: Pacific Black Duck Anas superciliosa. Photo by Anne Morton Research Reports Birds of Seal Rocks in northern Bass Strait over 40 years (1965-2005) Robert M. Warneke 1 and Peter Dann 2 'Blackwood Lodge, 1511 Mt Hicks Road, Wynyard, Tasmania 7325. Research Department, Phillip Island Nature Parks, P. O. Box 97, Cowes, Phillip Island, Victoria 3922 E-mail: pdann@penguins.org.au Abstract Long-term datasets of fauna are rare for uninhabited islands in south-eastern Australia. Here we report on 40 years of observations from 1965 to 2005 on the birds of Seal Rocks in northern Bass Strait. Seventy- five native and six exotic species including 2 1 native passerines were observed at Seal Rocks or nearby. Six species were recorded breeding — Crested Tern Thalasseus bergii. Silver Gull Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae, Sooty Oystercatcher Haematopus fuliginosus. Welcome Swallow Hirundo neoxena, Common Starling Sturnus vulgaris and, for the first time in Victoria, Kelp Gull Larus dominicanus. The main changes to breeding birds over the 40 years have been the movement and expansion of the breeding colonies of Crested Terns and Silver Gulls to adjacent parts of nearby Phillip Island, and the arrival and expansion of the breeding Kelp Gull population. Kelp Gulls have increased substantially at Seal Rocks since their arrival in 1968. The first reported breeding for Victoria occurred there in 1971. The expansion of Kelp Gulls may have been associated with the expansion of Australian Fur Seal Arctocephalus pusillus doriferus numbers which, on one hand, has reduced the number of suitable breeding sites but, on the other hand, has increased the amount of food available in the forms of vomited food remains and placentae. The variety of land birds recorded on Seal Rocks was surprisingly high, given the exposed nature and relative sterility of the terrain; however, the strait between Seal Rock and Phil- lip Island is narrow and all the species recorded there are common in the region and most are wide-ranging seasonally or undertake significant north-south migrations. Records were relatively few after 1997 due, in part, to the reduced amount of vegetation on the islets and greatly reduced lengths of research stays. ( The Victorian Naturalist 130(1)2013,4-21). Key words: Seal Rocks, Phillip Island, birds, long-term survey Introduction Seal Rocks (38° 32’ S, 145° 06’ E), a State Faunal Reserve, comprises two small islets — Seal Rock and Black Rock — which lie about 1.5 km off the south-west point of Phillip Island, Victoria (Fig. 1). Seal Rock, the larger islet, includes two detached rocks to the north-west and an exten- sive area of low-lying reef to the east, which is cut off at high tide (Fig. 2). The total land area is about 2.8 ha. Although Seal Rocks has had a long history of visits by Europeans dating from 1801 (Warneke 1982, 2003), very few detailed accounts survive and none provide any useful information on the vegetation or bird life. This paper reports on incidental sightings and observations on birds ashore and at sea around the islets, accu- mulated during a program of research on the resident colony of Australian fur seals Arcto- cephalus pusillus doriferus , by Robert Warneke (1965-1991) and continuing studies there on fur seals and birds by Roger Kirkwood (RK) and Peter Dann (1998-2005). Datasets of such duration are rare, particularly for uninhabited islands in south-eastern Australia. Field studies were initiated in 1965 by the Fisheries and Wildlife Department (now the Department of Sustainability and Environ- ment) and supported until 1979. A field station was built on the southern plateau of Seal Rock in the summer of 1965-1966 (Warneke 1966) and subsequently other structures were erected to facilitate aspects of the project including a fly- ing-fox connecting the two islets (1967), a small observation hide on each of the Seal Rock pla- teaux (1967) and a 15 m steel observation tower adjacent to the station (1969). Most of this in- frastructure was demolished by 1979 when a second field station was built out of rock at the base of the northern end of South Plateau. A small research team visited Seal Rocks at approximately monthly intervals from 1966 until 1972, but thereafter visits were limited to November and December each year to moni- tor events during the breeding season and to count pups. Pups were routinely marked each January until 1977. From 1979 to 1991 RMW continued the November-December monitor- 4 The Victorian Naturalist Research Reports 144* E 145* E 146* E Fig. 1 . Locations of Seal Rocks and Phillip Island in Bass Strait, south-eastern Australia ing and counting on a private basis until, by 1991, very few marked animals remained alive (Warneke 2003). More recently, Seal Rock has been visited on 40 occasions between February 1997 and April 2005 by PD and RK. Most visits were of several hours’ duration but several trips lasted 3-4 days while satellite transmitters were deployed on fur seals (Kirkwood et al. 2005). Opportunities for observation were con- strained by the demands of the seal study, and although new’ or rarely seen species and significant activities were always duly noted, observations on resident species were not sys- tematically recorded. Visits to many parts of Seal Rock were consciously limited, to avoid disturbing the seals, and extra care was taken when birds were nesting; visits to check the contents of particular nests were cautious and brief. Landings on Black Rock were difficult and risky until the flying fox was in place, but even then that islet was visited only for specific tasks such as tagging seal pups. Vol 130 (1) 2013 The data accumulated under these circum- stances, especially during the most intense peri- od of seal research from 1966 to 1972, provide a fairly clear picture of bird diversity on the islets, including the occurrence of seasonal migrants. Most observations were made with the aid of Zeiss 8 x 30 binoculars, and frequently an 800 mm telescope was used for closer viewing of a particular bird or activity. The effective visual range was usually about 1 km for large seabirds or congregations, and as far as 3 km in clear weather using the telescope. Observational ef- fort differed between the period of intense seal research (1966-1972) and the later years (1997- 2005). These are referred to hereafter as the first and second survey periods respectively. Bird observations in the later years were confined to the islets and waters immediately adjacent, using 10 x 20 binoculars; consequently, many fewer pelagic seabirds were recorded. Records of birds summarised here consist of notes in RMW’s field journals, to which all 5 Research Reports team members 1 contributed sightings; brief entries in surviving personal diaries kept by Fred Baum (1965-1968, 1970-1971) and Kevin Chipperfield (1968), which include visits when RMW was not present; and Phillip Island Na- ture Park research groups records of 40 visits between 1997 to 2005. A negative linear bino- mial generalised model was used for looking at the seasonal pattern of Kelp Gull numbers us- ing R software (version 2.15.1; R Development Core Team 2012). Physical and biological features of Seal Rocks The continuing effects of tides and storms on the geology of the islets have resulted in a var- ied topography of plateau tops, cliffs with ledg- es and undercuts, caves, gullies, boulder-strewn upper slopes, cobblestone-pebble shingle, worn wave-washed shore platforms with some deep tide pools, and many ephemeral tide pools flushed only by the highest tides or storm seas. Both islets are basically low platforms of fine- grained black basalt surrounding areas of pla- teaux of varying height to about 12 m above sea level. These plateaux are remnants of later vol- canic events and consist of deposits of tuff over- lain by lava flows. Storm waves have eroded the softer tuff and this has led to undercutting and rock falls from above. Many cliff faces are sheer with narrow ledges, and shallow caves occur at the south end of South Plateau and on all sides of Black Rocks central plateau. Land plants survive only where the seals have no or only limited access, i.e. on cliff faces and some parts of the plateaux tops. Gravel from weathering of the volcanic rock tends to accu- mulate on ledges and in fissures on cliff faces, and supports clumps and mats of Rounded Leaf Noon Flower Disphyma australe. Along the margins of abrupt cliff tops, where rest- ing seals are less inclined to lie, this plant has a precarious hold and generally forms a nar- row ridge-like mat. Seedlings of Ruby Saltbush Enchylaena tomentosa were occasionally found, apparently imported via bird faeces or pellets. If they germinated in protected places on the cliffs they flourished for several years. Other colo- nists were Bower Spinach Tetragonia implexico- ma , Cape Weed Cryptostemma calendula , Sow 6 The Victorian Naturalist Research Reports Thistle Sonchus sp., a nightshade Solarium sp. and Boxthorn Lycium ferrosissimum, but, with the exception of Bower Spinach and Southern Sea-heath Frankenia pauciflora, none survived for long. Small mats of Beaded Glasswort Sali- cornia quinqueflora were found on Black Rock plateau in 1968 and 1971. A profusion of ma- rine plants and invertebrates occurred at the edges of the shore platforms and on East Reef in the intertidal zone, including seaweeds, kelp Macrocystis sp., cunjevoi Pyura sp., barnacles, limpets, chitons, mussels (mainly Xenostrobus sp.) and the gastropods Subninella sp. and Ner- ita sp. were very common. Dense beds of kelp also occurred in the shallow bay formed by the two islets on the eastern side. The insect fauna appeared to be diverse and most forms were seen only during the warmer months. It included field crickets Teleogryllus commodus , at least six different kinds of wasps (especially the orange ichneumon Netelia sp.), a black ant and a small black native bee; blow- flies ( Calliphora sp.) and a small black fly com- mon in humid weather and attracted to sweaty skin; dragonflies and damselflies; moths (most notably Agrostis sp.) and butterflies (including Vanessa kershawi), and mosquitoes, noticeable only when a sheltered depression in the lee of the south end of North Plateau was sporadical- ly filled by sea spray and rain showers, in which larvae were observed. Species notes Nomenclature and systematic order follows Christidis and Boles (2008). Stubble Quail Coturnix pectoralis Eight records of lone birds sighted on or about South Plateau, among the mats of noon flower or in the cover of rocks, in November of 1965, 1967 and 1969, December 1971, and in October and December 1975. The desiccated remains of a bird were found on South Plateau on 16 No- vember 1967. Specimen RW#465, collected 25 November 1969 (Museum Victoria). Black Swan Cygnus atratus Four records of birds in transit; eight were seen heading west on 15 December 1969, one head- ing south on 19 December 1970, 11 heading west on 23 February 1972, and five heading north on 18 November 1975. Australian Shelduck Tadorna tadornoides A line of seven passed by to the north on 20 December 1974 flying towards the west. Pacific Black Duck Anas superciliosa A pair on 19 October 1970 flying slightly east of south, but they turned west before being lost to view. Rock Dove Columba livia Seven sightings of lone birds during the first survey period, in January and between May and August, and one of a group of three in No- vember. Most were seen flying over or past the islets and generally in a northerly direction. On two occasions, lone birds landed. Common Bronzewing Phaps chalcoptera One record only, of a bird seen to pitch into the noon flower sward at the north end of South Plateau on 24 April 1968. It appeared to be moulting, having only one remaining loose tail feather. White-throated Needletail Hinindapus caudacu- tus One sighting of a lone bird that passed low over Seal Rock from the north-east at 17.30 hr on 17 January 1969 shortly after a north-westerly change. This species has been sighted over tidal flats on Western Port (Davies and Reid 1975b). White-faced Storm-Petrel Pelagodroma marina One record of a bird that flew into the field sta- tion through the open door on 18 October 1967 at 20.00 hr. Wandering Albatross Diomedea exulans Twenty-two sightings offshore during the first survey period, between mid-June to mid-No- vember, and two additional records in mid-Jan- uary. Most sightings were of lone birds gliding in rough windy weather, well offshore within a broad arc from the south-east to the north- west, and predominantly during south-westerly blows. Six sightings were of lone birds flying in calm conditions. Black-browed Albatross 7 halassarche melanophris The most commonly observed albatross, from April to mid-December, but the majority of sightings (247 of 262) were from June to Au- gust; frequently in association with Shy Alba- tross Thalassarche cauta. Peak numbers were Vol 130 (1)2013 7 Research Reports recorded in the latter parts of May or June, usually on days of very rough weather. The greatest concentration was noted on 23 June 1971 during a hard south-westerly gale, when over 200 were in view within an arc from the south-east to the south-west. This species was observed only once in the second survey pe- riod when ten birds were seen on 25 May 1999. Despite frequent sightings close to shore early in the first survey period, feeding was rarely observed. On two occasions three to six birds fought over flotsam, identified in one instance as a large cuttlefish (probably Sepia apama); on another, two birds were observed harassing a seal thrashing a moderately large prey item at the surface, and on a third occasion several al- batross paddled up to an Australasian Gannet Morus senator when it surfaced with a fish and attempted to snatch it. Shy Albatross Thalassarche cauta Active offshore in small numbers from late April to mid-December (28 records), but with no obvious peak or influx as in the case of the preceding species. Possible feeding activity was observed on 15 June 1969 when several birds settled on a patch of discoloured water, which may have been a surface shoal of fish, to the south of Black Rock. Southern Giant-Petrel Macronectes giganteus Giant- Petrels were frequently seen offshore from June to December throughout the 40 year period, with a few additional sightings of lone birds in January, February, April and May. Dark- plumaged individuals predominated, with only three all-white (June, September), one grey (June) and one pale-headed individual (June) in 157 sightings. Only one record was made in the second survey period (June 2005). Despite Giant- Petrels being avid scavengers of dead seals on many subantarctic seal islands and the frequent presence of seal carcases on Seal Rocks, only two instances of scavenging by Southern Giant-Petrels were observed, on 27 May 1972 and 24 June 1972. However, Giant- Petrels were seen feeding on carcasses floating offshore on several occasions, and once two Gi- ant-Petrels were observed paddling about over a concentration of Coastal Krill Nyctiphanes aus- tralis and small fish, which in turn had attracted albatrosses, gannets and other small seabirds. On three occasions a lone Giant-Petrel was seen ashore on the Main Beach breeding area, resting or walking among the fur seals with wings partly opened. Juvenile seals and even adult males retreated, whereas cows with young pups responded with open-mouthed threats. Northern Giant- Petrel Macronectes halli Only one certain record of a bird resting on the water off East Reef on 5 February 1979 (RMW, FTB). Southern Fulmar Fulmarus glacialoides A lone bird was sighted by KJC flying low over North Beach at midday on 22 August 1968. Cape Petrel Daption capense Eight sightings of lone birds between June and September, of a pair on 22 August 1968, and of a lone bird in mid- December. Usually seen fly- ing low over the water and if alighting only for brief periods. On two occasions a Cape Petrel hovered about in the vicinity of a resting Giant- Petrel, but no interaction occurred. Specimen RW#216 collected 22 August 1968 (Museum Victoria). Fairy Prion Pachyptila turtur Observed once, on 16 June 1969. A group of 20-30 dived repeatedly into a swarm of krill lo- cated about 1.5 km south of Black Rock in com- pany with feeding Short-tailed and Fluttering Shearwaters and White-fronted Terns. Speci- men RW#414, collected 16 June 1969 (Mu- seum of Victoria), a male, testes minute, heavy sub-cutaneous fat deposits, stomach filled with Coastal Krill N. australis. Short-tailed Shearwater Ardenna tenuirostris The daily passage of large numbers of this shearwater to and from breeding colonies on the south-west and south coasts of Phillip Is- land was a feature of the offshore bird activity from October to February each year. Thereafter to the beginning of May the number and regu- larity of sightings declined. Observations fell into three broad categories — morning exodus and evening return, localised activity at the sea surface within 3-4 km of Seal Rocks, and indi- vidual birds at or close inshore. The morning exodus in calm to moderate weather was an orderly stream passing East 8 The Victorian Naturalist Research Reports Reef heading to the south and south-west; no movement to the south-east was observed. In strong winds and heavy seas the birds were active offshore all day, widely dispersed on all sides and seemed to circle the islets both clock- wise and counter-clockwise. Landward move- ment in the evening was always diffuse. In flat calm seas, large raffs (c. 300-500 individuals) of these shearwaters were occasionally noted about 3-4 km offshore to the south-east and always in the same general vicinity. During the morning these raffs continually broke up and reformed nearby, but if present in late after- noon they were more stable, with most birds resting quietly. Infrequently, large flocks and small groups were seen feeding at the surface to the south-east, south and south-west. Tempo- rary raffs formed when birds alighted over con- centrations of krill, dipping and diving beneath the surface. In January and February 2000, c. 3500 and 200 respectively were recorded feed- ing within several kilometres of the islets. Crested Terns and Fluttering Shearwaters were occasionally seen feeding with Short- tailed Shearwaters on the same concentrations. Most unexpectedly, a few Short-tailed Shear- waters were seen in June 1969, on several oc- casions during the 15th, 18th and 19th. The context of these sightings was remarkable in that these birds were active on a large swarm of Coastal Krill, together with Fairy Prions, Flut- tering Shearwaters, White-fronted Terns, Silver Gulls, Black-browed and Shy Albatross, Giant- Petrels and Australasian Gannets. However, only the shearwaters, prions and terns were feeding directly on the crustaceans. On rare occasions lone Short-tailed Shearwa- ter were seen resting on the sea, and in calm conditions were prone to attack by predators. In one instance two immature Pacific Gulls repeat- edly buffeted the Shearwater when it attempted to lift off the surface, knocking it down into the water. On another occasion two Giant-Petrels were seen tearing at a helpless bird floating at the surface. Despite opportunities for Austral- ian fur seals to prey on Short-tailed Shearwater in nearby waters, no instances were observed. Similarly, Deagle et al. (2009) found no evi- dence of shearwaters (or any other birds) in the faeces of fur seals at Seal Rocks. Fluttering Shearwater Puffinus gavia Recorded on 16 occasions offshore in the first survey period, most frequently in June-July and October-November, usually in groups of 2-5 birds. On 3 November 1969 at least 50 were observed feeding within 100 m of North Beach. Sightings in January, April and Septem- ber were of single birds. In calm weather feed- ing birds rose from the surface, flew a short distance and plunged in with wings extended. In rough weather they would fly into the face of an oncoming wave, emerge from the rear and fly into the next. By dropping back 50 m or so with the wind after passing through a succes- sion of waves the same general vicinity would be worked in this way for about an hour. Speci- mens RW#416, 16 June 1969; RW#449, 20 Oc- tober 1969 (Museum Victoria). Common Diving-Petrel Pelecanoides urina- trix One record only, of a desiccated carcass found in the enclosed South Plateau observation hide on 26 May 1976. It had entered via a narrow gap in the roof at some time after 7 January 1976. On 25 May 1976 RMW, on board the Lorraine May of San Remo, observed a widely dispersed group of 50+ Diving- Petrels off Pyramid rock, approximately 13 km east of Seal Rocks. Little Penguin Eudyptula minor Breeding was not observed, but small numbers came ashore to moult or rest or because they were sick or injured. Moulting birds were found from mid- January to mid- April, but as sites free of disturbance by seals were few, the maximum number of birds found at any one time was eight. Moulting birds hid behind fallen boul- ders at the base of South Plateau and North Plateau or in shallow caves, or took advantage of artificial shelter afforded by a wood stack and a section of flooring stored under a cliff over- hang. Four single birds were found moulting in crevices around South Plateau between Febru- ary and May 1997-2005. Penguins found at other times of the year (24 alive, 21 dead) were all in light to poor condi- tion; in eight instances they were wholly or partly stained by oil. A young lightly oiled bird found on 16 January 1973 was infested with a large number of ticks attached to the back of Vol 130 (1) 2013 9 Research Reports its head and neck. Ten carcasses were found within tide reach and may have died at sea, but the remainder had died where they had taken shelter. On 10 occasions, live penguins were seen during the day among fur seals rest- ing on Main Beach and North Beach, and were completely ignored by the seals, although the Cape Fur Seal A. pusillus pusillus and the New Zealand Fur Seal A. forsteri are known to prey upon penguins (Shaughnessy 1978; Page et al. 2005). Although in plain view of Pacific and Silver gulls, on only one occasion was a pen- guin harassed and forced to retreat to the sea. Penguins were occasionally seen feeding within about 100 m of the shore and often were heard calling in calm, foggy weather. Frigatebird Fregata sp. A single sighting, on 20 December 1968 by RMW and WMB. Shortly after 13.00 hr, atten- tion was drawn by a chorus of alarm calls from the colony of Silver Gulls to a dark bird passing south over East Reef. Although closely pursued by the gulls it flew unhurriedly off to the west. Australasian Gannet Morns serrator Seen frequently offshore throughout the year, but most often between November and Janu- ary, and generally out to sea within an arc from east to south-east or from west to south-west. About half of the 151 records were of lone birds and the remainder were of groups of 2 to 30, usually flying in lines abreast or trailing. Imma- ture gannets in mottled plumage were seen in all months, alone, in pairs and in the company of adults. Feeding dives were seen on a few oc- casions (see notes on Short-tailed Shearwater) and in May 1999, groups of 20 and 30 were seen feeding in conjunction with Crested Terns and Silver Gulls, on clupeiod fish probably being driven to the surface by Australian Salmon Ar- ripis truttaceous. Little Pied Cormorant Microcarbo melanoleucos One bird, probably the same individual, was sighted on most visits through 1971 and 1972 (26 records) and was usually actively fishing. Lone birds were seen infrequently in 1969, 1973, 1976, 2001, 2002 and 2003 (12 records). Fishing activity was confined to the protected waters of the landing gutter, Seal Pool and the deep tide pools at the south end of Main Beach. Juvenile Bluethroat Wrasse Notolabrus tectricus up to 15 10 cm long were a common prey, and one other fish taken appeared to be a Crested Weedfish Cristiceps australis, which occurred in the per- manent tide pools. When in the water the bird was extremely wary of seals and when resting always chose a rock well clear of those ashore. It became noticeably agitated if the resident Kelp Gulls passed overhead, but tolerated the close proximity of other resting cormorants. Great Cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo During the first decade of this survey this spe- cies was a rare visitor, in spring and summer, with only four sightings of one or two birds present for two or three days. During the after- noon of 24 November 1976, 6-10 birds settled near Black-faced Cormorants on North Plateau and towards evening a flock of 60+ flew past; the last and maximum count on North Plateau that season was 30 on 14 December 1976. Up to five were recorded at the roost in November and December 1977 and one to two in Decem- ber 1978 and 1979. Single birds were recorded on North Plateau on visits in October and No- vember 1999 and January 2000. Little Black Cormorant Phalacrocorax sulcirostris Four records only; of a single bird resting among a group of immature Pacific Gulls on Main Beach on 23 October 1972, of two birds resting near a Little Pied Cormorant and Black-faced Cormorants on Main Beach on 16 November 1972, of a single bird resting with Black-faced Cormorants on North Plateau on 27 December 2002, and a desiccated carcass on Main Beach below South Plateau on 6 January 1977. Pied Cormorant Phalacrocorax varius Six records in January, March, August and De- cember of lone birds standing quietly on rocks close to the water’s edge. One additional sight- ing was of two birds that perched briefly on the steel flying-fox cable mid-way between the is- lets, on 7 March 1969. Not recorded in the sec- ond period of the survey. Black-faced Cormorant Phalacrocorax fuscescens In groups generally less than four, rarely more than 10, from February to November, roost- ing in the evening on portions of high rock masses not used by the fur seals, i.e. the south- east point of Black Rock and the north edge of North Plateau, with a distinct preference for the The Victorian Naturalist Research Reports latter. In December to January over seven sea- sons (1966-1972), numbers increased to an av- erage of 26 and 32 respectively. A maximum of 67 was recorded on 14 December 1977. In the second survey period, numbers ranged from 0-57 and averaged 1 1.7. On North Plateau they invariably roosted in a group along the northern edge, spaced uni- formly about 1 m apart, standing or sleeping in an upright posture. Individuals sometimes tore up abandoned Silver Gull nests of dried noon flower stems, tossing beakfulls of the material into the air. Their roosting area became heavily fouled with white guano splashes during sum- mer and encroached on nest sites of Crested Terns, Silver Gulls and a pair of Sooty Oyster- catchers. Some birds were occasionally seen fishing in open waters near shore, but never in the Seal Pool or in the deep tide pools on Main Beach. Disgorged food items found in the roosting area on North Plateau included a small leatherjacket (Aluteridae) and an Australian Salmon. Cattle Egret Ardea ibis Single record of a solitary bird on Black Rock on 13 April 2000. White-faced Heron Egretta novaehollandiae Thirty-one records, mainly of lone birds, but also of groups of up to 10 in summer and autumn during periods of calm weather. About half the sightings were of birds flying past directly to- wards Phillip Island or north-west. Those seen on shore chose to roost either on the plateaux or outer reef areas well clear of any seals. Royal Spoonbill Platalea regia One sighting of a lone bird on 27 January 1966 that circled above Seal Rocks several times and then settled briefly on East Reef before heading north into a light north-easterly breeze. White-bellied Sea-Eagle Haliaeetus leu- cogaster One sighting on 16 November 1977 of a lone adult that made a low leisurely circuit of the is- lets followed by a mob of screaming Silver Gulls, that were at the peak of nesting. This bird was probably one of a pair resident at French Island and often seen in the vicinity of Sandy Point 17 km to the north (Davis and Reid 1975a). Swamp Harrier Circus approximans Four records of one or two birds passing — on 4 November 1969, 25 July 1971, 21 September 1971 and 18 January 1973. The resident Silver Gulls were greatly alarmed when they flew overhead and on one occasion a pair of nest- ing Kelp Gulls pursued a lone Harrier so closely that it was forced to flip and present its talons to break up the attack. The July record was of a lone adult flying slowly due south and stead- ily gaining in altitude until out of sight. A fifth record was of a lone bird perched on a wooden plank near the field station on 13 August 1969. Nankeen Kestrel Falco cenchroides Six sightings in January (1966, 1968 and 1972), and single sightings in April 1966, September 1968, November 1970 and June 1972. All were of lone birds either perched on cliff ledges or the railing of the observation towers upper deck, or hovering over the plateaux. On 19 June 1972 a large female was disturbed from the car- cass of a Common Starling from which most of the flesh had been stripped. She later returned and carried off the remains. Later that day two other partly consumed Starlings were found on Main Beach and South Plateau. The hind end of a small rat (possibly Rattus norvegicus ), found on North Plateau two days later, had probably been carried to the islet by this Kestrel. Brown Falcon Falco berigora Four records; two birds on 20 January 1966, and lone birds on 26 February 1966, 17 Janu- ary 1972 and 17 November 1977. On the first three occasions the birds remained high and showed interest in the activity of Silver Gulls and Crested Terns below, but they eventually flew off towards Phillip Island. On the last oc- casion the Falcon took a Silver Gull chick from West Beach and flew off to the north-east. Al- though the gull colony was greatly alarmed, the Falcon was not pursued. Peregrine Falcon Falco peregrinus Four records, possibly of the same bird, on 2 and 10 November 1970 and on 9 and 15 Janu- ary 1971 circling the islets. On the latter two oc- casions it was driven from the vicinity of North Plateau by a mob of Silver Gulls and flew off to the Nobbies, rousing the gull colony there. Vol 130 (1) 2013 11 Research Reports Australian Pied Oystercatcher Haema- topus longirostris Two birds were sighted on 4 and 16 November 1969 and lone birds on 7 October 1970 and 15 November 1972. All records were of birds mak- ing several circuits of the islets before heading off towards Phillip Island. On one occasion two birds settled on East Reef but were quickly driven off by a resident pair of Sooty Oyster- catchers. Sooty Oystercatcher Haematopus fuliginosus Three resident pairs routinely nested on the is- lets throughout both survey periods. The maxi- mum number recorded was nine on 25 Octo- ber 1999 and there were less present in winter, usually four to six birds. The mean (±_s.e.) of 39 counts in the second survey period was 2.6 (±0.37). Until the arrival of a pair of adult Kelp Gulls in late 1970, two pairs nested on North Plateau and a third on Black Rock plateau. In subsequent seasons the Kelp Gulls ousted the latter, at a time when nesting by the other pairs was well advanced. The ousted pair then es- tablished a nest on the southern ‘toe of North Plateau, on two occasions appropriating a Sil- ver Gulls nest. The North Plateau pairs were aggressively territorial, establishing their nests at least 35 m apart. During the entire span of 14 years these nest sites shifted by only a few metres. Nesting Silver Gulls were tolerated to within 3 m. Inter- and intraspecific interactions were common, and the latter were especially intense when parents were attending their re- cently hatched and highly mobile chick. On one occasion a sitting oystercatcher leapt up, caught and throttled a recently fledged Silver Gull that had ventured too near. The Gull was held down by a beak hold behind its head, the Oyster- catcher standing motionless with its feet braced wide apart until the Gull was dead. In 13 seasons the North Plateau pairs produced at least 25 clutches (14 x 2 eggs, 5 x 1 egg, 6 x eggs not visible). On four occasions two clutch- es were laid in a season, three after early failures, and in each case a chick was reared to fledging; in the fourth instance two eggs were laid af- ter the fledging or loss of a near-fledged chick (c. 42 days after the first hatching), but the fate of the second clutch was not observed. In no case of clutches of two eggs were two chicks reared, apparently because the first chick to emerge was moved by the parents and the second egg was abandoned in the nest — a sequence observed in two instances. Of the possible maximum pro- duction of 25 fledged young by the North Pla- teau pairs only 14 large runners’ were actually found, partly because the parents were adept at hiding them in crevices and narrow spaces un- der boulders where their plumage blended per- fectly with the black basalt. When we searched for these runners to band them, a parent would occasionally resort to a ‘broken wing’ display to lure the intruder away. The success of the Black Rock pair was very difficult to follow, but in the five seasons prior to being ousted by the Kelp Gulls in 1972 they hatched at least three chicks. In the seven subse- quent seasons when they nested on the southern ‘toe of North Plateau only five clutches were seen (3x2 eggs, 2x1 egg). In the summer of 1973/74 the Kelp Gulls abandoned Black Rock for Seal Rock and the Oystercatchers reclaimed their old nest site. They were first seen there on 1 0 January 1974 and four days later the nest contained one egg. The fate of this nesting was not observed. For the first four to five days after hatching chicks were fed small insects and arthropods probed for by their parents in the mats of noon flower, the chicks running from one to the other whenever something was captured. Thereafter chicks were fed with the flesh of chitons, small limpets, and univalve gastropods ( Nerita sp.) garnered from the outer inter-tidal zones of Main Beach, East Reef and Middle Reef. Adult Oystercatchers were extremely sensi- tive to the presence of humans and immediately vacated a nest if approached to within 50 m. This is similar to the flight initiation distance reported for this species by Glover et al. (2011). Despite great care to minimise disturbance, this was undoubtedly the cause of some nest failures as Silver Gulls were quick to plunder an egg and were suspected of taking at least one exposed newly hatched chick. It is likely that the poor success of the Black Rock pair when nesting on North Plateau was exacerbated by their close proximity to the field station located only c. 40 m away. One of these runners, banded on North Plateau 5 January 1977, was later found as a des- iccated carcass on Forrest Caves beach, Phillip 12 The Victorian Naturalist Research Reports Island on 24 April 1987. Another, banded on North Plateau 4 January 1980, was seen at Long Island Point near Hastings on 1 August 1981 and was subsequently trapped there on 12 June 1988 and released. Two resident colour-banded birds in the second survey period were banded respectively at Flinders (c. 10 km north-east) two years earlier and in Corner Inlet (c. 125 km south-east) six years earlier (as a two-year old). Masked Lapwing Vanellus miles A pair on Black Rock on 22 January 1968. One heard by KJC calling during night of 21-22 August 1969. Ruddy Turnstone Arenaria inter pres In the first survey, Ruddy Turnstones were ob- served on all visits except during the winter of 1969. From March to August they were usually seen in groups of 5 to 10, their numbers then increasing substantially to about 50 in Novem- ber to January. A few birds in richly coloured plumage were seen in April, July, August and September. In the second part of the survey, numbers ranged from 0 to 1 1 and averaged two birds per visit. Turnstones were observed on only 47% of visits in the second survey period. Dispersed groups were often seen feeding along the shoreline at low tide, among weedy rocks and over beds of cunjevoi Pyura sp. Oc- casionally small flocks were seen moving about on, and the slopes above, the Main Beach and twice on South Plateau among clumps of noon flower where they appeared to be searching for insects. Towards evening and during strong winds they congregated to roost in sheltered parts of the shore platforms and often among the fur seals, where they moved about confi- dently and were totally ignored. Turnstones were often seen resting in very close proximity to Pacific Gulls. Arctic Jaeger Stercorarius parasiticus Thirteen sightings were logged of one to four individuals active offshore during spring and summer — from October to March in the first survey period. Most often they were no- ticed in November to January, when pursuing Silver Gulls returning from Phillip Island or the Mornington Peninsula with food for their young. Fairy Tern Sterna nereis Two or three birds seen offshore on three occa- sions by KJC in late December 1965 and a lone bird on 17 Januaryl966. Caspian Tern Hydroprogne caspia Recorded only once, by KJC on 31 November 1968 feeding offshore. The Tern subsequently landed on North Plateau, but flew off when alerted by alarm calls of Silver Gulls. White-fronted Tern Sterna striata Commonly seen from late April to mid-Novem- ber feeding offshore and often diving for small fish close in to the rocks, in the Seal Pool and in the shallow landing gutter. Often roosted over- night on Seal Rock, generally in groups of less than 10, but occasionally there were 50. They in- termingled freely with roosting Crested Terns. On 16 June 1969 White-fronted Terns were seen diving into a swarm of krill to the south of Black Rock, where Fairy Prions, and Short-tailed and Fluttering Shearwaters were also feeding. Speci- men RW#415 (Museum Victoria), stomach contained Coastal Krill; subcutaneous fat light orange in colour. This species was not seen on or in the vicinity of Seal Rocks during the sec- ond survey period but has been recorded oc- casionally along the southern coast of Phillip Island (Norman 1992) but not in Western Port between 1991 and 1994 (Dann et al. 2003). Crested Tern Thalasseus hergii Before the field station was erected on the South Plateau in December 1965, 40 nests were found on a narrow band of noon flower growing at the cliff edge, and at least eight pairs had nested on the north-west corner of North Plateau. Af- ter 1965 all nesting activity was concentrated on North Plateau, but only 20 nests were estab- lished. The output of this colony was about 12 young/yr until 1971/72 when the entire nesting was lost due to unusually heavy seal traffic on that plateau. In 1972/73 only three nests were found there, but eight nests were established on the upper boulder slope of West Beach among nesting Silver Gulls. During the next four sea- sons (1974/75 to 1977/78) nesting was confined to West Beach, but the maximum number did not exceed six. In 1974/75 and 1977/78 two Vol 130 (1) 2013 13 Research Reports nests were established on the north end of South Plateau, which had not been visited dur- ing the period of courtship and nest-making in October, but occupation of the field station led to their failure. The last breeding recorded at Seal Rocks was of six nests in 1978 (Harris and Bode 1981). In 1994, a large colony became established at The Nobbies, 2 km north-west, and numbered 2050 nests by 2001 (Minton et al. 2001, Chiaradia et al 2002). Pairs engaging in high spiralling courtship flights were noted as early as 9 August and as late as 15 January. Some pairs slowly circled to heights of well over 300 m, came together and then plunged, one above the other, in a spec- tacular, slow-spiralling power-dive to within 10 to 20 m of the sea. Copulations were observed as early as 7 October and nests with eggs as late as 17 January. Chicks at the runner stage were moved to the shore platforms of North Beach and West Beach where they were protected by groups of adults, as many as three adults closely attending a single chick. Parents flying in with a fish were occasionally harried by Jaegers and on one occasion an adult with a bulging crop was pursued by a Kelp Gull. Fish up to c. 8-10 cm in length were fed to large chicks. Crested Terns roosted throughout the year on both islets, but mainly on Seal Rock, usually as a single aggregation and often with White- fronted Terns. On Seal Rock their numbers varied errat- ically from less than 50 to more than 500, and in general the largest flocks occurred in late spring and summer. Exceptional concentrations were noted in 1972, of 1200-1500 on 16 November and of c. 2000 on 17 December. Roosting terns preferred the boulder and cobblestone-pebble areas of Seal Rock and the broad ledges of Black Rock, their selection depending on the strength and direction of the prevailing wind. During south-westerly gales terns congregated to roost on Main Beach in the lee of the South Plateau, where they crouched low and adjusted their ori- entation to any shift in wind direction. Dead, injured and moribund adult Terns were found on Seal Rock from time to time and, on one occasion, an injured bird was attacked by Silver Gulls. Pacific Gull Larus pacificus These birds do not nest on the islets and were normally were seen resting on North Plateau, Main Beach and outer rocks, especially on East Reef. At least one pair of adults was noted on most visits in the first survey period, common- ly there were three to five but not more than six. Counts of immatures varied more, from 2 to 50, with a tendency for larger numbers in winter. The maximum count of 50 on 9 February 1979 was of equal numbers of juveniles and imma- tures. This seasonal variation correlates with counts made in the vicinity of Sandy Point to the north (Davis and Reid 1975a). By contrast, Pacific Gulls (adults and immatures combined) were seen on only 60% of visits in the second survey period and never more than six were seen. In strong winds Pacific Gulls sought protect- ed areas, in particular the lower shingle slopes of Main Beach. They often competed with Sil- ver Gulls for food items vomited by seals, and for fresh placentae during the pupping season, but were more watchful and tentative when in a close press of seals. Adult birds were seen to feed on the gastropod Subninella sp., which was common at the outer edge of the reefs, by drop- ping the shells from a height of 10 m or so onto the rocks to break them open. A juvenile in dark plumage and with a bad- ly injured wing was seen on Seal Rock on 14 November 1977. It was still alive on 28 March 1979, in sub-adult plumage, having survived by scavenging among the seals and tide-washed flotsam. Kelp Gull Larus dominicanus Lone adults were recorded on 22 August 1968 and 6 March 1969, and an adult pair arrived on 18 December 1970. They nested the following month on Black Rock and in all subsequent summers to 1979, when two additional pairs established nests. Other pairs were sighted on 29 October 1972 and 12 December 1977 but did not remain. For some days after their arrival the found- ing pair was harassed by Pacific and Silver Gulls and by one pair of Sooty Oystercatchers, but this aggression quickly waned. Over the following eight seasons this pair produced a minimum of 14 The Victorian Naturalist Research Reports 14 eggs in eight clutches (1x3 eggs, 4x2 eggs and 3 x eggs not seen) from which 12 chicks were hatched and seven fledged. The progress of the 1971/72 nesting on Black Rock was not observed but a juvenile was seen in flight on 26 February 1972. In the 1974/75 and 1978/79 seasons the original pair lost clutches when the nests were trampled by seals, and although a second nest mound of noon flower stems was raised nearby no eggs were laid. In 1973/74 and 1975/76 they abandoned their first nest (laying was not veri- fied) and shifted to the other islet. In 1971/72 and 1977/78 a second nest was raised after the first brood fledged and in the latter season the first nest was renovated as well, but no eggs were laid. In January 1979 all three pairs laid, but two nests (clutch of two eggs in one; others eggs not seen) were lost due to seal traffic. The third pair laid three eggs and two young were fledged. Laying dates varied from 28 October (estimated) to 13 January (observed), with most being laid between mid to late November. Adult Kelp Gulls were dominant in any inter- action with Silver and Pacific Gulls and routine- ly ousted a breeding pair of Sooty Oystercatch- ers from their favoured nest site on Black Rock. Physical clashes did not occur except for one instance on 15 November 1977 when a nest- ing adult killed a recently fledged Silver Gull Month Fig. 3. Counts of Kelp Gulls recorded on Seal Rocks 1997 to 2005 by month. Numbers were greater in spring and summer. The quadratic function is signifi- cant (r 2 = 0.8). The dashed lines are 95% confidence limits. that ventured too near. Caught in a powerful beak hold behind the head, the young gull was jerked about violently and thrashed and then despatched with downward stabbing thrusts to the body. On 18 January 1973 the pair pursued and attacked a passing Swamp Harrier. Kelp Gulls competed with other gulls for frag- ments of fish and squid vomited by seals, and for fresh placentae, and occasionally pecked at fresh seal carcasses. No predation of the eggs or chicks of other nesting birds was seen. The mean number of Kelp Gulls frequenting Seal Rocks in the second survey period was 30.1 (+ s.e. 2.9) and ranged from 1 to 96 birds. There was some seasonal variation in numbers with generally higher numbers in spring and summer (Fig. 3). It was noticeable during win- ter that Kelp Gulls occurred in greater numbers across the southern shores of Phillip Island and on the Mornington Peninsula to the north (pers. obs.). In 2005 it was estimated that the number of breeding birds in 2002 was c. 50, and that pairs had started nesting on the western end of Phillip Island in 1995 (Dann 2007). Silver Gull Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae In the first survey period, this species was present all year and bred on the plateaux of both islets, on cliff ledges and amongst boul- ders on West Beach and Main Beach. The airspace beneath the floor of the field station was particularly favoured. Breeding pairs were estimated at 250 to 300, with no marked fluc- tuations from year to year. On 30 October 1978 Harris and Bode (1981) counted 192 occupied nests and 63 new but empty nests on Seal Rock. A marked post-breeding exodus occurred, with numbers dropping to as low as 20; however, the flock size between breeding seasons fluctuated erratically and occasionally exceeded 600. The mean number of Silver Gulls frequenting Seal Rocks in the second survey period was 177.3 (± s.e. 58.1) and ranged from 0 in August 2002 to 2000 birds in May 1999. Breeding was greatly reduced in the second survey period with fewer than 10 nests being found in most years usually above the field station built in 1979 and a few isolated nests on Black Rock. Silver Gulls have bred at the western end of Phillip Island since 1970s (Loyn 1975) and the colony has grown to about 2500 birds (PD pers. obs). Vol 130(1)2013 15 Research Reports The commencement of egg-laying (on South Plateau) varied by as much as a month (27 July 1968, 21 August 1969, 21 July 1970, 27 August 1971) and the peak of breeding, in terms of the number of occupied nests, occurred 8-10 weeks later, at about the time the first fledglings were leaving the nesting area. Clutches were usually of two or three eggs, in nests formed of dried noon flower stems and a few feathers. The fur seal colony provided a supplementary source of food during the latter part of the nest- ing season, when large numbers of pregnant females were ashore to give birth. Placentae and associated membranes from 2000+ births were shed between early November and mid- December, but only about half were thoroughly scavenged. Silver Gulls were quick to detect a female seal in labour or any seal showing signs of vomiting the remains of a previous meal. Gulls fed eagerly on any partially digested fish or squid and also on clotted masses of curdled milk that pups would occasionally vomit if trodden on by a large breeding male. Experi- ence of this kind led some gulls to pounce on freshly voided seal faeces of an unusually pale cream colour, but they quickly stopped after a few beakfulls. Ever the opportunists, a group of gulls was observed avidly to devour a large mass of c. 80 mature tapeworms discarded after the dissection of a seals digestive tract - be- haviour that probably explained why strands of ripe proglottids were not found in any masses of soft faeces voided on shore. Individual gulls were attracted to and pecked at fresh wounds on fur seals and eagerly fed on clotted blood. Insects were taken opportunistically. Gulls of- ten snapped at blowflies Calliphora sp. attracted to seal carcasses and were adroit at catching moths Agrotis sp. which appeared in large num- bers at various times on 17 October 1968, 4 November 1969 and 19 April 1977. They pounced on moths amongst the noon flower and pursued them when they swarmed into the air as high as 100 m. Larvae of the com- mon cockchafer Adoryphorus couloni were fed to chicks by parents that followed the spring ploughing on Phillip Island and Morning- ton Peninsula. These grubs appeared to be an important source of food in some years. Un- defended gull eggs were soon broken and de- voured by other gulls, as were those of Crested Terns and Sooty Oystercatchers. Very small gull chicks that were displaced from the nest and not defended were pounced on by other adults, thrashed vigorously and then swal- lowed; unprotected larger chicks or ‘runners in down were pursued, buffeted and pecked about the head until they died. Inadvertent disturbance by humans and by the fur seals contributed to this mortality and probably reinforced the tendency of parents to move their advanced chicks to the periphery of the nesting areas. Silver Gulls were alert to any activity at sea nearby, flocking to investigate feeding by Crest- ed and White-fronted Terns or the commotion caused by a Great White Shark Carcharodon carcharias preying on a seal at the surface, or a seal thrashing a large fish. On several occasions flocks of more than 100 gulls were observed feeding on surface shoals of small fish. Apart from cannibalism only two instances of predation of Silver Gulls were observed — of an adult gull by an Eastern Barn Owl Tyto javanica on 5 October 1970, and of a chick by a Brown Falcon on 17 November 1977. On two occasions fledglings were killed when they ventured too close to nests of other species — by a Kelp Gull on 15 November 1977, and by a Sooty Oystercatcher on 25 November 1978. Silver Gulls were observed to harass and mob predators such as Eastern Barn Owl, Brown and Peregrine Falcons, White-bellied Sea-Eagle and Frigatebird, but were tolerant of Kelp and Pacific Gulls unless they approached occupied nests or runners. Blue-winged Parrot Neophema chrysostoma Two records of lone birds, on 19 March 1968 and 3 November 1969. The dates of these vis- its accord with the seasonality of sightings at Sandy Point (Davis and Reid 1975b). Speci- men RW #454, (Museum Victoria) collected 3 November 1969, female, heavy mesenteric and subcutaneous fat deposits over abdomen and base of neck; ovary 8x5 mm, largest follicle 1.3 mm, crop empty. Pallid Cuckoo Cacomantis pallidus Seen only once, on North Plateau on 18 March 1968. 16 The Victorian Naturalist Eastern Barn Owl Tyto javanica Six records and some prey remains, possibly representing the activities of three individuals. A lone bird flew from the broken, stepped west- ern edge of North Plateau on 10 June 1966 and settled in a crevice on the north face of Black Rock plateau. Regurgitated pellets were found below the south end of South Plateau the next day. This bird may have remained until at least 13 July, when the fresh remains of a Common Starling were found, picked clean in precisely the same manner as were Common Diving- Petrels taken by Barn Owls at Lady Julia Percy Island (RMW pers. obs.). On 20 and 22 August 1970 a Barn Owl was seen successively at the rear window of the field station, roosting on Black Rock, and on a tank stand beside the station. On 15 Septem- ber a Barn Owl flew from a recess below the northern point of South Plateau to East Reef, pursued by Silver Gulls; later it was on Main Beach directly beneath a steel cable that guyed the observation tower, incapacitated by a bro- ken wing. On 5 October the fresh remains of a Silver Gull, headless and stripped of flesh, were found on West Beach, indicating another owl was in residence. This was confirmed two days later when a large Barn Owl flew from a roost below the South Plateau observation hide to Black Rock, pursued by Silver Gulls. Sacred Kingfisher Todiramphus sanctus One sighting by FTB, of a lone bird on Seal Rock on 10 November 1970. Yellow-rumped Ihombill Acanthiza chrysorrhoa One record on 19 November 1967 of a lone bird hopping about mats of noon flower on South Plateau; last seen flying to Black Rock. Yellow-faced Honeyeater Lichenostomus chrysops Lone birds were recorded on 21 December 1968 and 28 October 1975. The first sighting was of the bird battling against a strong wind near the field station and the second bird was seen perched on the roof of the South Plateau observation hide. Specimen: RW#361, 21 De- cember 1968 (Museum Victoria ), female, ovary c. 5 mm in length, largest follicle 1 mm; stomach contained four tiny flower(?) buds c. 2 mm in length. Research Reports White-eared Honeyeater Lichenostomus leucotis One record of a lone bird flying about the eastern cliff face of South Plateau on 16 January 1968. Yellow-tufted Honeyeater Lichenostomus melanops One record of a lone bird active about mats of noon flower near the rear of the field station on 15 May 1968. Closely observed with binocu- lars from a distance of about 6 m by KJC, FTB, WMB and RMW. White-plumed Honeyeater Lichenostomus penicillatus One record of a lone bird perched on the flying fox tripod, South Plateau, on 18 May 1971. White-fronted Chat Epthianura albifrons One record on 18 October 2000 on South Plateau. Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike Coracina novae- hollandiae Single sighting of a lone bird on 19 April 1972, perched on the tower guys for about an hour. Grey Shrike-thrush Colluricincla harmonica Sighted once only on South Plateau on 27 April 1966. Dusky Woodswallow Artamus cyanopterus One sighting on 26 April 1966 by WMB of a lone bird perched on a ladder beside the door of the field station at dusk. It was captured after dark, found to be fit and was released next morning. Raven Corvus sp. One record of a flock of 12 birds flying past about 50 m offshore on 26 February 1971 and heading in a southerly direction. As none vocalised, identifi- cation to species was not possible. Presumed to be the locally common Little Raven C. mellori. Satin Flycatcher Myiagra cyanoleuca Recorded in most years in the first survey peri- od during calm weather. The 27 records fall into two distinct seasonal groups: late February to March and November to mid-December, with a single record on 17 May of a female on West Beach. Pairs were seen twice in November, twice in December and once in March; the 23 other sightings were of lone birds. About half the sightings were of males. These flycatchers were always observed on or near noon flower on the edges and cliff faces of the South Pla- Vol 130 (1)2013 17 Research Reports teau, where they actively pursued insects. This species bred at Sandy Point (14 km north-east) in December 1962, 1963 and 1964 (Davies and Reid 1975c). Magpie-lark Grallina cyanoleuca One record on 23 November 1965 of a lone bird on Black Rock. Rufous Fantail Rhipidura rufifrons Seen once by WMB, on 13 December 1970, perched on the steps of the field station. WMB noted its white throat and broadly fanned rus- set tail. Davis and Reid (1975c) noted this spe- cies to be a rare visitor to Sandy Point. Grey Fantail Rhipidura albiscapa All the 40 records came from the first survey period and fell into two clear seasonal groups — autumn visits (mid-March to May) of groups of up to eight birds, and spring visits (mid- August to mid-December) of individuals and, rarely, pairs. Arrivals were always associated with calm weather and the fantails activities were restricted to mats of noon flower on the plateaux and cliff faces, where they searched for flies and small moths. Usually, they left before the weather changed for the worse. Willie Wagtail Rhipidura leocophrys Two records of lone birds, on 17 August 1969 (KJC) active on South Plateau, and from 26 to 30 May 1976 when one was ‘marooned’ on the islet by very strong north-westerly winds. It confined its activities to the lee side of South Plateau, mainly about the base of the cliff. Flame Robin Petroica phoenicea Eighteen sightings during autumn on seven oc- casions during the first survey period — in mid to late March in 1966, 1968, 1969, 1972, 1973 and 1977, and on 13 and 14 May 1969. Gener- ally, up to seven birds were seen at any one time over a period of one to seven days, and about three in four were in drab plumage. A dramatic influx to Seal Rock occurred on 19 August 1969 when at least 18 birds were in view (11 males, 7 in drab plumage). This was apparently part of the pre-breeding migration (see Davis and Reid 1975c). Specimens RW#434 female and #435 male, collected 20 April 1966, both very fat, testis of male 1.5 mm in length (Museum Victoria). Australian Reed- Warbler Acrocephalus aus- tralis Three records of lone birds active about the cliff faces of South Plateau, on 9 January 1969, 24 November 1969 and 17 June 1970. Specimens — RW #365, 9 January 1969 and RW #48, 17 Janu- ary 1970 (Museum Victoria). The latter had bright yellow subcutaneous fat associated with the major feather tracts, and cream-coloured visceral fat; testis 3.3 mm in length. Brown Songlark Cincloramphus cruralis Recorded twice on South Plateau in mid-sum- mer, on 14 January 1969 and 17 January 1970. The first bird was feeding on small butterflies, Australian Painted Lady Vanessa kershawi that had appeared in considerable numbers on the previous day, apparently from Phillip Island via a steady easterly breeze. Specimen: RW#369 (Museum Victoria), 14 January 1969, testis 1.5 mm in length; stomach contents remains of V kershawi, an orange ichneumon wasp Netelia sp. and small flies. Silvereye Zosterops lateralis Nine sightings in the first survey period be- tween October and May of one or two birds ac- tive about clumps of noon flower on the Seal Rocks plateaux. On two occasions, 2-4 Novem- ber 1969 and 12-13 April 1973, repeated sight- ings may have been of the same individual or stragglers of larger groups passing through on pre- and post-breeding movements (see Davis and Reid 1975c). Welcome Swallow Hirundo neoxena A resident species, nesting in cavities and caves in the cliffs of South Plateau and Black Rock. One to two pairs seen throughout the year, usually skimming low over the upper beach slopes and plateaux. Very young nestlings were found on 2 November 1967 and 2 November 1969, and had fledged by the end of that month. Flocks of swallows were seen in December (lx 9), January (1 x 30+), March (3 x 12+, 8, 10) and May (1 x 6). Common Blackbird Turdus merula Lone birds were sighted on Seal Rock on 21 April 1966 and 30 March 1979. Common Starling Sturnus vulgaris Small numbers bred regularly on Seal Rock, 18 The Victorian Naturalist Research Reports pairs being noted as early as mid-August and nestlings being fed as late as 20 December, sug- gesting that several clutches were produced in a season. Only eight nests containing three to five eggs were found in well-hidden natural sites — in rock piles, in deep crevices in the cliffs, and one was behind a festoon of Ruby Saltbush on the cliff near the South Plateau observation hide; elsewhere nests were constructed in the roof ventilation shafts of the field station and in a corner of the South Plateau observation hide. Parents actively foraged in clumps of noon flower and obtained an abundance of blowflies and their maggots from decomposing seal car- casses. Starlings were very wary of Silver Gulls, especially when gathering food in their vicinity, but on one occasion a parent defended a chick exposed to a threatening gull by landing on its back and pecking at its head. Large flocks roosted on the cliffs overnight throughout the year, usually arriving at dusk from the direction of Phillip Island in small groups and separate compact flocks of 50-100 birds; occasionally a massed flock of 500+ birds was seen. Numbers appeared relatively simi- lar between the two survey periods. As they approached these large flocks broke up into smaller groups which flew down at surprising speed straight onto the cliff faces. Incoming starlings were not deterred by strong winds and were often seen labouring against gale-force south-westerlies. A succession of small groups departed at or soon after dawn. Predation by a Barn Owl and a Nankeen Kestrel were noted. Common Myna Sturnus tristis A lone bird was seen on South Plateau on 25 November 1976 and a pair next day in the same vicinity. House Sparrow Passer domesticus A group of about five sparrows was seen on South Plateau near the field station on 10 June 1966, and lone birds were seen at the islet on 16 November 1966 and 16 November 1967. Australasian Pipit Anthus novaeseelandiae Six records of lone birds between mid-October and mid-April, active about the Seal Rocks pla- teaux and on Main Beach. European Goldfinch Carduelis carduelis Five records of 1-4 birds flying over or past Vol 130 (1)2013 the islets, on 19 and 26 April 1966, 16 October 1968, 12 November 1968 and 26 July 1969. Discussion Although Seal Rocks lies a mere 1.5 km from Phillip Island, in character it is truly an island of Bass Strait. It is exposed to the full force of any gales and to the prevailing ocean swells from the south-west, which rise and break heavily around the two islets, and on occasion com- pletely sweep the outer reefs and lower shore platforms. Powerful currents associated with the tidal flushing of Western Port contribute to turbulence of the sea to the north and east of Seal Rock. All the common Bass Strait seabirds adapted to these conditions were frequently seen in the waters adjacent to Phillip Island. Seventy-five native and six exotic species of birds, including 21 native passerines, were ob- served at Seal Rocks or nearby. Six species were recorded breeding — Crested Tern, Silver Gull, Sooty Oystercatcher, Welcome Swallow, Com- mon Starling and, for the first time in Victoria, Kelp Gull. The variety of land birds recorded on Seal Rocks in the first survey period was surprisingly high, given the exposed nature and relative ste- rility of the terrain; however, the strait between Seal Rock and Phillip Island is narrow, all the species recorded there are common in the re- gion, and most are wide-ranging seasonally or undertake significant north-south migrations. In each case the dates of sightings at Seal Rocks correspond with the timing of seasonal move- ments by the species concerned. Of particular interest is the clear evidence of departure and arrival of several small passerines known to mi- grate across Bass Strait— Satin Flycatcher, Grey Fantail and Flame Robin. Changes over the 40-year period There are a number of differences between the numbers and species of birds recorded in the first period of intensive observation ( 1966— 1972) and the second period (1997-2005). Many fewer pelagic seabirds, Pacific Gulls and land birds were recorded in the second period and there were substantial changes in the num- bers of breeding Crested Terns, Silver Gulls and Kelp Gulls. A comparison of the abundance and diversity of pelagic seabirds between the two periods is invalid as observations were not 19 Research Reports made out to sea in the second period and hence relatively few seabirds were recorded. The pre- ponderance of sightings of passerines and oth- er land birds on South Plateau was no doubt a reflection of the activities centred on the field station there, which had the effect of deterring visits by seals, but may also have been related to the more extensive growth of noon flower on the plateau and its cliffs than elsewhere and the better shelter provided on its eastern face. With the removal of the field station on South Plateau in 1979, came much greater fur seal activity there and consequent destruction of noon flower areas on the top of the plateau. After 1997, vegetation was limited to a few sites inaccessible to seals on the sides of the plateau. This, together with the fact that the length of visits was substantially shorter in the second survey period meant that relatively few passer- ines were recorded there in later years. The main changes to the breeding bird popu- lations have been the movement and expansion of the breeding colonies of Crested Terns and Silver Gulls to adjacent parts of nearby Phil- lip Island and the arrival and expansion of the breeding Kelp Gull population. Crested Terns no longer breed on Seal Rocks; they have in- creased enormously in number locally and approximately 4000 birds breed on the Lit- tle Nobby (2 km east) (Chiaradia et al. 2002). The number of breeding Silver Gulls on Seal Rocks has decreased significantly over the past 40 years. Since the early 1980s there has been a consolidation of most of the Silver Gull colonies on the western end of Phillip Island to the two islets that make up ‘The Nobbies and the adjoining area of Point Grant. Disturbance from the increasing number of seals and Kelp Gulls may have been factors in both of these species moving from Seal Rocks and the sub- sequent increase may have been encouraged by the progressive elimination of foxes Vulpes vulpes in the western half of Phillip Island. Kelp Gulls have also increased substantially at Seal Rocks since their arrival in 1968. Ap- proximately 80 birds now breed there and they have successfully colonised a number of sites on nearby Phillip Island (Dann 2007) and on Lady Julia Percy Island (Dann et al 2004). The expansion of Kelp Gulls at Seal Rocks may have been associated with the expansion of fur seal numbers which, on one hand has reduced the number of suitable breeding sites, but on the other hand has increased the amount of food available in the forms of vomited food remains and placentae. In regard to the latter, the ag- gregate mass of placentae produced during the November-December pupping season would be at least 2000 kg and this represents an im- portant source of high-quality protein for the gulls. However, many placentae are left un- scavenged during the peak period of pupping, apparently because supply far exceeds demand. On the other hand, retching seals are always ea- gerly and competitively attended by gulls, and any ejected food items immediately snatched up by one or other of the three species of gull that occur on the islets. Acknowledgements The seal project was initiated and supported by gen- erous grants from the MA Ingram Trust. KJ Chip- perfields interest in birds and his remarkably keen eyesight gave impetus to this study and stimulated the other team members to be alert and to record sightings. Collectively their observations formed the major part of this report. Janey Jackson painstakingly searched all the diaries and field journals to compile lengthy species dossiers summarised here. Victorian Wader Study Group provided details of banded oys- tercatchers seen and Roger Kirkwood organised the field trips in the second period, sharing his bird ob- servations and commenting on a draft of this paper. Duncan Sutherland kindly prepared Figures 1 and 3 and assisted with the binomial generalised linear model. Note 1 Fred Baum (FTB), 1965-1979; Kevin Chipperfield (KJC), 1965-1970; Bill Bren (WMB), 1967-1973; Keith Cherry, 1970-1979; and Steve Craig, 1973- 1977. References Chiaradia A, Dann P, Jessop, R and Collins P (2002) Diet of Crested Tern ( Sterna bergii) chicks at Phillip Island, Victo- ria, Australia. Emu 102 , 367-371. Christidis L and Boles WE (2008) Systematics and Taxonomy of Australian Birds. (CSIRO Publishing: Collingwood, Vic). Dann P, Arnould JPY, Jessop R and Healy M (2003) Distribu- tion and abundance of seabirds in Western Port, Victoria. Emu 103 , 307-313. Dann P, Mackay M, Kirkwood R and Menkhorst P (2004) Notes on the birds of Lady Julia Percy Island in western Victoria. The Victorian Naturalist 121 , 59-66. Dann P (2007) The Population Status of the Kelp Gull Larus dominicanus in Victoria. Corella 31 , 73-75. Davis WA and Reid AJ (1975a) Western Port Report No. 1, Part 3. The Victorian Naturalist 92, 59-70. Davis WA and Reid AJ (1975b) Western Port Report No. 1, 20 The Victorian Naturalist Research Reports Part 4. The Victorian Naturalist 92, 121-123. Davis WA and Reid, AJ (1975c) Western Port Report No. 1, Part 4 - continued. The Victorian Naturalist 92, 163-171. Deagle BE, Kirkwood R and Jarman SN (2009) Analysis of Australian fur seal diet by pyrosequencing prey DNA in faeces. Molecular Ecology 18, 2022-2038. Glover HK, Weston MA, Maguire GS, Miller KK and Chris- tie BA (2011) Towards ecologically meaningful and social- ly acceptable buffers: Response distances of shorebirds in Victoria, Australia, to human disturbance. Landscape and Urban Planning 1 103, 326-334. Green RH (1973) Albatross Island. Records of the Queen Vic- toria Museum 51, 1-17. Harris MP and Bode KG (1981) Populations of Little Pen- guins, Short-tailed Shearwaters and other seabirds on Phil- lip Island, Victoria, 1978. Emu 81, 20-28. Kirkwood R, Gales R, Terauds A, Arnould JPY, Pemberton P, Shaughnessy PD, Mitchell AT and Gibbens J (2005) Pup production and population trends of the Australian fur seal. Marine Mammal Science 21, 260-282. Loyn, RL (1975) Report on the avifauna of Westernport Bay. Project report; Westernport Bay Environmental Study, Melbourne; Ministry of Conservation, Victoria. Minton C, Jessop R, Collins P and Graham D (2001) Tern breeding and banding 1999/2000 and 2000/2001. Victorian Wader Study Group Bulletin 24, 55-56. Norman FI (1992) Counts of Little Penguins Eudyptula mi- nor in Port Phillip Bay and off Southern Phillip Island, Vic- toria, 1986-1988. Emu 91, 287-301. Page B, McKenzie J and Goldsworthy SD (2005) Dietary re- source partitioniong among sympatric New Zealand and Australian fur seals. Marine Ecology Progress Series 293, 283-302. R Development Core Team (2012) A language and environment for statistical computing, R Founda- tion for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. URL: http://www.R-project.org/. Shaughnessy PD (1978) Cape fur seals preying on seabirds. Cormorant 5, 31. Warneke RM (1966) Seals of Westernport. Victorias Resources 5, 44-46. Warneke RM (1982) The distribution and abundance of seals in the Australasian Region, with summaries of biology and current research. In Mammals in the Seas. FAO Fisheries Series No. 5, Volume 4. pp. 431-475 (Food & Agriculture Organisation: Rome) Warneke RM (2003) Seals at Seal Rocks, Western Port, and in Bass Strait, before and after the Baudin Expeditions visit in 1802. In Le Naturaliste in Western Port 1802-2002 - Two Hundred Years of Change. Proceedings of a seminar held at Cranbourne, Victoria, 13th and 14th April 2002, pp. 77-98. Ed N and P McWhirter, JL Sagliocco and J Southwood. (Department of Infrastructure/Mornington Peninsula Shire: Melbourne/Cranbourne) Received 20 October 201 1; accepted 13 September 2012 One Hundred Years Ago Excursion to Phillip Island BY JOSEPH GABRIEL I am indebted to my co-leader, Dr. Brooke Nicholls, for the following notes on the bird-life of the outing. He says “As the result of several trips to Phillip Island just sixty species of birds have been recorded, but of these sixteen are sea or shore birds, leaving forty-four as residents of the island. These correspond very closely with the total of thirty-six species recorded in the Naturalist of December, 1911 (xxviii., p. 149), for the Bass Valley by Mr. A. W. Milligan and myself at Easter, 1911. The Bass Valley, it may be mentioned, is situated on the eastern side of Western Port, and at no great distance from Ph illip Island. However, as each of our visits to the island and to the Bass Valley was made during the Easter holdiays, observations at other periods of the year would doubtless add to the lists. The absence of the Spotted Ground-bird, Cinclosoma punctatum, Lath., from the Phillip Island list, and its inclusion in that of the Bass Valley, is perhaps the most interesting result of the comparison, and, while this bird has not yet been recorded for the islands of Bass Strait, it occurs in Tasmania. The presence of the Emu-Wren, Stipiturus malachurus , Shaw, the Orange-tipped Pardalote, Pardalotus assimilis , Ramsay, and the Mistletoe-bird, Dicaeum hirundinaceum, Shaw, upon the island is also of interest. Of the sea-birds found upon the island, the Short-tailed Petrel, or “Mutton-bird,” Puffinus brevicaudus , Gld., and the Little Penguin, Eudyptula minor, Forst., bulk largest in importance. Both these birds are diminishing in numbers every year, and their rookeries are being gradu- ally thinned out. It will be a surprise to many members of the Club to learn that the penguin is not upon the list of birds protected for some portion of the year. As Phillip Island is practically the last stronghold near the mainland of the Mutton-bird and the penguin, it is time they were afforded full protection in this locality. During the excursion some interesting observations were recorded regarding the penguins. The accompanying plate shows the nest of a pair of these birds, containing a young bird. The nest was some 500 yards inland from the sea, and placed high upon the cliff, amongst the tussocks. There were two openings to the burrow, which is unusual. In the foreground of the picture will be seen numbers of feathers scattered in front of the young bird. These are the shed feathers of the second down stage. During recent years it has been found that, many birds, especially penguins and petrels, shed two stages of down prior to acquiring the adult plumage. In the penguin the first down is of a fine, silky, hair-like structure. The young bird in the photograph had donned the adult plumage, which is attained prior to its leaving the nest and entering the sea.” From The Victorian Naturalist XXX, pp. 33-34, June 12, 1913 Vol 130 (1) 2013 21 Research Reports Sleeping aggregations of bees in relation to the risk of fire at their roosting sites in a forested, suburban landscape in eastern Australia PJ Kubiak PO Box 439, Ryde, NSW 1680, Australia Abstract Sleeping aggregations of at least 13 bee species (from the families Halictidae, Apidae, Colletidae and Meg- achilidae) were observed in the forested and fire-prone landscape of the Lane Cove River valley, in suburban, northern Sydney, NSW, Australia, during the years 2002-2012. Bees were often found roosting at sites subjec- tively assessed as having a lower risk of being burnt. The fire risk of the observed sleeping aggregation sites may have been reduced by bees: 1. roosting in smaller vegetation patches, separated by a clearing from larger, nearby areas of vegetation; or 2. roosting in areas of vegetation recently burnt by fire and therefore at a reduced risk of burning; or 3. roosting at or near the edges of vegetation, giving them a chance to escape into adjacent cleared areas, if a fire arrived when there was enough light for the bees to see and fly away; or 4. roosting at or near the edges of tracks or trails, which might act as fire breaks in the event of lower intensity fires; or 5. using combinations of some of the above four ‘strategies’. This study suggests that sleeping aggregations of bees in this fire-prone area generally appeared to have a tendency to occupy roosting sites that were at a lower risk of being burnt, or sites that probably provided more opportunities for the bees to escape an approaching fire. There are a few indications in the published literature that some bee and wasp species in other fire-prone regions of the world may also have a tendency to occupy lower fire risk roosting sites. ( The Victorian Naturalist 130 (1)2013,22-36). Keywords: bee, fire, sleeping aggregation, communal roost, wasp Introduction Communal roosting has been observed in a number of insect groups (reviewed by Yackel Adams 1999), including butterflies (Lepidop- tera) (Mallet 1986; Finkbeiner et al. 2012), bees and wasps (Hymenoptera) (see references below), dragonflies (Odonata) (Corbet 1999), beetles (Coleoptera) (Pearson and Anderson 1985; Webb 1994), flies (Diptera) (Allee 1927) and owlflies (Neuroptera) (Gomes-Filho 2000). Communal roosting has also been recorded for harvestmen (Opiliones) (Donaldson and Grether 2007). The males (and occasionally females) of soli- tary bee species have been observed often gath- ering in the evening to sleep together at night, in both Australia and worldwide (Rau and Rau 1916; Rayment 1935; Linsley 1958; Evans and Linsley 1960; Linsley 1962; Michener 1974; Houston 1984; O’Toole and Raw 1991; Dollin et al. 2000; Alves-dos-Santos et al. 2009; and see images posted on the internet, e.g. www.aus- traliannativebees.com). Similar behaviour has also often been observed in male and female wasps (Banks 1902; Bradley 1908; Rau and Rau 1916; Rau 1938; Evans and Linsley 1960; Lins- ley 1962; Evans and Gillaspy 1964; Callan 1984; O’Neill 2001; Evans and O’Neill 2007). The term generally applied to communal roosting in bees and wasps is sleeping aggregation’. Male bees can form loose or dense sleeping aggrega- tions, occasionally consisting of several spe- cies and ranging from a few bees to hundreds of individuals (Rayment 1935; Michener 1974; O’Toole and Raw 1991). Sometimes female bees may also be found sleeping near the males (Rayment 1935; Linsley 1962; Michener 1974). Typically, however, the females of most solitary bee species spend the night in nests, whereas the males of various species sleep together in communal roosts (Linsley 1958; Evans and Lin- sley 1960). Bee sleeping aggregations tend to form to- wards the end of the day and, weather permit- ting, disband again the next morning (Evans and Linsley 1960; Linsley 1962; Alcock 1998). Roosting sites may be used by groups of male bees on successive nights for prolonged periods and the same sites are sometimes used by fol- lowing generations of male bees in subsequent years (Evans and Linsley 1960; Linsley 1962; Alcock 1998; Wcislo 2003). 22 The Victorian Naturalist Research Reports The most common type of sleeping aggre- gation probably involves male bees attaching themselves, either by the jaws and/or with their legs, to the stems or leaves of living or dead plants. Less commonly, males of various bee species may form sleeping aggregations in flowers, in communal burrows, under bark, in crevices or cracks, on seed pods and in bird nests (Rayment 1935; Linsley 1958; Cazier and Linsley 1963; Linsley and Cazier 1972; Raw 1976; Maynard 1991; O’Toole and Raw 1991; Azevedo and Faria 2007). In denser aggrega- tions some of the bees may rest on top of each other, without contacting the substrate (Cazier and Linsley 1963). One of the intriguing aspects of these sleeping aggregations is that, whilst some male bees may compete aggressively with each other for mates during the daytime, the same individuals can be capable of peacefully roosting together at night (Raw 1976; O’Toole and Raw 1991). The reason(s) for the formation of bee and wasp sleeping aggregations have apparently not been well understood (Rau and Rau 1916; Evans and Linsley 1960; Michener 1974; Dol- lin et al 2000; Wcislo 2003; Alves-dos-Santos et al. 2009; Matthews and Matthews 2010). A number of researchers have put forward pos- sible explanations for this phenomenon, often focusing on protection from predators and/or on thermoregulatory benefits (Rayment 1935; Rayment 1956; Evans and Linsley 1960; Linsley and Cazier 1972; Freeman and Johnston 1978; Callan 1984; Alcock 1998; Silva et al. 2011). A social function was suggested as a possible rea- son for sleeping aggregations in Steniolia obli- qua wasps (Crabronidae) by Evans and Gillaspy (1964). However, it would appear that none of these explanations has been definitely proven (see Yackel Adams 1999, for a discussion of the possible function(s) and adaptive significance of communal roosting in bees and other insects). Similar and additional explanations have been suggested to account for aggregative behaviour in a wide range of animal species (Allee 1927; Ward and Zahavi 1973; Stephens and Suther- land 1999; Stephens et al. 1999; Marzluff et al. 1996; Bell et al. 2007; Grether and Donaldson 2007; Finkbeiner et al. 2012). Matthews and Matthews (2010) considered that sleeping aggregations of bees are not in- Vol 130 (1) 2013 ternally organised and do not involve co-op- erative behaviour. However, it is possible that such aggregations might be an early step along the path towards the more co-operative behav- iour of complex insect societies, as indicated by Rau and Rau (1916) and Rayment (1956). Ag- gregation pheromones may be involved in the formation of sleeping aggregations in bees and wasps (see Freeman and Johnston 1978; Alcock 1998; Wcislo 2003; Silva et al. 2011). Aggrega- tion pheromones have been reported for a di- verse range of non-social arthropods, including a few species of Hymenoptera ( Wertheim et al. 2005). Fire is important in shaping many terrestrial ecosystems in Australia and worldwide. Some researchers have studied the effects of fire on bee communities (Potts et al. 2003; Moretti et al. 2009; Grundel et al. 2010) and on individual bee species (Stow et al. 2007; Maynard and Rao 2010; Cane and Neff 2011). The aim of this current study is to explore whether there might be a relationship between the roosting sites of bee sleeping aggregations and the risk of fire at those sites in the bushland of northern Sydney. Study area Observations for this study were made in the Lane Cove River valley of suburban northern Sydney, NSW, Australia. Surviving natural veg- etation in the study area includes open-forest, tall forest, woodland, heathland, rainforest, riparian shrubland, mangrove forest, rushland and saltmarsh (Clarke and Benson 1987; Ben- son and Howell 1990; Benson and Howell 1994; Martyn 2010). Much of the surviving bushland in the Lane Cove River area is sclerophyllous, is situated on sandstone and has been broadly described by Keith (2004) as the Sydney Coast- al Dry Sclerophyll Forests. This bushland has undergone varying degrees of fragmentation and the majority of the Lane Cove River catch- ments natural vegetation has been cleared, for timber, agriculture and subsequently for sub- urban development, which has intensified in recent years. A more or less contiguous band of bushland survives along the course of the river and some of its tributaries. The largest areas of native vegetation occur in the upper reaches. Introduced weed species frequently 23 Research Reports dominate the study areas watercourses and also disturbed places, such as bushland edges. Even so, the study area still has a high diversity of na- tive plant species. Much of the vegetation in this study area could be described as ‘fire-prone’, in the sense that it is likely to be burnt quite frequently. The sclero- phyllous vegetation is the most ‘fire-prone’, but areas containing rainforest species, mangroves, rushland and saltmarsh may also be burnt under extreme weather conditions. However, some patches of sclerophyllous bushland in the study area may escape being burnt for relatively long periods of time. Arson and planned fires set by bushland managers (for the purposes of hazard reduction and ecological management) are probably the two most common causes of bushfire in the Lane Cove River area in recent times. Occasionally, large wildfires have swept through the valley, e.g. in January 1994. Such fires can reach high intensities, depending on fuel levels in the bushland and weather condi- tions at the time of burning. Smaller bushfires occur fairly frequently in the Lane Cove River valley. Methods In the years 2002-2012 some bushland areas in the Lane Cove River valley were searched for sleeping aggregations of bees. Generally, searches were conducted in the late afternoon. The first aggregation was found by chance in 2002, when I was not looking for roosting bees. The pattern of searching tended to be biased towards looking along walking tracks, serv- ice trails and the edges of bushland because such places are easier to search. I attempted to counteract this bias by also searching bushland away from tracks and trails. Narrow tracks sur- rounded by thick, unburnt bushland were also searched and these were considered to be a very high fire risk situation for any bees that might have been found roosting along them. Several aggregations were found in a suburban garden in the vicinity of the Lane Cove River, located well away from the nearest bushland. A few bees (from eight species) were taken from a handful of the observed aggregations and sent for iden- tification to Michael Batley, who also identified some bees from photographs. However, the bee species in the majority of the sleeping ag- gregations were tentatively identified (without capturing the bees) by consulting Dollin et al. (2000) and by referring to the identifications, provided by Michael Batley, of similar looking bees. Some bees were not identified and these are grouped together as ‘unidentified species’ in Table 1. The number of bees in the smaller aggregations was counted, whilst bee numbers were estimated for larger aggregations. The fire risk of each roosting site was subjec- tively assessed, taking into account character- istics such as the proximity and density of ad- jacent vegetation, the amount of leaf litter and other fuels present and the length of time since the last fire. Other factors that could potentially have modified the risk of fire to the bees were also noted, including whether the sleeping ag- gregation was situated on the edge of the bush- land area, or next to a service trail or walking track. Roosting sites were given a subjective fire risk rating, ranging from very low to very high. Even when rain had recently fallen at a roosting site, the fire risk was assessed on the basis of what the risk would have been at the site under dry conditions. It was considered that, even in wetter periods, bushland could dry out quite quickly in the event of a run of successive hot, dry days without rainfall. Results Observations of bee sleeping aggregations made during this study are summarised in Table 1 . At least 1 3 bee species (from the families Halictidae, Apidae, Colletidae and Megachili- dae) were observed forming communal roosts. In some years more effort was put into search- ing for sleeping aggregations than in other years and this may largely account for variations in the numbers of aggregations found in different years. Generally, the number of bees found in roosts tended to peak in late spring to early or mid-summer. Sometimes sleeping aggregations persisted into late summer or autumn, but the numbers of bees aggregating at those times of the year were generally smaller. Of the small number of bees taken for identification, all were found to be males (M. Batley pers. comms.). Species from all of the bee families occurring in the study area were observed forming sleep- ing aggregations. 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(N (N S (N (J 3 QQ^QZQ^ O (N ™ VH 3 «2 O O O cj CJ CJ CJ QQ cu QQ o ON o o 04 O cS T o3 T o U4 o3 (J > > > > > O O O O O O O 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3^33 i 33 i 3q i 3^3X,33 i Co Co Co Co Co Co Co w w w -3 X X X X -X X .u co co .to .vo .vo vo ■ bi -b -t: - v " ■b -b -h -b -h ooooooooooooooo •2 s -2 s •2 < •2 -1 -2 s -2^ -2 s -2 s -2^ -2 s -2- 1 •2 h -2^ ■2-' -2 s x x *x X 1 — j ^ ‘ — j x xj >x >x xj > — j xj x s^. ^ ^ >. V- V- o o o o o o o • 2 ’- 2 '- 2 -. 2 ^. 2 h. 2 -- c ^ x x x x x x x H-» 03 C X a> - § £ X 1/3 r S-c 5-1 50 males) and numerous freshly deposited foam nests around clumps of aquatic vegeta- tion. Most nests were aggregated amongst a 9 m 2 patch of Spikerush Eleocharis sphaecelata where they were exposed to dappled sunlight or else were completely shaded. A total of 27 nests were located in this patch. The site was visited over four consecutive days and nests inspected for the presence of leeches and other invertebrates on each occasion. Water temperature approximately 10 cm below the surface varied between 21-24°C at midday over the four days. Leeches were observed on the foam caps of L. tasmaniensis nests on each day. All of the leeches appeared to belong to the same species and were uniform black in colour and approx. 50-60 mm in length. (Leeches were not able to be identified to genus (or species) level ow- ing to the lack of an appropriate identification guide at the time.) The leeches were observed typically lying completely still on the foam cap of the nests with the head and anterior body buried down through the foam cap into the gelatinous egg mass below. While most of the affected nests contained a single leech, on three nests there were two, and on one nest, three leeches. On three nests the surface of the foam caps had dried to a polystyrene- like consistency and leeches had attached themselves to the side of the nest where they were just visible above the water line. Nests around the periphery of the aggregation were most affected by leeches while only one leech was recorded on a nest near the ‘centre’. On the first day, three of the leeches (taken from nests outside of the aggregation) were eutha- nised and found to contain numerous (> 10), mostly intact frog’s eggs. The incidence of leeches on foam nests re- mained fairly constant over the four days, af- fecting about one-third of all nests (30-37%; Vol 130 (I) 2013 49 Naturalist Notes Table 1). By the fourth day, the eggs of seven nests had begun to hatch and most of the others were close to hatching (Gosner stages 20-25; Duellman and Trueb 1986). Two nests were occupied by leeches for up to three con- secutive days. Eight leeches closely examined on the fourth day had noticeably distended bodies, indicating recent feeding. Other arthropods located on the foam caps of nests included (total number in parenthe- sis): ants (6), aquatic snails (5), spiders (4), caterpillars (3), millipedes (2) and dipterans (8). As none of these arthropods appeared to be feeding directly on the eggs, it is likely that these occurrences were quite incidental and represent fauna displaced by flooding (although see Discussion). The percentage of nests with other arthropods was consist- ent over the three days they were recorded (14-16%; Table 1). In addition to the observations above, I have since made very similar observations at two other (nearby) sites: 2. Approximately 3 km south of the above site, beside the Darebin Creek in Bundoora, two leeches were located on separate, recently deposited L. tasmaniensis nests in a rela- tively small ephemeral pond following rain in January. 3. At Somerton (37°63’S, 144°95’E) near the southern boundary of Craigieburn Grasslands, four leeches were located separately on the foam caps of freshly laid L. tasmaniensis nests partially concealed by Poa sp. tussocks and de- posited in a large ephemeral pond which had been filled by heavy rain in November. At all three localities the leeches found on L. tasmaniensis nests appeared to be the same species. These leeches were occasionally caught in dip-nets skimmed through water around the periphery of large ponds and swamps at the sites, indicating their aquatic habit. While L. tasmaniensis has frequently been observed to breed in small ephemeral ponds (n > 15), no leeches were ever observed on nests deposited in these ponds. Leeches were never observed as ectoparasites of L. tasmaniensis larvae or adult frogs at any of the sites, despite regular visits over more than ten years. Discussion The sanguivorous habit of many terrestrial and aquatic leeches is well known and leeches have been documented as ecto and endopara- sites of both frogs and their larvae (Waite 1925; Mann and Tyler 1963; Brockelman 1969; Tyler 1976; Duellman and Trueb 1986; Sawyer 1986 and references therein; McCallum et al. 2011). By contrast the literature on leeches as mac- rophagous predators of frog spawn, though relatively small, has been largely neglected or omitted entirely from consideration in reviews of both leech and amphibian biology (Duell- man and Trueb 1986; Govedich 2001; Toledo 2005; Romano and Di Cerbo 2007). A relatively recent literature review by Romano and Di Cer- bo (2007) found that anuran egg predation by leeches had been documented in some 20 spe- cies, representing 3.6% of the total number of anuran species in those regions where anuran leech predation occurred. That some leech species should consume frog spawn is curious Table 1. The frequency of occurrence of leeches and other arthropods on 27 foam nests of the Spotted Marsh Frog Limnodynastes tasmaniensis monitored over a four day period. Day Number of Leeches % of nests with Leeches % of nests with other arthropods 1 11 30 15 2 15 37 16 3 16 37 14 4 10 33 - 50 The Victorian Naturalist Naturalist Notes because it occurs in spite of a clear adaptation they have to piercing the skin of mammals (Cargo 1960) and other vertebrates. Limnody- nastes tasmaniensis is the only Australian frog species in which this kind of predation has been documented to date. The presence of leeches on L. tasmaniensis nests is unlikely to be the result of their dis- placement due to flooding for two reasons: (i) I had only ever located them in water and thus their presence on the top or sides of foam nests above the water level (in many instances) is at odds with this habit, and (ii) in all instances the head of the leech was protruding down through the foam cap into the egg mass, consistent with their being engaged in feeding. Even if the leeches were present on foam nests due to disturbance of some kind, the small sample of leeches found to have consumed frog spawn indicates opportunistic feeding was occurring. The number of leeches recorded on individual foam nests in this work must, however, be con- sidered an underestimate as only a few nests were thoroughly examined for leeches residing amongst the egg mass or the portion of the egg mass below the water (and none were located). The impact that the leeches had on individual nests was not apparently severe since their pres- ence did not seem to affect the integrity of the nests and the relatively warm conditions meant that egg development was rapid, ensuring that most eggs hatched to produce larvae. The occurrence of dipterans on nests, while possibly incidental, is worthy of closer exami- nation as the parasitisation of frog spawn by dipteran larvae has been documented to occur in various other anuran species (Bokermann 1957; Tyler 1976; Villa et al. 1982; Menin and Giaretta 2003). Furthermore six South Ameri- can leptodactylidae frog species (that produce foam nests similar to L. tasmaniensis) were found to suffer significant predation from dip- teran larvae (Menin and Giaretta 2003). It seems remarkable, given how common L. tasmaniensis is in south-eastern Australia, and the conspicuousness of black leeches on the contrasting white foam nests, that leech pre- dation had not been reported until relatively recently. This may indicate that leech preda- tion does not occur in all breeding situations, or is limited by the distribution and/or habitat preferences of the particular species of leech in- volved. Burgin and Schell (2005) reported the leech B assianob della fusca feeding on L. tasmanien- sis foam nests from a wetland near Sydney and most of the observations described above are consistent with their work. For instance, the timing of the observations in both cases was summer (or late spring), coinciding with maxi- mum leech activity, and both sets of observa- tions occurred in large ephemeral water bodies. One notable point of difference was that Burgin and Schell (op. cit.) observed that leeches con- sumed ova only in Gosner stages 1-14, which meant that clutches were vulnerable to preda- tion only in the first 24 hours following ovipo- sition; observations in this work indicate that leeches remained on spawn clumps, apparently continuing to feed, for up to four days. It would be useful to know if this same leech species was also responsible for predation events described in this work, and further, whether leeches are able to consume larger and more developmen- tally advanced larvae (i.e. Gosner stages >14). Finally, Hakansson and Loman (2004) have shown that spawn located in the centre of com- munal aggregations of the Common Frog Rana temporaria suffered markedly less leech pre- dation compared to those on the periphery. A similar pattern of leech predation was noted in this work and may be worthy of more detailed examination. References Barker J, Grigg GC and Tyler MJ (1995) A Field Guide to Australian Frogs. (Surrey Beatty & Sons: Chipping Norton, NSW) Bokermann WCA (1957) Frog eggs parasitized by dipterous larvae. Herpetologica 13, 231-232. Brockelman WY (1969) An analysis of density effects and predation in Bufo americanus tadpoles. Ecology 50, 632- 644. Burgin S and Schell CB (2005) Frog eggs: unique food source for the leech Bassianobdella fusca. Acta Zoologica Sinica , 51, 349-353. Cargo DG (1960) Predation of eggs of the spotted salaman- der, Ambystoma maculatum , by the leech Macrobdella decora. Chesapeake Science 1(3), 119-120. Davies M, Tyler MJ and Martin AA (1979) Frogs Preyed on by Ants? The Victorian Naturalist 96(3), 97. Duellman W E and Trueb L (1986) Biology of Amphibians. (McGraw-Hill: New York) Gillespie, GR and Hero, J-M (1999) Potential impacts of introduced fish and fish translocations on Australian am- phibians. In Declines and Disappearances of Australian Frogs, pp. 137-145. Ed A Campbell. (Environment Aus- tralia: Canberra) Vol 130 (1)2013 51 Naturalist Notes Govedich FR (200 1 ) A Reference Guide to the Ecology and Tax- onomy of Freshwater and Terrestrial Leeches ( Euhirudinea ) of Australasia and Oceania. (Cooperative Research Centre for Freshwater Ecology, Identification Guide No. 35: Thur- goona, NSW) Hakansson P and Loman J (2004) Communal spawning in the Common Frog Rana temporaria - Egg temperature and predation consequences. Ethology 110 , 665-680. Hero JM, Littlejohn M and Marantelli G (1991) Frogwatch Field Guide to Victorian Frogs. (Department of Conserva- tion & Environment: Melbourne) Littlejohn MJ (2003) Frogs of Tasmania. Fauna of Tasmania, Handbook No. 6. 2 edn. (University of Tasmania: Hobart) Littlejohn MJ and Wainer JW (1978) Carabid beetle preying on frogs. The Victorian Naturalist 95, 251-252. Mann KH and Tyler MJ (1963) Leeches as endoparasites of frogs. Nature (London) 197 , 1224-1225. McCallum ML, Moser WE, Wheeler BA and Trauth SE (2011) Amphibian infestation and host size preference by the leech Placobdella picta (Verrill, 1872) (Hirudinida: Rhynchobdellida: Glossiphoniidae) from the Eastern Ozarks, USA. Herpetology Notes 4, 147-151. Menin M and Giaretta AA (2003) Predation on foam nests of leptodactyline frogs (Anura: Leptodactylidae) by larvae of Beckeriella niger (Diptera: Ephydridae). Journal of Zoology (London) 261 , 239-243. Morgan LA and Buttemer WA (1996) Predation by the non- native fish Gambusia holbrooki on small Litoria aurea and L. dentata tadpoles. Australian Zoologist 30(2), 143-149. Parker HW (1940) The Australasian frogs of the family Lep- todactylidae. Novitates Zoologicae 42, 1-106. Romano A and Di Cerbo AR (2007) Leech predation on Am- phibian eggs. Acta Zoological Sinica 53, 750-754. Sawyer RT (1986) Leech Biology and Behavior. Volumes I, II & III. (Clarendon Press: Oxford) Toledo, LF (2005) Predation of juvenile and adult anurans by invertebrates: current knowledge and perspectives. Herpe- tological Reviews 36, 395-400. Tyler MJ (1976) Frogs (Collins: Sydney) Tyler MJ (1994) Australian Frogs - a natural history. (Reed Books: Chatswood, NSW) Tyler MJ and Davies M (1979) Foam nest construction by Australian Leptodactylid Frogs (Amphibia, Anura, Lepto- dactylidae). Journal of Herpetology 13 , 509-510. Villa J, McDiarmid RW and Gallardo JM (1982) Arthropod predators of leptodactylid frog foam nests. Brenesia 19 / 20 , 577-589. Waite ER (1925) Field notes on some Australian reptiles and a batrachian. Records of the South Australian Museum 3, 17-32. Grant S Turner 103 Settlement Road Bundoora, Victoria 3083 One Hundred and Twenty-two Years Ago Notes On The Planarian Worms Obtained On The Upper Wellington. BY ARTHUR DENDY 1. Geoplana howitti, species nova. — Unfortunately only a single specimen of this worm was found, but it is a well marked and very beautiful species. The ground colour of the dorsal surface is yellowish white. In the middle line there is a fairly broad band of the ground colour, and on each side of this a stripe of about equal width of dark purplish brown, then a rather broader band of ground colour thickly flecked with dark purplish brown and edged on the outside by a fine line of the same. Outside this is a very narrow margin of ground colour. All the dark bands unite at each end. The ventral surface is pale yellowish white or grey, with no markings. 2. Geoplana lucasi, Dendy. — This is a remarkable and very rare planarian, of unusually large size, and with black and white markings. It was hitherto known only from three specimens found on the top of the coast ranges in the Croajingolong district, on the occasion of the Club's expedition to that locality, and described (from spirit specimens only) by me in the " Transactionsof the Royal Society of Victoria." Only a single specimen was found. 3. Geoplana quadrangulata , Dendy. — A small variety of this remarkable species was found in abundance. Hitherto it has only been recorded from Macedon, and in very small numbers. 4. Geoplana frosti, Spencer. — This species was recently discovered on the Clubs expedition to the Yarra Falls, and is described by Professor Spencer in the “Transactions of the Royal Society of Victoria.” We obtained one small specimen. 5. Geoplana alba, Dendy. — We obtained several fine examples of this common planarian. 6. Geoplana sulplmrea, Fletcher and Hamilton. — This species was common. From The Victorian Naturalist , VIII, pp. 43-44, June - July, 1891 52 The Victorian Naturalist Tribute Dorothy Mahler 28 February 1941 - 12 December 2012 Dorothy Mahler was elected to the FNCV in 1985 and within a few years began an active con- tribution to the operation of the Club that was to continue until the end of 2012. In that time she occupied a range of positions within the Club. Dorothy’s natural history subject of choice was birdlife but she had wide ranging interests and was an active member of both the Botany Group, of which she was Assistant Secretary in 1989, and the Geology Group. She contributed reports on excursions undertaken by these groups as well as occasional reports of meetings of the Fauna Survey Group. On two occasions, having taken part in the Annual Camp of the Victorian Field Naturalists Clubs Association, she provided reports that detailed the activities that took place. For more than 20 years Dorothy was involved in most aspects of production of the Club’s newsletter, Field Nats News. From its first issue, in November 1990, until the December 1992/ January 1993 issue, it was Dorothy who typed up and laid out the material, in her spare time at her work place. She would then deliver it to a nearby ‘Pink Panther’, for printing. In the early days of Field Nats News, Dorothy and Noel Schleiger between them also did all the colla- tion of the 500 plus copies of the newsletter. Dorothy continued to assist with collation well past issue no. 200. As well as her role with the newsletter, Dorothy contributed to the smooth operation of the Clubs journal. From 2001 until October 2012 Dorothy undertook the essential task of sending complimentary copies of The Victorian Naturalist to authors, following the publication of each issue. In June 1990 Dorothy took on the role of Excursion Secretary. Until she stepped down in May 1998 she organised, was the contact point for, took part in (often as leader), and re- ported on dozens of FNCV general excursions. All parts of the metropolitan area, as well as locations within easy driving distance of Mel- bourne, were covered. During this period Dor- othy was also the FNCV Tour Operator, and organised what became memorable interstate trips. Destinations included Binna Burra, with- in Lamington National Park in Queensland (August 1991); the northern coast of Tasmania (11-24 January 1992); Kangaroo Island (10-23 October 1993); Lake Mungo and Mootwingee (26 August-7 September 1995) and the Mount Kosciusko area (17-25 January 1997). Extend- ed trips were planned and undertaken also to the Grampians (six days in October 1992) and south-western Victoria (three days in March 1993). Vol 130 (1) 2013 53 Book Reviews In 1994, the same time that she was organising some of these activities, Dorothy also served as a member of FNCV Council. Dorothy was made an Honorary Member of FNCV in August 2012, along with her partner, Noel Schleiger, for their individual and joint contributions to the Club. Dorothy’s input to FNCV was wide-ranging, significant and en- during. As Valda Dedman wrote in 2005 (The Victorian Naturalist 122: 309) ‘Dorothy Mahler is a great worker . . . She represents the indis- pensable ‘backroom girls’ not on Council, but essential to the Club.’ Gary Presland 40 William Street Box Hill 3128 Wetland Weeds: Causes, Cures and Compromises by Nick Romanowski Publisher: CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria 2011. 140 pages, paperback, colour photographs. ISBN 9780643103955. RRP $49.95. Nick Romanowski has been infatuated with indigenous wetland plants for over four dec- ades and his passion shows in Wetland Weeds: Causes, Cures and Compromises , a book written in his endeavours to educate people about the dangers of using introduced plants in aquaria and ponds or water gardens. His efforts are com- mendable. Weeds of waterways have many costs — environmental, economic and cultural. They can out-compete desired native plants, thus reducing biodiversity; form dense infestations that clog waterways, making their navigation difficult and impeding recreational activities, irrigation and industrial processes; and divert waterflow, resulting in erosion and/or flooding. Weeds also can be difficult and costly to eradi- cate. There is much information concerning the problems caused by aquatic weeds (e.g. Adair and Groves 1998; Groves et al. 2005), as well as examples of the cost of their management, such as $1.6 million for the Salvinia infestation in the Hawkesbury-Nepean River in 2004 (Gorham 2008 ) and $140000 per annum for Cabomba caroliniana Fanwort in Lake Macdonald in the Noosa biosphere in Queensland (Moran 2009). As Romanowski says (page 13), the primary theoretical defence against weeds is educa- tion. I would have preferred, therefore, that the sections in Chapter 1 on problems caused by weeds and the causes of weediness, had provid- ed much greater detail. The chapter, however, does provide a good overview of what a weed is and the legal and official categories of weeds. Chapter 2 discusses prevention, different types of control and management of weeds. The author pragmatically explains the importance of differentiating between the various types and levels of threat posed by weeds and the likelihood of eradication or control. At times, however, he tends to ramble and rely on his 54 The Victorian Naturalist Book Reviews own opinions rather than scientific evidence. Weed management is complex and dependent on scale and local conditions as well as local regulations; it would have been useful if this had been discussed in some detail. Moreover, the treatments of the various control methods are cursory, especially considering the volume of information available in the literature. I would have preferred to see an actual literature review of control methods for aquatic systems with appropriate citations, so the reader could consider other viewpoints. However, a list of websites, including government websites, and references are included at the end of the book and provides the reader with the opportunity to do this. The section on assessment and plan- ning raises some important points and provides a useful list of key issues that should be includ- ed in any management program. An important point that was not covered related to the im- portance of understanding the local ecology of the weeds. In certain circumstances removal of weeds can be harmful to fauna that depend on them (Carlos and Gibson 2010; Jayawardana et al. 2010), or may cause erosion of banks (Zu- kowski and Gawne 2006). Thus, weed removal should be carried out in gradual stages in con- junction with planting of natives, to replace the environmental services provided by the weeds. In Chapter 3 Romanowski discusses how Australian native plants can, and have, become weeds, an important topic little recognised by the public. He then proceeds to discuss the origins, uses, preferred growth conditions, species that can be confused with each other, environmental impacts and values and control and management of minor indigenous wet- land weeds. Species are discussed under the genus in which they occur. This is disconcert- ing as not all species within these genera are weeds. Chapter 4 presents a compendium of weeds and largely follows the format used for minor indigenous wetland weeds in Chapter 3. In Chapter 4, however, the weeds are firstly divided into: grasses; sedges, rushes and other relatives of grasses; other wetland weeds; hardy waterlilies, tropical waterlilies; algae and cyano- bacteria and seaweeds. These two chapters are useful and provide the reader with a good idea of what the problem plants are and for which species they should be on the alert. Thirty-two coloured plates are included and depict various weedscapes, highlighting the in- vasive nature of many of the species pictured. Other photographs are useful identification aids. The photographic plates are grouped to- gether between pages 30 and 31 but I am sure many readers would prefer a coloured pho- tograph of each species in the compendium, alongside their associated information. The glossary provides informal definitions of more unusual terms and would be useful to those unfamiliar with such terms. I feel the book is a little overpriced but it would make a useful addition to the library of those who care for our wetland environments. It would facilitate their recognition of what plants to remove when re- storing a wetland, which to use in revegetation of a wetland or creation of a new wetland, even if this wetland is only a small pond in the back- yard. References Adair RJ and Groves RH (1998) Impact of environmen- tal weeds on biodiversity: a review and development of a methodology. Occasional Publication, National Weeds Program, Environment Australia, Canberra. Carlos EH and Gibson M (2010) The habitat value of Gorse Ulex europaeus L. and Hawthorn Crataegus mongyna Jacq. For birds in Quarry Hills Bushland Park, Victoria. The Vic- torian Naturalist 127, 115-124. Gorham P (2008) Aquatic weed management in waterways and dams. Primefacts profitable and sustainable primary industries. Primefact 30. http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/ data/assets/pdf_file/0020/256403/ Aquatic- weed-manage- ment-in-waterways-and-dams.pdf accessed 5 September 2012 . Groves RH, Boden R and Lonsdale WM (2005) Jumping the Garden Fence; Invasive garden plants in Australia and their environmental and agricultural impacts. A CSIRO report for WWF- Australia. Jayawardana JMCK, Westbrooke M and Wilson M (2010) Leaf litter decomposition and utilisation by macroinverte- brates in a central Victorian river in Australia. The Victo- rian Naturalist 127, 104-114. Moran P (2009) Aquatic weeds so what? http://noosa- biosphere.org.au/_blog/Environment_Blog/post/aquatic_ weedsso_what accessed 5 September 2012. Zukowski S and Gawne B (2006) Potential effects of Willow (Salix spp.) removal on freshwater ecosystem dynamics: a literature review. Report for the North East Catchment Management Authority. Murray-Darling Freshwater Re- search Centre, Wodonga. Maria Gibson Environmental Sustainability Research Group Deakin University 221 Burwood Highway Burwood, Victoria 3125 Vol 130 (1) 2013 55 Book Reviews Kangaroos by Terence Dawson Publisher: CSIRO publishing, Collingwood, 2012. 216 pages, paperback. ISBN 9780643106253. RRP $ 39.95 In 19% in an editorial in the esteemed jour- nal Conservation Biology the then editor Reed Noss wrote an article provocatively titled ‘Are the Naturalists Dying Off?’, in which he decried the loss of natural history skills in modern day conservation biologists. He wrote how impor- tant natural history was in providing the rigor- ous, first-hand observations that underpinned conservation biology and provided the data for predictive models, hypothesis posing and even enthusiasm for the newly emerging discipline. The Australian Natural History Series (initially published by UNSW Press but now by CSIRO Publishing) is an excellent series that has over the years provided that wonderful nexus be- tween natural history and science — a science that is challenged to account for astute observa- tions made in the field. Kangaroos, now in its second edition, is an exemplar in the series and written by one of Australia’s leaders in the field of marsupial biology, Terry Dawson. A good example of this interrelationship be- tween natural history and science is from my own field of marsupial thermoregulation. Kan- garoos and wallabies have been observed to lie in the heat with their naked areas of skin ex- posed; further, they lick their fur and pant like dogs. Conventional wisdom explained these observations by (correctly) stating heat loss is enhanced by peripheral vasodilatation of the blood vessels in the unfurred skin — the process having the quaint descriptor of ‘opening up the thermal windows’; panting and fur licking are examples of evaporative cooling. Kangaroos at rest do not sweat, yet micro- scopic examination of their skin reveals ad- vanced sweat glands - the so called eccrine glands - which produce sweat in other animals. Furthermore, kangaroo hunters have described how animals that have been chased are often covered in sweat. Dawsons laboratory has undertaken ex- periments to demonstrate that kangaroos do indeed sweat, but only when exercising. As well, his team has shown that fur licking was not a primitive adaptive response to heat but instead, an advanced one in which saliva is smeared over the wrist areas which have super- ficial blood vessels; the evaporation thus cools the blood very effectively. These examples illustrate the underlying theme of the book— observations and the un- derpinning science that offers explanations. After introductory chapters on evolution and diversity of kangaroos, there are chapters on population structure, social organisation, re- production, feeding, water and temperature regulation and finally chapters on human di- mensions of kangaroo interactions and man- agement. These were the same chapters as in the first 56 The Victorian Naturalist Book Reviews edition. So what has been changed? The first major addition has been the inclusion of more data to substantiate and illustrate the biology of kangaroos. For example, we now have a graph showing that kangaroos have an amazing ability to increase speed of hopping with little increase in metabolic rate (and thus energy expendi- ture). Methods of age estimation of animals are provided in some detail. There are some other minor improvements: there is now one consoli- dated reference list instead of listing references per chapter. Secondly, the material has been significantly updated. I have reviewed some new editions of books that have barely changed; this is not the case with Kangaroos. Indeed, I counted some 47 new references published since the original edition. The book is written well and is illus- trated to good effect. Who is the audience for this book? I would expect naturalists who ponder on the signifi- cance and adaptive advantages of behaviour, physiology and anatomy would enjoy the book. Scientists will appreciate its rigorous, evidence- based approach. It is not a coffee table book (al- though there are 16 colour plates); rather, it is a book that seeks to demonstrate and explain the remarkable, advanced adaptations kangaroos have to their many environments. Rob Wallis Horsham Campus Research Precinct University of Ballarat Horsham, Victoria 3402 Australia’s Amazing Kangaroos: Their conservation, unique biology and coexistence with humans by Ken Richardson Publisher: CSIRO publishing , Collingwood, 2012. 240 pages, paperback. ISBN: 9780643097391. RRP $ 49.95 Some years ago at an international conference I had difficulty in explaining to some delegates from where I came. Some thought I came from Austria, while others were convinced I came from the UK. The problem was solved by my hopping briefly with arms in front — aha, Aus- tralia, they all said at once. Kangaroos = Aus- tralian! Ken Richardsons excellent book aims to ‘bridge the ever-widening gap between the mountains of detailed information found in the serious scientific literature and the many members of the public who wish to be better informed about Australia’s iconic kangaroos. In todays rapidly changing world, the better we are informed about our native animals the bet- ter their prospects for survival’ (page v). The result is a scientifically authoritative, con- temporary, beautifully illustrated book that is KIN Kk'H.AKDSON AUST KANG Vol 130 (1) 2013 57 Book Reviews essentially written in two sections. In the first, a brief account of marsupial evolu- tion, kangaroo characteristics and conservation status precedes a species by species account of each member of the suborder Macropo- diformes. This section could be considered an update on Ron Strahans (and Steve Van Dycks updated) seminal work The Mammals of Aus- tralia - complete with the species’ distinctive features, distribution, threatening factors, man- agement actions and an excellent photograph. The second section covers Adaptation and Function (morphological adaptations, mobility and movement, diet, reproduction etc.), Con- servation, and finally Kangaroos and Humans Today, which includes an informative account of the kangaroo harvesting industry. This last chapter distinguishes this book from many others on todays market, including Daw- sons Kangaroos , which I have reviewed previ- ously in this issue (see p. 56). For example, a most useful Appendix outlines procedures to be used when kangaroos are commercially har- vested from the four states in which the indus- try is legally operating. Hopefully this chapter will inform the current and sometimes heated debate about harvesting kangaroos as a useful resource versus protecting a much-loved natu- ral icon. Of course, such a discussion is fraught with challenges, with protagonists arguing from quite different platforms (ethical/moral/aes- thetic versus pragmatic/resource utilisation). This is a well written and well presented book. Its acknowledgements are a who’s who of Aus- tralian mammalogy and the photographs are excellent. So who will gain most by buying the book? Readers will need a reasonable background knowledge of mammalian biology. They will need an understanding of biological terms, although there is a glossary to help a reader’s comprehension. The book will certainly appeal to naturalists - the first section will help in ma- cropodid identification while the latter chap- ters provide anatomical, physiological and be- havioural bases for observations people make in the field. Biology students will enjoy the clear presenta- tion, up to date science and lucid explanation of some quite sophisticated biological concepts. The case studies — Heirisson Prong Peninsula (Shark Bay) reintroduction of the Burrow- ing Bettong and the Proserpine Rock Wallaby recovery plan— provide excellent accounts of conservation management with realistic evalu- ations of their success. In the interests of readability, sources are not cited in the text and the bibliography is thin and quite general. This detracts from its usefulness to researchers and students alike. Steve Van Dyck’s name is misspelled and Emeritus Professor Ian Hume is given two such awards, but these are minor distractions from an other- wise most valuable addition to the popular lit- erature on what most people regard as the most Australian of animals — the kangaroos. Rob Wallis Horsham Campus Research Precinct University of Ballarat Horsham, Victoria 3402 58 The Victorian Naturalist Book Reviews A Natural History of Australian Bats - Working the Night Shift by Greg Richards and Les Hall with photography by Steve Parish Publisher: CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, 2012. viii, 192 pages, hardback, colour photographs. ISBN 9780643103740. RRP $79.95 A Natural History of Australian Bats - Working the Night Shift by Greg Richards and Les Hall is an absolutely tremendous book, which intro- duces the wonderful world of bats. The authors, who have worked for over 40 years on bats (as you can tell), present a broad range of topics on Australian bats in a captivating and descriptive way. With over 400 large beautiful colour photo- graphs, mostly by the acclaimed photographer Steve Parish, it is written for the general pub- lic, naturalists and students. But I am sure that scientists will also find it enjoyable, and learn a few things, as I certainly did. The page size is large — A4 — and so is the text, which is succinct and clear. The text of the book is 184 pages long, and condenses major topics on our current knowledge about Australian bats into eight punchy chapters. The first chapter opens by cultivating a gen- eral fascination about bats, and you can easily see the passion of the authors for these noctur- nal mammals. A short overview of significant events in bat research history follows, includ- ing the development of specialised research equipment. The next chapter, the Travelogue, presents some of the characteristic species, as well as important bat habitats and noteworthy loca- tions for bats from each ‘bat bioregion, from significant islands, down to the major cities in Australia. This part might be especially enjoy- able for grey nomads (bat veteran researchers or enthusiasts). More specific details are then presented in chapters 3 to 5 on the sophisticat- ed and intriguing bat morphology, bat breeding behaviour and general ecology. Ihese chapters constitute nearly one third of the book and pro- vide a great overview as well as interesting facts on major topics in these areas. A disturbing part of the book is chapter 6, where trials and tribulations of being a bat in Australia are described. Short and diverse para- graphs cover a range of issues, from the natu- ral predators of bats to the serious impact of humans and the potential future im- pacts of global warming, clearly showing the risks and threats bats are exposed to. Chapter 7, which refers to the book title, starts by describing the fossil history of bats. It then gives an overview on bats in the culture of Aboriginal Australians, in prehistoric paintings in Australian caves, and goes on to detail the Vol 130 (1) 2013 59 Book Reviews first encounter of European explorers with bats in Australia. Also highlighted are the passion- ate people who rescue and care for injured bats. The closing chapter is devoted to species pro- files, with stunning photos of a large proportion of Australian bats, and associated descriptive information. What I liked especially about this book is that it brings together current knowledge on bats in Australia, and each chapter is presented in a way that can be followed easily even by people who are completely new to the world of bats. In addition, it manages to present factual informa- tion that would intrigue bat scientists, making this an enjoyable read for them too. All readers benefit greatly by the profusion of photographs that enhance the text to make this book a very engaging read. I guarantee that, by the end of this book, readers will be hooked on bats, if they are not hooked already! Tania Straka Australian Research Centre for Urban Ecology (ARCUE) c/o School of Botany The University of Melbourne A Guide to Australia's Spiny Freshwater Crayfish. By Robert B McCormack Publisher: CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic., Paperback 2012. 248 pages, paperback colour photographs. ISBN: 9780643103863. RRP $59.95. From time to time I have been asked to identify freshwater crayfish for environmental manag- ers, curious members of the public or kids. While I know something about marine crusta- ceans, these groups are not my speciality. So a guide is just what I need. This new book is a fine publication but it is not a guide for those who might want to find out the name of a newly caught crayfish. Identification of species, espe- cially in a genus like Euastacus with 50 named species and more yet to be described, is no easy task. To the uninitiated (that’s most of us) tell- ing one from the other is difficult. Gary Mor- gan, whose taxonomic work (1986-1997) is the foundation of current understanding, provided dichotomous keys full of arcane terms and de- manded an appreciation of subtle distinctions. No substitute for these keys is provided in this book— perhaps that is not possible but some of the new information provided here, colour patterns for example, might have proved use- ful. I wonder how the author and his colleagues identify species without resorting to Morgans A GUIDE TO AUSTRALIA'S 60 The Victorian Naturalist Book Reviews works. The section devoted to identification of crayfish relies on division of the species into what the author calls giant’, ‘intermediate’ and ‘dwarf’ spiny crayfish, each group characterised by about 20 morphological, ecological and be- havioural features, some overlapping. I found it difficult to differentiate some of the species tabulated aphabetically on the basis of these characters. The section fails to explain how to tell one species from another. Having said that, A Guide to Australia s Spiny Freshwater Crayfish should have general inter- est. I am a fan of books that cover a well defined taxonomic group, the genus Euastacus in this case, in detail and in a popular format. Three- quarters of the book discusses all 50 species found in Australia in alphabetical order (which is fine if you know the species name of the spe- cies of interest). A colour photograph, ecology, diagnostic features, distribution, colour, size, breeding and conservation status are given for each. We learn that many are uncommon and most are restricted to small catchment areas. In the absence of identification keys, it might have been better to group similar species to- gether and discuss how they differed from their neighbours. The introductory chapters discuss basic crayfish anatomy, moulting and growth, morphology and breeding. A concluding chap- ter evaluates threats from recreational fishing, illegal fishing, climate change, habitat altera- tion, exotic species and diseases. There is a wealth of information in the intro- ductory chapters and for each species. I assume that the author and his colleagues in the Aus- tralian Crayfish Project, a collaboration active since 2005, are responsible for most of it and are to be commended for bringing it together. I was curious why only 27, mostly taxonomic, citations are listed in the References section. A vast number of refereed papers and government reports goes unacknowledged. This literature deals with spiny crayfish physiology, reproduc- tion, life history, evolution, phylogeny, popu- lation genetics, conservation, management, fisheries, diet, behaviour, growth, burrows, Aboriginal use, moulting, pollution tolerance, dispersal, ectoparasites and more (try Euasta- cus in Google Scholar). I list below some key papers from the hundreds I found. The writing style ranges from highly technical to chatty, fact and opinion often intermingled. The technical sections will be beyond many readers - I wonder what are the really diagnos- tic bits in the species diagnoses. Advice on han- dling spiny crayfish is useful but not in a section on anatomy (p. 32). The excellent coloured and labelled illustrations of anatomy (pp. 37-40) seem to stand alone and the difference between ‘small’, ‘medium’ and ‘large’ spines is never ex- plained. Small errors have crept in. The cheli- ped (and in fact all the legs) comprise seven segments, coxa, basis, ischium, merus, carpus, propodus and dactylus in that order, not four as stated. There is only one pair of uropods, each with two branches, not two pairs. This book covers a lot and fills a gap for an im- portant and charismatic group of endemic Aus- tralian crustaceans and for these reasons it is to be recommended. References Crandall, KA, Fetzner JW, Lawler SH, Kinnersley M and Austin CM (1999) Phylogenetic relationships among the Australian and New Zealand genera of freshwater crayfishes (Decapoda: Parastacidae). Australian Journal of Zoology 47, 199-214. Furse JM and Coughran J (2010) An assessment of genus Euastacus (49 species) versus IUCN Red List criteria. A report prepared for the Global Species Conservation As- sessment of lobsters and freshwater crayfish for the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. International Association of Astacology. Horwitz P ( 1 995) A preliminary key to the species of Decapoda (Crustacea: Malacostraca) found in Australian inland wa- ters (Co-operative Research Centre for Freshwater Ecology Identification Guide 5). (Co-operative Research Centre for Freshwater Ecology: Albury, NSW) Zukowski S, Watts R and Curtis A (2012) Linking biology to fishing regulations: Australia’s Murray Crayfish ( Euastacus armatus). Ecological Management & Restoration 13, 183- 190. Gary CB Poore Museum Victoria GPO Box 666 Melbourne 3001 Vol 130 (1) 2013 61 Book Reviews Australian High Country Owls by Jerry Olsen Publisher: CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, 2012. 376 pages, paperback, colour photographs. ISBN: 9780643097056. RRP $69.95 Owls have an uncanny ability to intrigue us, whether through their regular nightly rituals, particularly during their breeding season, their persistent calling in the depths of the night, their elusiveness (causing subsequent frustra- tion on our part while trying to find them) or simply because of their mystery and awe. Owls, for whatever reason, hold a very special place in the hearts of many people. As public awareness about owls increases, so do the questions about these cryptic creatures. Jerry Olsen, through his book Australian High Coun- try Owls, has provided extensive information and knowledge on both Australian and interna- tional owl species. The 366 page book provides detailed accounts from Jerry’s own experiences as well as incorporating relevant scientific litera- ture. The book focuses primarily on Australian Ninox species and how these compare to their international counterparts. This comparison is extremely valuable, as highlighted in Jerry’s preface, because much of the owl research un- dertaken in Australia is based on protocols and data interpretation from overseas. The book contains 41 chapters, all of which are very well written and easy to read. The first few chapters contain essential background information such as what an owl is, owl tax- onomy, in particular Ninox species followed by the Southern Boobook as a Ninox example. After providing background information such as this, the book delves into the many aspects of studying owls, including how to locate, trap and handle these often difficult creatures on which to undertake research! Detailed information and accounts of diet and hunting, breeding and conservation are also provided. These sections are extremely valuable as they draw heavily on both the scientific litera- ture and the author’s own research experiences. Summary tables, figures and photographs are well used to provide information and highlight visual points. The photography is of extremely high quality and certainly provides further in- sights into the mystery associated with these birds. The final section of the book is titled Wallacea and provides a detailed account of owls on the island of Sumba and the discovery of a new owl species, the Little Sumba Hawk-owl. An exten- sive reference list is also provided along with appendices on Australian owls and rehabilitat- ing injured or orphaned owls. Jerry Olsen is one of Australia’s leading owl researchers and has many years of experience working with these birds. This expertise and experience shines throughout this book, with interesting and accurate information. The book is a must have for anyone interested in learn- ing more about these mysterious and amazing creatures. Dr Raylene Cooke School of Life and Environmental Sciences Deakin University - Melbourne Campus 22 1 Burwood Highway Burwood Vic 3133 62 The Victorian Naturalist Book Reviews Australian Natural History Medallion Trust Fund Donations to the Trust Fund were gratefully received during 2012 from the following: Julia Davis $ 10.00 Helen Handreck $ 10.00 David Cheal $ 5.00 Elizabeth Sevior $ 40.00 Latrobe Valley FNC $ 50.00 Portland FNC $ 50.00 Helen Aston $100.00 WA Naturalists Club Inc $100.00 John Poppins $ 20.00 Valda Dedman $ 10.00 Launceston Field Nats $ 50.00 Alan Reid $ 16.00 Ken Simpson $ 50.00 Maryborough FNC $ 50.00 Kay Taranto $ 10.00 If you would like to contribute to this fund, which supports the Australian Natural History Medal- lion, donations should be sent to: The Treasurer, Field Naturalists Club of Victoria, Locked Bag 3, Blackburn, Vic. 3130. Cheques should be made payable to the Australian Natural History Medal- lion Trust Fund’. The medallion is awarded annually to a person who is considered to have made the most significant contribution to the understanding of Australian natural history in the last ten years. Gary Presland Secretary Australian Natural History Medallion Vol 130 (1) 2013 63