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GEELONG NATURALIST 


MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF THE GEELONG FIELD NATURALISTS CLUB INC 





In this Issue... 

Club Notices (Next speaker, Excursions, Program, etc.) 
Skulkers and lurkers: Bristlebirds, Scrub-birds and Whipbirds 
Out and about 

Lake Lorne and McLeods Holes 

Rambling On 

Eucalypt plantations as fauna habitat in mosaic rural landscapes 
lan Clifford Hunt 

Snippets from the journals 

Bamganie excursion 

Reptile report 

Mammal report 

Did you know 

Canoeing on the Lower Barwon 

Plant Group 

Butterfly survey 

From the specimen table 

Preserving for the specimen table 

Bird observations 


Vol. 43 No. 01 


ISSN 0726-7363 


Inside front & back covers, pp. 5, 16 


Marilyn Hewish 
Valda Dedman 
Lynne Clarke 

Marilyn Hewish 
Barry Lingham 


Graeme Tribe 
Lorraine Phelan 
Trevor Pescott 


Barry Lingham 
Dick Southcombe 
Valda Dedman 
Dave King 

Dave King 

Barry Lingham 


OOO MOND AW — 


May 2007 


csi nh pl a a ee el ed ae eae eget cee ee es wy se 
I Editor's corner 


l his corner of the Geelong Naturalist is usually reserved imbalance one way or the other. Small changes in climate | 
I for a word from the president of our club. Over the last on a local level can have a huge effect, and the changes i, 
_ two years | have enjoyed reading what Deborah has had to can ripple out in ways we don't see or fully understand. | 
i say—she has been insightful and thought-provoking in her 


„ comments. In the absence of a president, hopefully a What can we do personally? We can try to make our i 
| temporary situation, | will ask various club members to fill ‘footprint’ on the earth as small as possible. We can read i 
_ this space so be prepared for a tap on the shoulder! what the scientists are saying. We can take part in surveys. | 


| We can join a Friends group. We can turn out lights and use « 
_ |'ve had water on my mind this week, perhaps because a Green Bags. We can vote. We can listen to the young | 
| period of rain was imminent. And perhaps because, like people in our community. We can bring up the topic of the 

. many others, | am dealing with grey water in my garden. environment in conversations we have with friends and I 
I strangers. We can support environmental lobby groups. We « 
„ Everywhere | go | see plants under stress through lack of can recycle. We can walk or catch a bus instead of driving. | 
I water, but I'm not too worried about them— the seed bank We can fight to protect reserves, and support programs 0 
. İS in the soil and unless we get a real climate shift the plants such as Bush Tender, Land Care and Trust for Nature that | 
l will grow when the rains come. But I do worry about the support private land-holders protecting indigenous n 
„ fauna. What if things get so bad that animals, (birds, worms, vergetation on their properties. I 
į snails, insects, and so on), can't breed before they die? " 
„ There may be catastrophic things happening in the macro The global problems are overwhelming but we only need to | 


y World already. | read about a migrating bird species in look to our own 'patch', our own home, our own bad habits. «= 
» Europe that is dying out because its food source, a But don't forget to do it cheerfully—a smile is contagious. | 
į caterpillar, is morphing several weeks earlier than usual. And keep in mind that 'even if you're on the right track, you 

» The gender of baby crocodiles is decreed by a small can still be left behind if you just sit there’. (Anon.) | 


| degree of temperature, so we could end up with an Lorraine Phelan (Editor) 


Tonight... 

... }revor Pescott, leader of our Mammals Special Interest Group, will talk about ‘Small mammals of 
Victoria's South West'. Because most are nocturnal and difficult to see, the small mammals of the 
Geelong region are little known. Some of their secrets will be revealed by Trevor. 


At the June meeting... 

...Chris Pitfield will talk about ‘Biodiversity conservation within the Corangamite Region—lessons 
learnt’. Chris, who was a junior member of our club, has resigned his position with the CCMA and has 
accepted a position within DSE as a Senior Policy Officer within the Biodiversity and Ecosystems Branch. 


REMINDER 


2007/08 GFNC MEMBERSHIP RENEWALS NOW DUE 


The club's subscription rates are listed on the orange coloured Renewal Notice that was enclosed with the April issue 
of the Geelong Naturalist. Please forward your payment to Hon. Treasurer, GFNC, PO Box 1047 Geelong 3220 
(cheques made payable to Geelong Field Naturalists Club Inc.). 


GFNC website Mailing roster 


May: Polly Cutcliffe 
Any observations (plant, mammal, bird, 
reptile, invertebrate etc.) can be emailed to 
Barty Lingham (5255 4291) so that the Tne choledraphvert theta 
arry Lingham (5255 4 so that the e photograph on the front cover, 
nies ee onto x site 5 Mem bers are encouraged to by Rob Ganly, is of an immature male 
frequently. arrive early at general Gang Gang Cockatoo feeding on green 
ae ee meetings. pinecones, Newtown, April 2007. 
eb page: l 
http://home.vicnet.net.au/~gfnc/ The room will be open at 7.15 pm to The photo on the back cover, by Craig 


allow members to chat to other members Morley, is of Australian Magpie. 


e-mail address: and visitors. 


gfnc@vicnet.net.au 





Skulkers and lurkers: Bristlebirds, Scrub-birds and Whipbirds 
Bird Group meeting, 19 April 2007 


hose of us with twitching tendencies know that some 

Australian birds are hard to see. Three groups of birds have 
a particularly evil reputation. Margaret Cameron used the 
expression 'skulkers and lurkers’ to describe them: the 
Bristlebirds, Scrub-birds and Whipbirds. 


There are three species of bristlebirds, the Rufous, Eastern and 
Western: two scrub-birds, Rufous and Noisy; and two whipbirds, 
Eastern and Western. They are all shy, rarely come into the open 
and live at low level in dense habitats. Except for the Eastern 
Whipbird, they are rare and localised in distribution. They have 
loud far-carrying songs, important in communication in dark 
environments with limited visibility. Many perform antiphonal 
duets, in which the male starts a song and its mate finishes. 
Many are expert ventriloquists. These birds are sedentary. They 
fly poorly and reluctantly. Flight skills are unnecessary in their 
enclosed habitats. They are dark or dull coloured—bright colours 
are little use for birds living in the dark—but they have some 
white or pale colour on their faces, perhaps used in recognition 
or communication at close quarters. Another characteristic they 
share is that they drive bird-watchers crazy. 


Rufous Bristlebirds occur in coastal heath from Torquay to 
the Coorong in SA. Locally, Loch Ard Gorge, Aireys Inlet and 
Point Addis are good places to see them. In the Otway Ranges, 
they range inland. We have recorded them in thickets of 
Blackwood and Prickly Tea-tree in the Carlisle heath 25 km from 
the coast. Perhaps the most bizarre location is the garden of the 
Blackwood Gully tea-rooms in Lavers Hill. We have drunk our 
coffee by the window and watched bristlebirds running under the 
shrubs and even on the verandah. In March this year, we saw a 
bristlebird sunning itself on a path. 





Photo: Rob Mackenzie. 


When | was a beginner bird-watcher in 1982, Rufous Bristlebirds 
were hard birds to see. My first sighting was at Point Addis on a 
Challenge Bird Count in 1982. When | arrived at 6 a.m., Gordon 
McCarthy had lined up a bristlebird calling in a shrub. The bird 
was typically uncooperative, staying behind twigs and keeping to 
the opposite side of the bush, but eventually | got a good look. 
Anyone new to bird-watching in this area would find my 
frustration puzzling, because bristlebirds have recently become 
quite tame. In the carparks at Point Addis, Aireys Inlet and Port 
Campbell, they ignore cars and fearlessly approach people. They 
have a sweet tooth. In 1996, Margaret Cameron reported a 


...Marilyn Hewish 


bristlebird at Aireys Inlet eating a chocolate icecream she had 
dropped by the car. They are also attracted by jelly snake lollies, 
especially bright green ones. 


Eastern Bristlebirds occur in two areas on the east coast 
of Australia, around the Victoria- NSW and NSW-Queensland 
borders. They live in heaths, melaleuca scrubs and rainforest 
gullies. My first and only sighting was at Barren Grounds Bird 
Observatory south of Wollongong in 1986. | ‘flogged’ the swampy 
heath with no result and eventually Richard Jordan, the 
observatory warden, took pity on me and helped. He heard a call 
and homed in on it, and we flushed a bird from under our feet. It 
flew weakly for a few metres and dropped down into a ferny 
patch. No amount of beating the bushes would make it fly again. 


I've never seen a Western Bristlebird. They live in 
heathland near Albany in WA. Before a visit in 2005, internet 
research revealed that Little Beach at Two People's Bay was the 
place to look, as the birds cross a track to get to an ‘island’ of 
heath in the carpark. Arriving at 5:30 a.m., | sat in a comfy chair 
to watch. Bristlebirds began calling close to the track just after 
sunrise. No birds appeared. They obviously hadn't read the 
internet. A bristlebird called no more than a metre from the car. 
The scrub was so thick that | wrote in my notebook, ‘The bird 
might as well have been on the moon’. 





ee mA —— pia 


Three of the skulkers occur at Two People's Bay, WA: 
Western Bristlebird, Noisy Scrub-bird and Western Whipbird. 


Rufous Scrub-birds live in south-eastern Queensland and 
north-eastern NSW. I've never tried for them but in 1982 Dean 
saw their habitat and heard their calls in Lamington National Park 
(| went off in the opposite direction chasing Noisy Pittas). The 
birds favour dank dark beech forests with a dense understorey. 
Sean Dooley described the Rufous Scrub-bird as a 'wretched 
bird' and his ‘bogey bird', and saw a ‘low-flying brown meteor’. 
When he eventually saw one well he performed a victory dance. | 
will too if | ever see one. 


Noisy Scrub-birds occur in dense heath near Albany in 
WA. In the 1800s, they were known in three areas in south- 
western WA: Waroona between Perth and Bunbury, the Margaret 
River-Augusta area and the Albany area. After 1899, they were 


Continued on next page... 


Geelong Naturalist May 2007 1 


... continued from previous page 


thought to be extinct. They were rediscovered at Two People’s 
Bay in 1961, and the area was designated a Nature Reserve to 
protect the scrub-bird. 


Such is the scrub-bird's reputation for cussedness, that | arrived 
at Two People's Bay in WA undecided about whether to try for it. 
But the deafening calls proved irresistible. | scrambled into a 
thicket of two-metre high sedge clumps and banksias enmeshed 
in a tangle of brittle fallen branches. Over two hours, my ears 
rang as the bird called continuously a few metres away. | crawled 
on hands and knees, pushed into sedge clumps, watched at low 
tunnels in the vegetation, and staked out small gaps between 
bushes. | saw a few brown bird-shaped blurs. The next morning, 
the bird was in a clump of mallee by the track. | tried to crawl 
towards it, but it melted away. The heath was already flattened 
along the crawl-way. | wasn't the first to try this method. 





ee Eee 
Chasing the Noisy Scrub-bird, Two People's Bay, WA, 
September 2005. 


| was fired up for the chase, however, and decided to out-think 
the bird rather than blundering around after the calls. The second 
bird had progressed through the heath, singing at intervals, and | 
realised that it must have crossed the walking track at some 
stage. At dawn the next morning, Dean and | sat on the track 
staking out the mallee clump. An ear-splitting call came from right 
next to Dean. The bird had come in to look at him. Dean had a 
clear view. | turned and a branch blocked my line of sight. The 
bird flew back. Relations between Dean and | became strained. 
But the bird was calling again close by. | waited for five minutes, 
the calls slowed, stopped. The bird dashed onto the track, 
paused, looked at me, and then disappeared. Dean and | were 
friends again. 


Eastern Whipbirds are more widely distributed than the 
other skulkers, and rather less retiring. They occur down most of 
the east coast of Australia, reaching the Dandenongs in Victoria, 
and their habitats are coastal scrub and wet forests with dense 
undergrowth. My first sighting was at Mallacoota in 1981. | 
stalked the bird to a particular bush by its whip-crack call, and 
then waited quietly. It came out into a gap in the branches and 
posed for me. The birds seem to be curious, and sitting or 
standing quietly often brings them out. 


For us, Western Whipbirds have been the most intriguing of the 
skulkers. They occur in several disconnected populations; in 
heath in Eyre Peninsula, Yorke Peninsula and Kangaroo Island 
in SA, and in south-western WA; and inland in mallee-heath 
along the SA-Victoria border. In our experience, they are the best 


2 Geelong Naturalist May 2007 


ventriloquists. One bird had us spinning around as the call 
progressed around the horizon to finally end in a bush a metre in 
front of us. 


Dean and | worked long and hard trying to glimpse these 
infuriating birds. We first heard them in 1982 at Innes National 
Park, SA. The park pamphlet showed a photo of a Western 
Whipbird. Its discovery in 1965 was the main reason for the 
establishment of the park. The pamphlet directed us to dune 
heath at West Cape, where | heard calls over several years but 
saw nothing. We also heard calls in 1996 at Comet Bore north of 
Bordertown, SA, and in 2005 at Two People’s Bay and the 
Stirling Ranges in WA. However, we discovered the place where 
we saw our first birds by accident. In 1989, we heard calls near 
Royston Head in Innes National Park. This place looked hopeful. 
The birds were in mallee clumps and the surrounding heath was 
quite sparse. Thus we could close in on the birds while they 
called, and they couldn't leave the mallee clumps without 
showing themselves. We spent hours tracking calls and had 
several glimpses. While trying to help me, Dean got the best 
views. Finally | spotted a bird preening itself just inside the 
foliage. By lining myself up with gaps in the leaves, | got a 
patchwork view of the whole bird. It had taken three hours (but 
really it had taken seven years). 


i 


4 
+ 





Habitat of the Western Whipbird, Royston Head, SA, 
November 2006. 


The distribution map for Western Whipbird shows it ranging into 
western Victoria. However, the last confirmed Victorian record 
was in 1974, and even unconfirmed reports ceased in 1985, 
more than 20 years ago. However, while camping along the 
Murrayville Track in April 2005, Dean heard intriguing calls in 
sandplain heath with stunted mallee and native pine. We camped 
there in October, and woke in the dark before dawn to the sound 
of Western Whipbirds calling. We scrambled out of the tent in a 
rush. The birds were in the mallee-pine thickets. We waited for 
sunrise to try to track the birds down, but when the sun showed 
above the horizon, the birds shut up. Were they always there or 
just moving through? We don't know. No birds were heard on two 
subsequent visits, but we need to try again in spring when they 
are most vocal. 


Our pursuit of the skulkers and lurkers has been a bit of twitching 
fun—a concession to our competitive instincts. However, while 
spending hours tracking down and trying to outwit these birds, 
we've learnt a lot about them. And we still have two to go. 





Out and about 


Unusual Encounters 

My attention was caught by a flash of gold in the late afternoon 
sun. A tiny butterfly had landed on a daisy plant. With wings fold 
vertically, it was no bigger than my little fingernail. It was busy 
sipping nectar with its long thread-like proboscis from one of the 
minute yellow flowers clustered together at the heart of the pink 
daisy 'petals'. Each bloom was really a hundred or so flowers 
surrounded by pink rays that help guide pollinating insects to 
them. Because it was so intent on feeding | was able to get a 
photo of the little butterfly which was new to me. It was a 
Greenish Grass-dart Ocybadistes walkeri sothis (sometimes 
known as the Yellow-banded Dart), the same species as appears 
on the cover of the December 2006 Geelong Naturalist. 





Greenish Grass-dart Ocybadistes walkeri sothis. 
Photo: Valda Dedman 


As their name implies, grass-darts fly quickly from plant to plant, 
usually close to the ground. They belong to the Skipper 
(Hesperioidea) superfamily of butterflies, which makes up almost 
half of Australian butterflies, though we may not be as aware of 
them as of the often larger, brighter and higher flying members of 
the Papilionoidea superfamily. 


It is not surprising that we have not recorded this Grass-dart 
more often in Geelong. It did not occur in Melbourne until about 
1977 and it is assumed that it came in coils of instant turf. It is 
now well established in suburban gardens. It was first recorded in 
Victoria in 1960 at Noorinbee in East Gippsland. Its range in this 
state is sporadic and probably increasing. The Museum of 
Victoria records do not even include Geelong, although the 
species is recorded from Anglesea. It is included in the 1989 list 
of butterflies of Anglesea and nearby coastal areas by Mary 
White and John Landy (Geelong Naturalist, vol. 26, no. 2). There 
are three subspecies recognised in Australia; the local one is 
O.w.sothis. 


The caterpillar is green and slender, covered with short white 
hairs. It grows to about 20 mm then pupates in a curled-over leaf 
or stem. Its food plants are introduced and native grasses and 
Dianella sp., which is where Lorraine Phelan found newly-mated 
butterflies in her garden last year. 


Skippers often bask in the sunlight with the forewings open over 
the body and the hindwings held flat, as Lorraine's photo 
(December 2006 Geelong Naturalist) clearly demonstrates. 
Another distinguishing feature you can see is the tip of the 
antenna, which ends in a little hook, called the apiculus. 


©% ©% >% >% > >% 


...Valda Dedman 


One afternoon in 
March, when | was 
sitting at my 
computer, | felt 
something cold 
crawling on my 
neck. It was a tiny 
black and white 
caterpillar, less 
than 1 cm long. | 
took its portrait on 
my hand (oh the 
joys of one- 
handed digital 
photography!) and 
was able to 
identify it as an early instar of the Grapevine Moth Phalaenoides 
glycinae, one of whose larval food plants is fuchsia, under which 
| had been weeding earlier in the day. Before European garden 
introductions, the larvae fed on Guinea Flowers Hibbertia sp. and 
Willowherb Epilobium sp. 





The caterpillar is attractively patterned in black and white, with a 
distinctive patch of orange near the posterior end, perhaps to 
confuse predators as to its head or rear. The Mistletoe Moth has 
a similar brightly coloured patch on a black and white body, but 
its pattern is sufficiently distinctive to avoid identification 
confusion and its legs are brown, not black. 


If you look carefully at the photo, you can see two different leg 
types. The six on the first three body segments are jointed and 
end in a claw. They are the true legs, and are used for holding 
food. Walking is done with the soft, stumpy ones, known as 
prolegs, which have hooks, called crochets, on the tip to help 
them grip the surface. The final pair of legs are anal claspers. 


Phalaenoides glycinae is regarded as an agricultural pest, 
although it has many natural predators, such as wasps and flies. 
It is claimed that the Common Myna, now itself a pest, was 
introduced to Australia in the 1860s to control it. 


© ©% © >% >% % FH 


We had been walking along an old timber tramway at Millgrove in 
the Yarra Valley, among tall treeferns and regrowth forest, a 
lovely lush area near the Dee River, where my husband spent his 
childhood. Suddenly we heard a trail bike starting up. 
'Brr....brrr...brrp, brpp'. It stopped for a moment, then started and 
stopped again. The rider was having a bit of difficulty, it seemed. 
Was our peace going to be shattered? Our dismay turned to 
delight when we realised we were listening to a lyrebird down in 
the gully. It tried a few more times to get the bike going, then 
gave up. We looked for scratchings then, and found them beside 
the track and also had a glimpse of a dark bird dashing across a 
clearing. 


©% ©% A >è A ọọ% 


More about Dedman's Sun Orchid 

Thelymitra dedmaniarum has a chocolate-vanilla perfume, with 
strong overtones of burnt sugar. It figures. [See Geelong 
Naturalist, vol. 42, no. 11, p 2] 





Geelong Naturalist May 2007 3 


Lake Lorne and McLeods Holes 
Mid-week bird group excursion, Thursday 22 February 
Leader: Gordon McCarthy 


t was overcast when about twelve of us arrived at Drysdale 
station around 9.00 am, immediately commenting on the low 
water level in Lake Lorne. Telescopes lined up on the station did 

not appear to trouble the person keeping order there. Ravens 
and a Pied Currawong were seen in the pine trees and Australian 
White Ibis were doing over a grassy stretch nearby. 


' ...was it an Australasian Shoveler? 
Eventually Gordon pronounced it to 
definitely be a shoveler. ‘Why?’ | 
asked him. ‘Yellow legs,’ was his 
succinct and accurate reply.’ 


On the lake recumbent Australian Pelicans draped on the nesting 
boxes were not disturbed. Raucous Masked Lapwings moved in 
and out—there were about twenty of them. Ten Black-winged 
Stilt stalked about the edge of the lake, their reflections making 
wonderful pictures, and thirteen Black-fronted Dotterels were 
avidly searching the muddy verge. A number of duck were 
pottering about, some roosting on the near island among the 
fallen trees. Much discussion ensued about a particular individual 
among them: was it an Australasian Shoveler? Eventually 
Gordon pronounced it to definitely be a shoveler. 'Why?' | asked 
him. 'Yellow legs,’ was his succinct and accurate reply. 
A female darter was drying her wings then disappeared. Soon 
after, her snake-like head was seen emerging on the surface of 
the water. The shoveler lifted its head from under its wing 
showing its distinctive bill. There was not a Freckled Duck to be 
seen. Perhaps there were some on the other side of the island? 
We drove around to the other side. A Hoary-headed Grebe swam 
away from us between the islands. No Freckled Duck. 'They 
must have heard the news of the water in the inland,’ suggested 
Polly. How do they know???? No Blue-billed Duck or Hardheads 
either. 'We're a month too late,’ said Gordon, who had seen 
many of all of them here three weeks ago. 
Birds at Lake Lorne Superb Fairy-wren 
Yellow-rumped Thornbill 
Red Wattlebird 
Noisy Miner 
White-plumed Honeyeater 
New Holland Honeyeater 
Magpie-lark 
Grey Fantail 
Willie Wagtail 
Grey Butcherbird 
Australian Magpie 
Pied Currawong 
Little Raven 
Red-browed Finch 
European Goldfinch 
Welcome Swallow 
Golden-headed Cisticola 
Common Starling 
Common Myna 

39 species 


Australian Wood Duck 
Pacific Black Duck 
Australasian Shoveler 
Grey Teal 

Chestnut Teal 
Hoary-headed Grebe 
Darter 

Little Pied Cormorant 
Australian Pelican 
Australian White Ibis 
Straw-necked Ibis 

Purple Swamphen 

Dusky Moorhen 

Eurasian Coot 
Black-winged Stilt (x10) 
Black-fronted Dotterel (x13) 
Masked Lapwing 

Silver Gull 

Galah 

Sulphur-crested Cockatoo 


4 Geelong Naturalist May 2007 





...Lynne Clarke 


We strolled around the lake beside a huge bank of Giant Honey- 
Myrtle, Melaleuca amillaris. Yellow-rumped Thornbills and 
Superb Fairy-wrens flitted about, with honeyeaters apparent and 
a Grey Butcherbird calling. The wide shallow area where the lake 
had been is now covered with grassy vegetation, and here was 
seen a flock of Red-browed Finches, and sitting, calling, on the 
tops of the hemp bushes, Gynatrix pulchella, were several 
Golden-headed Cisticola. We had superb views of them. 


Gordon led the way to McLeods Holes. We pulled up near some 
willows and sat down on the grass under them looking out over 
the water. Not that there was very much water here either, but 
there was a much larger group of ducks, mainly Chestnut Teal, 
and a pair of Black Swans in the distance. Only after a time was 
our attention drawn to the little Black-fronted Dotterels just in 
front of us silhouetted against the sun. ‘Seven!’ 'No, nine!’ Eleven 
was the number finally agreed on. 


'Why have we seen so many of them today?’ Barry wondered. 
"You usually see them in pairs scattered about on farm dams. | 
guess it’s because so many dams have dried up in the drought.’ 
Some of us wandered off up the hill to be rewarded with views of 
a Shining Bronze-Cuckoo, and a rather rufous-coloured Grey 
Fantail. Barry explained that it must be Tasmanian, which 
regularly migrate: race a/biscapa, as opposed to alisteri of the 
eastern and south-eastern mainland.* 


We walked to the other waterhole, on the way seeing a Spiny- 
cheeked Honeyeater. There was lots of water here, but many 
fewer birds. Three exquisite Little Pied Cormorants were resting 
in the sun. We walked halfway round, not even hearing the 
clamour of a reed-warbler. A few ducks and coots scattered 
about. Gillian had especially come to see this waterhole—lake, 
really—why isn’t it full of birds this dry year? 


Thanks to Gordon for showing us these lovely places. 


*Pizzey, G. and Knight, F. (1997) Field Guide to the Birds of Australia, 
Harper Collins. 


Birds at McLeods Holes 


Spotted Pardalote 
Brown Thornbill 
Yellow-rumped Thornbill 
Red Wattlebird 
Spiny-cheeked Honeyeater 
White-plumed Honeyeater 
New Holland Honeyeater 
Magpie-lark 
Grey Fantail 
Willie Wagtail 
Grey Butcherbird 
Australian Magpie 
Pied Currawong 
House Sparrow 
Red-browed Finch 
European Goldfinch 
Welcome Swallow 
Fairy Martin 
Silvereye 
Common Starling 

40 species 


Black Swan 

Australian Wood Duck 
Pacific Black Duck 
Grey Teal 

Chestnut Teal 

Little Pied Cormorant 
Australian Pelican 
Australian White Ibis 
Straw-necked Ibis 
Brown Goshawk 
Purple Swamphen 
Dusky Moorhen 
Eurasian Coot 
Black-fronted Dotterel 
Masked Lapwing 

Silver Gull 

Spotted Turtle-Dove 
Sulphur-crested Cockatoo 
Shining Bronze-Cuckoo 
Superb Fairy-wren 


Birds of the Western Port Phillip 


(working title only!) 


As an extension to the work already done on the planned book, 
Birds of the Bellarine Peninsula, by Tom Fletcher, it has been 
decided to extend the area to the east of the Princes Highway 
from Point Cook to Anglesea Heath including Cheetham 
Wetlands, Western Treatment Plant, Geelong city, Bellarine 
Peninsula, Mud Islands and Anglesea Heath. 


To achieve this, Tom Fletcher has invited Hugo Phillipps to co- 
author with him. Any records, old photos and area lists, no 
matter how old, would be greatfully received and 
acknowledged. We probably all have pre Geelong Bird Report 
records collecting dust in a drawer or box under the bed, out 
the back shed and so on. These are the records we are looking 
for, no matter how irrelevant they may seem. 


Tom can be contacted at 54 Woodlands Dve, Ocean Grove 
3226, phone 5256 3737 or email <tpf54@bigpond.com> 


Wider Geelong Flora Lecture 


12 June 2007 
Valuing riparian vegetation 


Greg Peters, CCMA 


Greg Peters is the River Health coordinator with the 
Corangamite Catchment Management Authority. He will focus 
his talk on streamside and instream flora. 

Arrive 7.00 pm at the GBG Meeting Room for tea/coffee/ chat. 
Lecture commences 7.30 pm. 


RSVP Annette Zealley, Director of GBG Ph. 5227 0379 oe 
email <azealley@geelongcity.vic.gov.au> 


For further information contact Dick Southcombe on 5243 3916. 


Climate change 


What will it mean for the Bellarine? 


Barrie Pittock, author of Turning Up the 
Heat, and former head of CSIRO Climate 
Impact Group 


Uniting Church Hall, Hesse St, Queensliff 
7.30 pm Friday 11 May 2007 


Gold coin donation 





Valda Dedman is a little bruised and battered after a fall but is 
out of hospital and slowly mending. 


Get well soon Valda. We want you back out there defending the 
environment. 


Friends of Mud Islands 


27 May 
24 June 
22 July 


Weeding 

Weeding 

Victorian Wader Study Group and 

weeding 

Weeding 

Alternate excursion 

Weeding 

Seagrass monitoring and weeding 


26 August 
October 

23 September 
25 November 


Please email fomislands@yahoo.com to register for any 
of these trips or phone Felicity on 5258 2559. 


Barwon River walk, Winchelsea 
Saturday 2 June 


The Upper Barwon Landcare Network invites any GFNC 
members to join a Landcare celebration along the Barwon 
River on Saturday 2nd of June. 


Feel free to join us for whatever parts of the day you wish. 


10 am—1 pm Walk along the Barwon River from Kargun 
Bridges to Kilwarrie Cottage—approximately 
7.5 km (Winchelsea—Deans Marsh Road to 
Kildean Lane, just south of Winchelsea) 

Lunch at Kilwarrie Cottage, Kildean Lane, 
followed by our annual meeting. Light lunch will 
be available for $8 per person or BYO. (Lunch 
will be provided by UBLN for Landcare members 
attending the meeting) 

Walk along the Barwon River from Kilwarrie 
Cottage to Ingleby— approximately 5.5 km. 
(Ingleby is along Cape Otway Road) 


1 pm-3 pm 


3 pm—5 pm 


5pm until lights out Informal social evening in the historic 
Ingleby Woolshed. Includes a spit roast at 
6:30 pm ($10 per person) Bring your own 
beverages and nibbles. Musical entertainment 
will be provided. 


Some of the landholders along the river will be joining us to talk 
about their patch—Peter Dorman will be with us (local birdo). 


This will be a great opportunity to see some parts of the river 
with old remnant trees that you normally wouldn’t get to. The 
walking is easy going with some scrambling through fences. A 
car shuffle will be organised to retrieve vehicles. 


Please let Neil know if you wish to join in. 


Neil McInnes, Co-ordinator, Upper Barwon Landcare Network, 
4/454 Murray Street, Colac 3250. 

Mobile 0427 316 396. 

neilubl@bigpond.net.au 





Geelong Naturalist May 2007 5 


Rambling on 


Moth mysteries 


Three years is my record for the longest gap between seeing a 
creature and identifying its species. 


On 13 February 2003, | sat on my favourite seat at Long Point in 
Long Forest, enjoying the peaceful scene and the shade of a 
magnificent Yellow Box tree. In those days, it took a lot to make 
me notice anything other than birds, but | soon became aware 
that the flowering Box Mistletoe was surrounded by a cloud of 
‘butterflies’, fluttering and crawling among the blossoms. The 
huge mistletoe clumps hung down almost to the ground, so | was 
able to get up close, although getting a clear view of such active 
butterflies was difficult. They were exquisitely beautiful. The 
wings were black with intricate patterns of cream lines and spots 
and the body was black with bright red-orange stripes on the 
abdomen. There was some vivid orange colour near the head. 





Long Point, Long Forest 


The naturalist's hunting instinct was aroused: what were they? 
Butterflies so striking should be easy to find in a butterfly book. | 
whipped out my notebook and drew a sketch. Three years later, | 
had searched page by page through all the butterfly guides | 
could beg or borrow, and | was none the wiser. | let the puzzle sit 
on the back burner. Birds were my focus. Then on 18 February 
2006, the butterfflies were there again. This was too much. | 
needed to know! 


| did what | often do in such a quandary. | asked Rob Mackenzie. 
He suggested that | try day-flying moths. It had never occurred to 
me that there could be any such thing. Once | had borrowed 
Common's Moths of Australia from the GFNC library, the mystery 
was Solved in about five minutes flat. Plate 22 shows the 
Mistletoe Moth Comocrus behri. That made sense. Mistletoe 
Moths on mistletoe. Most photos show the abdomen as black 
with a red-orange tuft at the tip, but from below there is some 
orange striping. The red colouring I'd seen near the head was 
from tufts of hair which the female has on her legs. 


In 2007, they were back again, but this time earlier than | was 
used to. | saw a few on 27 January, and on 7 February there 
were huge numbers in the mistletoe, in the air and on the ground. 
Now that | know what they are, | feel like I'm greeting old friends 
each summer. 


Some superficial research shows that the genus Comocrus is 
confined to Australia and the Mistletoe Moth is its only species. It 


6 Geelong Naturalist May 2007 


...Marilyn Hewish 


is widely distributed in southern Australia in open forest and 
roadside eucalypts—but I've seen the moths only at one site in 
Long Forest. The caterpillars feed on mistletoe, including Box 
Mistletoe, and the adults take the nectar of the same plants. 
They could be in the mistletoe at Long Point all year, but I've 
noticed only the adults, not the caterpillars or pupae. The flight 
period is said to be spring, summer and autumn. I've seen them 
only in January and February, but | don't visit too often in 
summer because it can be very hot in the creek-valley. Flora of 
Melbourne says that Box Mistletoe flowers sporadically 
throughout the year. In Long Forest, most of my records of 
flowering are from mid January to mid April, and the emergence 
or arrival of the moths falls nicely into that period. 


Memos to myself: 

Look for Mistletoe Moths in other places, especially where there 
are large concentrations of mistletoe. 

Make regular visits to Long Point in summer to find out the time 
period over which the moths are present. 

Look for the caterpillars. 


The book Flying Colours describes the Mistletoe Moth as, 'A 
beautiful day-flying moth which could be mistaken for a butterfly’. 
That's my excuse for the three-year delay in identification. Now, 
with an ever-growing collection of sketches and photos of other 
unidentified moths, I'll never run out of puzzles to solve and | can 
see myself beating that three-year record. 





Mistletoe Moths gather at large clumps of 
flowering Box Mistletoe at Long Point, Long 
Forest, in January and February. 


Books: Moths of Australia, |.F.B. Common, 1990, Melbourne 
University Press; Flying Colours, Pat and Mike Coupar, 1992, 
New South Wales University Press; Flora of Melbourne, 3rd edn, 
Australian Plants Society Maroondah Inc., 2001, Hyland House, 
Flemington, Vic. 


Websites: Australian Museum Online; CSIRO Entomology, 
Australian Moths Online and Lepidoptera; Lepidoptera Larvae of 
Australia, Don Herbison-Evans and Stella Crossley (thanks 
Valda). 


Eucalypt plantations as fauna habitat in mosaic rural landscapes 
Dr Richard Lloyn, Bird Group meeting, March 2007 


Rihara is a well-known scientist, wildlife officer and bird 
watcher who presented the results and analysis of his study 
of the wildlife within eucalypt plantations in Victoria. With the 
extensive areas of Victoria currently being planted with eucalypt 
species, Richard's study shows significant implications for the 
management and conservation of wildlife in our state. He 
undertook the study after noting that very little data existed on 
the species that inhabit eucalypt plantations. The study was 
funded via Joint Venture Agroforestry Program and Natural 
Heritage Trust grants plus DSE and DPI funds. It aimed to 
develop appropriate designs to increase biodiversity in 
commercial eucalypt plantations. 


Richard began by noting some of the problems facing birds and 
other wildlife that inhabit bushland. Key issues were loss, 
degradation, fragmentation and overall reduction of natural 
habitat. Possible solutions involved restoration of habitat through 
conservation programs or commercial plantations, better 
management of the habitat, protection or buffering and 
reconnection. Plantation sites to study were selected from central 
Victoria and along the northern slopes of the Great Dividing 
Range. Various plantation design features such as size and 
shape, tree species, position in the landscape, geology, soils, 
topography and aspect, connectivity, shrub structure and 
relationship to remnant forest were investigated. 


Plantation management systems were also studied. Actions such 
as irrigation and fertiliser use; pruning, grazing and scrub 
structure; management of pest weeds and animals plus 
harvesting all affect the biodiversity of the plantations. Some 
plantations are kept almost free of undergrowth and leaf litter, 
while others have shrubs or a grassy understory. The retention of 
some remnant trees played a significant role in attracting some 
species. 


To establish the species present at each site, hair tube analysis 
of small mammals was conducted and counts made of bird and 
mammal species and populations. Mammal scats were checked 
and bat detectors were used to identify bat species. Experimental 
study of variations in planting systems involved five replicate 
groups of 1 ha sites. Each group had six treatments with differing 
variations of shrub planting patterns and nearby forest or 
farmland. The study sites were visited over a 5 year period from 
the initial planting. 


A retrospective study of other plantations that were more than 
five years old investigated tree species, retained trees, shrub 
cover, proximity to forest, position in the landscape and 
embedded remnants. 109 different sites were checked. 


The results obtained showed a variance in forest bird species 
due to many factors such as elevation, retained trees, dead 
hollow-bearing trees, logs on ground and the amount of mistletoe 
in flower or berry. The open-country bird species showed 
variance due to elevation, landform, grass cover, and plantation 
size. The overall results of the mean number of forest and 
woodland bird species present showed an approximate 10% 
decline from the natural forests to the plantations. There were 
more open-country birds present in plantations than in natural 
forest. 


Analysis of specific sections of the bird population showed that 
the canopy gleaners such as Striated Thornbills and the tall- 
shrub gleaners like Golden Whistlers and Brown Thornbills were 
frequently found in plantations. Other groups such as the damp 
ground and low shrub gleaners like White-browed Scrubwrens 


...Barry Lingham 


and bark gleaners such as White-throated Treecreepers and 

Crested Shrike-tit were less likely to use plantations compared to 
natural forests. The commonly planted eucalypt species, such as 
Blue Gums, have smooth bark that does not attract treecreepers. 


Arboreal mammal species were not as frequent in plantations as 
in natural forest. Open-ground gleaners that tend to feed away 
from tree cover were often found in plantations. Flame Robins 
move to more open farmland in winter after breeding in the 
forests. They have benefited from plantations that they use for 
foraging and roosting. The plantations also allow them to access 
some open areas more easily. 


Open-ground gleaners that feed amongst trees also used 
plantations. Species in this category include the Scarlet Robin 
and the Buff-rumped Thornbill. Many of the species in this 
category are declining across Victoria. Nectarivores such as 
honeyeaters were found in plantations, but at a much reduced 
rate compared to forest habitat. Introduced species such as 
Goldfinch and Blackbirds were equally numerous in plantations 
and forests. Some rarer bird species such as Speckled Warbler 
and Grey-headed Babbler were found in few sites in this study, 
but have been found to use particular plantations elsewhere. 


Richard showed graphs from a collaborative study by Sharon 
Rossi (Monash University) that clearly indicated a strong 
correlation between bird abundance and habitat complexity. 
Open cleared farmland had the lowest abundance followed by 
pine plantations. Eucalypt plantations showed only a slightly 
smaller abundance than natural forest. 





Blue Gum plantation 


The findings of the overall study revealed many important details. 

e  Eucalypt plantations can provide valuable habitat for 
many forest wildlife species. 

e They can help protect (buffer) valuable small patches of 
remnant forest. 

e They can help some species access parts of the 
landscape that would otherwise be unavailable to them. 

e Their potential role in adding connectivity remains to be 
tested. 


So the next time you drive past another huge eucalypt plantation, 
remember that they may not be the ‘perfect’ habitat, but they may 
have a very important role to play in the conservation of some of 
our disappearing bird species. With careful management and 
design, they can help overcome some of the damage caused by 
the large-scale clearing of our open forest areas. 


Geelong Naturalist May 2007 7 


lan Clifford Hunt 
9 June 1930—15 March 2007 


| n 1930 when the Great Ocean Road had a toll gate, when the 
road between Eastern View and Lorne was merely a rough 
stony track, when winter rains could cause great landslides that 
blocked the track for days—in late May (or early June) Cliff Hunt 
took his wife Isabella from Lorne to Geelong because she was 
due to give birth to their second child, lan. She travelled in the 
sidecar of the Harley Davidson. They had lived in Lilydale briefly 
after their marriage but Cliffs brother at Lorne had work for him 
and they returned. Like his father before him Cliff became a 
carpenter/builder. Over the nine years following lan’s birth three 
more children were born. 


After his school years lan began work at the Lorne Post Office as 
a telegram deliverer and later as a mail deliverer. As servicemen 
returned from the war they were given work and lan left the 
postal service. For a time he worked in the bush cutting firewood 
by hand for Erskine House and later worked on a dairy farm at 
Eastern View. 


His older brother Bryan already had a fishing boat and at 16 lan 
began commercial fishing with him. There were thirty-two fishing 
boats at Lorne. They fished for barracouta and crayfish out of 
Lorne and one season out of Wynyard where lan also played in 
the local football team. For fifteen years he worked his own boat 
from Lorne before joining Bryan again in a joint venture with a 
larger boat dredging scallops in Port Phillip Bay from May to 
November for eight seasons and setting pots for crayfish during 
the rest of the year around King Island, Port Campbell, Apollo 
Bay and out on the western edge of the continental shelf of Bass 
Strait. lan also worked for other fishermen at times out of Eden 
for tuna and out of Whyalla for snapper. lan and Bryan were 
foundation members of the Lorne Fishermen’s Cooperative and 
lan was chairman of this organisation for four years. 


lan was given an interesting scientific task by Edmund Gill of 

CSIRO in 1973 charting an undersea fault which stretches from 
Torquay to Cape Otway a few kilometres out from the coast and 
collecting samples of rock and coral along the fault. This fault is 
an ancient cliff from the times before Bass Strait and Port Phillip 


were flooded by rising seas. Because of his involvement in this 
exercise he was invited to many sessions of the Royal Society of 
Victoria when there was discussion regarding breakwaters, 
entrances to ports, silting or coastal erosion, or Aboriginal pre- 
history. 


There were times in the off-season from fishing when he and a 
younger brother went to Queensland harvesting sugar cane. 
Another year he spent time opal mining at Lightning Ridge. 


Two Torquay fishermen moved to Lorne in 1947. One of them, 
Bill Thompson, was a qualified surf life saver and examiner and 
he recruited a group of six young men who were keen to gain the 
surf life saving qualifications. Thus the Lorne Surf Life Saving 
Club began in October 1947 with lan and the others as its 
foundation members. They were greatly encouraged by Lillian 
and Sir Frank Beaurepaire. Within a few years, through much 
effort, the club house was built. Apart from the many rescues of 
swimmers in difficulty the senior and junior club members 
participated in numerous competitions. lan was captain at the 
sweep oar in the team of five which won the Victorian senior surf 
boat championship in 1956 and the Flinders to Point Leo 
marathon surf boat race of 1959. With Don Stewart lan won the 
Victorian surf double ski championship in 1955. In 1966 lan was 
made a life member of the Lorne Surf Life Saving Club. 


Among the numerous visitors attracted to the Lorne Life Saving 
Club was Dennis O’Hearn, sub-dean of the Arts Faculty at 
University of Melbourne, who became a firm friend of lan. 
Perhaps he encouraged lan to write the stories which in 1997 
were printed under the title Fee/ the Sea Wind. They are not just 
memoirs. There are numerous colourful accounts of life during 
the depression, the war and the post war times. From his father 
lan learned to be observant of birds and other animals and in his 
writing he includes beautiful descriptions of the behaviour of 
other creatures including fish. Twenty or more years ago he 
joined the Field Naturalists in their excursions and with Roma, 
his friend, he continued to participate in their activities. lan was 
very active in the 150th anniversary of the arrival of John Hunt in 
Geelong in 1848 with his wife and family. 


In his forties he joined the Lions Club and remained an active 
member for 32 years. He enjoyed the social activities and 
helping elderly or needy people. This had been typical of his 
parents who, over many Christmases, had a swagman or some 
other visitor at their table. One year the swagman helped Ian's 
father battle the 1939 bushfire which threatened their home. 


He travelled widely through Australia and overseas with Roma. 
In later years lan took up painting in oils, and more recently he 
constructed intricate replicas of three famous sailing ships. 
Some of these paintings and replicas were on display at his 
funeral. These artistic tendencies enhanced his photographic 
skills. He is survived by his friend Roma, his sister Valerie and 
her husband, a brother-in-law John, and the children of his 
brothers and sisters. Submitted by Roma Julian 





Snippets from the journals 


E nvironment Victoria has prepared an eco-friendly 
guide to help us make good decisions at the 
supermarket. It can be downloaded from their website at 
www.environment victoria.org.au 


EVNews, Issue 225 


8 Geelong Naturalist May 2007 


T o see how your energy supplier's Greenpower product 
rates, visit www.acfonline.org.au/greenpower. The 
chart has been set ip by environmental groups to help 
consumers choose green electricity products. 


Habitat Australia, vol. 35, no. 2 


Bamganie excursion 


welve members visited the very drought affected bushland and what a contrast to our six other 
excursions to this spot which were all in lush springtime conditions. 


The bushland canopy was quite open and the forest had minimal leaf cover. Woodbourne Creek is 
obviously spring-fed as it had abundant clear still water and is much used by macropods. We 
found several small (12 mm) opened freshwater mussels on a submerged rock. 

There was a Koala skeleton and two dead Blue-tongue Lizards by the creek. 

We recorded only 12 bird species in the reserve, three species of butterfly (Common Brown the 
most numerous). Flying insects were virtually non-existent, although ant nests (without many ants) 
were abundant. Echidna diggings were numerous. 


There was almost a complete absence of fungi and only three plants were found flowering (one 
Cranberry Heath, two Parsons Bands orchid and abundant Sugar Gums in the northern plantation. 


En route home we drove to the Leigh River near Bamganie where the sight of complete 
degradation and desertification of the farmland in the valley shocked us all. 


Reptile report 


Grass (Garden) Skink 2 03.04.07 


...Graeme Tribe 
Bird list 


Wedge-tailed Eagle 
Crested Pigeon 

Crimson Rosella 

Laughing Kookaburra 
White-throated Treecreeper 
Superb Fairy-wren 
Buff-rumped Thornbill 


Yellow-rumped Thornbill 
White-eared Honeyeater 
Jacky Winter 
Australian Magpie 
Raven sp. 

12 species 





..Lorraine Phelan 


Sheoaks, East Road; found under dry stumps on the ground, 10.00am, warm, 


sunny day. TPe 
Spencer's Skink 1 08.04.07 Barwon Downs, Mclaughlin's Track off Delaney's Road; sun-basking on trunk of 
healthy blue gum about 2 m above the ground, among bark ribbons, 9.30 am on 
warm, sunny morning. TPe 
Observers: TPe Trevor Pescott 
Mammal report 
... Trevor Pescott 
Mammal Atlas additions 
Agile Antechinus 1 03.04.07 Taylors road, near Meredith; came inside farmhouse. CBa 
Agile Antechinus 2 03.04.07 Brisbane Ranges National Park, Kangaroo Track; in trap in tree. MSG 
Brush-tailed Phascogale 1 04.04.07 Brisbane Ranges National Park, Kangaroo Track; caught in trap. MSG 
Brush-tailed Phascogale 1 03.04.07 Sheoaks, property on Sheoaks-Steiglitz Road; caught in trap. MSG 
Common Wombat 18.11.06 Anglesea, Gundrys Road; hair in funnel trap. ANG 
Common Wombat 1 25.03.07 Little River, house on east side of You Yangs; seen in garden. BLy 
Sugar Glider 5 21.03.07 Taylors Road near Meredith; emerged from hollow at dusk. CBa 
Common Ringtail Possum 1 28.03.07 Deans Marsh-Pennyroyal; disturbed from tree-hollow. MCo 
Common Ringtail Possum 1 02.04.07 Shannon Ave., Newtown, near Leach-Wood Gardens; road-killed. TPe 
Eastern Grey Kangaroo 50 10.03.07 Sheoaks, Sheoaks-Steiglitz Road; in open paddocks, grazing. CPa 
Red Fox 1 09.04.07 Birregurra, Cape Otway Road; road-killed. TPe 
Red Fox 1 11.04.07 Batesford; interaction with Little Ravens observed. RGa 


Observers: ANG ANGAIR observation; BLy Bev Lyon; CBa Chris Baird; CPa Cambria Parkinson; MSG Mammal Survey Group; MCo Melanie 


Costanzo; RGa Rob Ganly; TPe Trevor Pescott. 


he Common Wombat observations are quite extraordinary 

because the natural populations that were here at the time of 
European settlement were exterminated by the early 1900s. 
While they did inhabit some areas around Bellbrae, for example, 
they were seen as pests partly because their burrows were 
hazards to horses and their riders. There is a summary of the 
former distribution of wombats in an article in Geelong Naturalist 
vol. 22 no. 3, November 1985. 


there are houses on small acreages along Gundrys Road, it is 
assumed that the animal was a pet that had strayed from home. 
Bev Lyon, whose farm abuts the eastern side of the You Yangs, 
had noticed some unusual disturbance to the house-gardens, 
so when the security light came on at around 2.00 am, she went 
to investigate. She first thought it was a Koala ambling across 
the yard, but a second look revealed a wombat. Where it came 
from she does not know, for the nearest known population is at 


Lerderderg Gorge a long way to the north. 


The Gundrys Road report was the result of routine searching for 
mammals by members of ANGAIR who use hair funnels to 
obtain samples that are later identified by expert Barbara Triggs. 
Because the wombat is not known to occur in the area being 
surveyed, the sample was double-checked to be sure. Since 


Geelong Naturalist May 2007 


In an article in The Victorian Naturalist, vol. 100 no. 6, Nov/Dec 
1983, L.E. Conole and G.A. Baverstock wrote about the 


Continued on next page... 


9 


... continued from previous page 


mammals of the Lorne-Angahook State Park, and of the 
Common Wombat they said 'A juvenile [Common Wombat] 
observed on the Mt Sabine Road in late 1982, and subsequently 
discovered dead after Ash Wednesday in 1983, is presumed to 
be an escaped or dumped 'pet' '. (At the time, a popular 
television series featured a wombat as a pet.) Curiously enough, 
though, Mt Sabine once did have a population of wombats that 
were destroyed by a Lands Department officer, according to 
Ballarat naturalist Gavin Cerini. 


The two Red Fox reports are vastly different, one from the 
other. The road-killed animal was a beautifully-pelaged vixen, 
probably only six months or so of age. Her fur was lush, deep 
golden chestnut on the back and soft grey beneath—no wonder A scrawny fox pauses to drink at an outback waterhole. 
in the bad-old-days the pelts were much sought after for coats! Photo: Trevor Pescott 
But Rob Ganly's fox story was about a large, mangy animal that — + 

he saw slinking through the trees at his favourite birding place 
near Batesford. Its objective was a sheep carcase that was being 
attended by 14 Little Ravens. 'As the fox approached,’ he wrote, 
‘a ‘platoon’ of four Little Ravens advanced on the fox and for the 
next five minutes, they (and they alone!) kept the fox at bay, and 
it only once got to sniff the carcase before being driven off again, 
this time by the whole group. | can only assume that the carcase 
was not very appetising to the fox, as 14 Little Ravens could not 
protect their spoils from a determined meat-eater.' 





Regarding the Brush-tailed Phascogale entries on the Atlas, they 
were caught as part of a deliberate attempt to determine the 
distribution of the species in the Brisbane Ranges-Anakie- 
Meredith area. A more complete report on our search, including os 
some excellent sight records from south-east of Anakie, will be This young fox is in excellent condition. 

published over the next few months. Photo: Trevor Pescott 





Mammal trapping 
Anglesea-Aireys Inlet, 17-20 May 2007 


We will do some trapping in the Anglesea-Airey's Inlet area as part of the GFNC excursion. 


Thursday 17 May 1.00 pm Meet at the intersection of the Anglesea (Great Ocean) Road and Forest Road to set the traps. 


Friday 18 May 8.00 am Meet at the same place to check the traps. 
Saturday 19 May 8.00 am Meet at the same place to check the traps. 
Sunday 20 May We will check the traps as part of the Club excursion. 


If you are able to help with the setting or checking the traps phone Trevor on 5243 4368 or email <ppescott@optusnet.com.au> 
Did you know? 


id you know that Geelong Field Naturalists Club is a 
shareholder in the Timboon Bushland Cooperative (Yarro 
Waetch)? 


| The cooperative was formed to purchase Yarro Waetch before it 
~ | was put on the open market. The bushland is north of Timboon 
| on Hirsts Road off Browns Road and is alongside the old 
Camperdown railway line (that is now a walking track). 


The Cooperative is holding a weeding session at the Yarro 
Waetch on 6 May. Guides will meet weeders at the entrance at 
10.00, 11.00 and 11.30. 


An AGM will then be held at 1.00 pm at the Timboon Senior 
Citizens Centre. BYO lunch from 12 noon. Tea and coffee and 
biscuits provided. 





Eg | - 
SS bs j . rE 
A AA f s ie 


Debris caused by two Gang-gangs in Newton in April. See A i? 
photo on front cover. Ee 
Photo: Rob Ganly ' 


10 Geelong Naturalist May 2007 


Canoeing on the Lower Barwon 
GFNC Excursion 4 March 2007 


fter postponing the trip by a fortnight due to high 

temperatures and winds on the original date, an enthusiastic 
group gathered at Taits Point at 8.00 am to begin the expedition. 
There were 11 starters, so we needed five canoes (large 
'Wobbegongs’) and a kayak to paddle the journey. 





Diana Primrose and Peter Williams 


Graeme Tribe gave us an overview of the Lower Barwon from 
the Second Break down the river to Lake Connewarre, past the 
reverse delta and islands and into the lower reaches of the river 
estuary. Graeme has extensive experience of the area and used 
aerial photos to illustrate his comments. He explained that the 
first breakwater (on Breakwater Road) was installed under the 
direction of Foster Fyans to provide fresh water for the original 
Geelong township. During the late 19th century, the Second 
Break was installed further down river, opposite Reedy Lake, so 
that a supply of fresh water could be available for irrigation and 
stock on the river floodplains. 


Taits Point was formed by a basalt flow that extended into the 
lake during the Newer Volcanic times when the area had active 
volcanoes, such as Mt Duneed. The basalt would have blocked 
the Barwon and created a massive dam upstream of blockage. 
Water from the Barwon may have flowed into Corio Bay via the 
Moolap lowlands. Eventually, the river broke through the 
blockage. During the last ice age which lasted up until about 10 
000 years ago, sea level was more than 100 metres lower than 
current levels. This meant that the Barwon River flowed rapidly 
through the zone around the current Lake Connewarre, cutting a 
deep valley as it flowed out across the dry plains of Bass Strait. 


At the end of the last ice age some 600 years ago, melting 
icecaps led to a rapid increase in sea level to about two metres 
above the current level. The Barwon River valley would have 
been inundated back to Buckleys Falls. The area filled with silt 
deposits and formed a shallow bay. It was during this period that 
extensive oyster beds were present. 


Having gained a geological and historic perspective of the area, 
we set off at a steady pace in pleasant weather and paddled 
across the upper section of Lake Connewarre to where the 
Barwon River enters the lake. The lake was less than a metre 
deep, but the river section was about two metres deep. As we 
paddled up stream, we noted the saltmarsh vegetation and 
Tangled Lignum bushes along the banks. The peace and quiet 
was disturbed by an engine-powered paraglider that buzzed 
around to check us out. We passed a small channel that was the 


...Barry Lingham 


outlet from Reedy Lake. The outlet is usually closed, but can be 
opened to allow for periodic drainage of the lake. 


After 40 minutes, we reached the basin where the Second Break 
blocked our path. We spent some time checking the simple but 
effective system of floats used to close the gates in dry times and 
open them when the river level rose. 


In 2006, a fire burned much of the vegetation on the northern 
side of the river for a distance of about 1.5 kilometres. It even 
jumped the river in one section. The Common Reed has quickly 
re-established in the burnt zone. A walk along the river led us to 
a grove of River Red Gums. Many Blue-winged Parrots were 
perched amongst the trees. Presumably they use the grove as a 
roost and feed on the surrounding saltmarsh and grassy areas. 
Just past the grove of trees was the inlet channel from the 
Barwon into Reedy Lake. An adjustable barrier is used to allow 
water to flow into the lake. 


We returned to the canoes and paddled back down into Lake 
Connewarre, landing on the northern shore and ascending the 
hill to view the scenery. There were impressive views over Reedy 
Lake and the Upper Barwon through to Geelong, the You Yangs 
and Corio Bay to the north west. Looking southeast over Lake 
Connewarre, we could see Ocean Grove and the Barwon Heads 
Bluff. The route through the delta islands to the Lower Barwon 
was Clear from this height, but many paddlers have become 





View north, Campbells Point 


Continued on next page... 


Geelong Naturalist May2007_ 11 


...continued from previous page little more easily. This section of the river has clay banks that are 


riddled with the holes made by crabs. Larger holes show where 


disoriented when they try to find their way to the river entrance eels have tried to get to the crabs they like to eat. 
when they are at water level. 

The river carves a sinuous path through the estuary area to the 
Pressing on, we paddled to Campbells Point for lunch. The point Sheepwash at Barwon Heads, before straightening a little in the 


consists of clay soils with a lot of iron minerals present in section to Ocean Grove. We finally arrived at the Tribe’s 
‘buckshot gravel’ and the rocks around the point. At the point,a residence, where we appreciated the refreshments on offer. 

hill some seven metres high was topped with the remains of Despite aching muscles and weary bones, we all agreed that we 
many oyster shells. This aboriginal midden dates from over 5000 had been able to enjoy experiences that were unavailable to 
years ago when oyster beds flourished in the shallow seas. land-based explorers. 


Remains of these beds can be found in Lake Connewarre, as 
detailed in Dr John Sherwood’s recent talk to the GFNC. 


Lunch was eaten while sitting in the shade of some ancient 
twisted Moonah trees. Graeme found a Sea Hare and we saw 
the mass of eggs attached to it. These slug-like creatures grow 
up to about 15 cm long. They feed by browsing algae from the 
Lake floor. 





View to delta 


Bird List 


Black Swan Common Greenshank 





Pacific Black Duck Red-necked Stint 
Chestnut Teal Sharp-tailed Sandpiper 

















Paaka Little Pied Cormorant Curlew Sandpiper 
Pied Cormorant Pied Oystercatcher 
After lunch, we battled through the shallow, muddy water near Little Black Cormorant Red-capped Plover 
the delta islands to reach the outlet to the Lower Barwon. We Great Cormorant Masked Lapwing 


saw large numbers of waders feeding on the mud flats, including 
Red-necked Stints, Curlew Sandpipers and Sharp-tailed 
Sandpipers, with some birds starting to move into breeding 
plumage. They leave on their long journey to Siberia near the 


Australian Pelican Pacific Gull 
White-faced Heron Silver Gull 
Great Egret Crested Tern 


end of March. Water was still rushing into the lake, even though Australian White Ibis Crested Pigeon 
high tide at Barwon Heads had been about three hours Straw-necked Ibis Blue-winged Parrot 
previously. We waited about 20 minutes before tackling the Royal Spoonbill Superb Fairy-wren 
moving water. Once we were able to leave the entrance section, Whistling Kite Spotted Pardalote 


the river speed slowed and we were able to make progress a Swamp Harrier Brown Thornbill 
Nankeen Kestrel Red Wattlebird 
Purple Swamphen Australian Magpie 
Eurasian Coot Little Raven 
Eastern Curlew 37 species 


The Second Break 

Campbells Point—site of the aboriginal midden. 
Hilltop where we got good views 

The delta area 


Taits point 


o 
Copyright © Stale Govamment of Viclona. Service provided by www. land.vic.gav.au. 


12 Geelong Naturalist May 2007 


Plant Group 


mall plants with tiny flowers consume lots of time with large 

books. This occurred at our April meeting when Joe brought 
a small, yellow-flowering aquatic plant, complete with roots, for 
identification. 


It soon became obvious that it was a bladderwort. [Refer Flora of 
Victoria Vol. 4, Family Lentibulariaceae, Genus Utricularia. 
Utriculus = little bladder. ] 


Unfortunately we were unable to obtain an illuminated view 
through the microscope because the transformer was missing 
(now in its rightful place). The plant was identified as Utricularia 
gibba Floating Bladderwort, a common weed of aquaria and 
gardens throughout the world. 


We then turned our attention to the eight Victorian bladderworts, 
especially Fairies Aprons U. dichotoma which is locally common 
throughout south-west Victoria. 


Butterfly survey 
...Valda Dedman 


am willing to collect records of butterfly sightings in the 

Geelong district. Please provide date and place and time of day 
as well as behaviour details and some idea of numbers. If you 
can't identify it, send a description. Butterfly caterpillar sightings 
are also acceptable (with food plant), but no moths please. 
Include the very common Cabbage White because there are only 
a couple of months (perhaps none) when it does not fly. 


The Victorian Butterfly Database (Viridans) lists 21 for the greater 
Geelong area; White & Landy (see Out and about this issue) list 
41 for Anglesea and the coast. Many of the Museum of Victoria 
records are not recent. 


Send your records to me at dedmanv@iprimus.com.au or phone 
5243 2374. 


From the specimen table 


....Dave King 


n the specimen table at the GFNC General Meeting, March 

2007, an invertebrate specimen was presented for 
identification that turned out to be a rather putrefied wasp. 
Fortunately sufficient remained to make the positive identification 
as that of a Flower Wasp. 


Further investigation of these remains established it to be a 
Scolia seror, Scoliidae; significant diagnostic features being the 
narrow wings having a metallic blue-purple sheen and veins not 
reaching the distal areas. The large eyes are distinctly 
emarginate. It is a generally black wasp, having a hairy body and 
legs with conspicuous spines. 


For a relatively more detailed description of a related Scoliid, 
refer to the article by the writer in the Geelong Naturalist, Vol. 40, 
No. 8, December 2004. 


...Dick Southcombe 


Thanks Joe for the specimen. Hopefully more plant specimens 
will be brought to our May meeting. 


Note: According to Nick Romanowski, bladderwort flowers are 
small, showy, yellow or purple and held above the water so they 
have the appearance of tiny aprons. But the really interesting fact 
is that they are carnivorous. The finely and intricately divided 
foliage contains many tiny bladders, actually tiny traps for minute 
underwater animals, and these are virtually spring-loaded to 
snap shut on being disturbed, drawing water and prey inside. 


Reference: 
Romanowski, N. (1992) Water and Wetland Plants for Southern 
Australia, Lothian, Melbourne. 


Preserving for the specimen table 
....Dave King 


f invertebrate specimens are to be presented for identification 

more than a day or two after they are deceased, they require 
adequate preservation. This can be readily achieved by 
immersion in a solution of three parts methylated spirits and one 
part water. Failing this, immersion in a dram of Sherry, Port or 
Scotch, whichever is your favourite ‘tipple’. Pouring a glass for 
oneself can mollify any stress that results from this course of 
action. It is highly recommended!! 





L 





ei 


X marks the spot —a juvenile Southern Boobook in 
Manifold Heights Primary School grounds in April. 
Photo: Joe Hubbard 


Geelong Naturalist May 2007. 13 


Bird observations April 2007 


he change of seasons is now in full swing, with autumn 

bringing an influx of species that either move though the 
Geelong area or over winter here. It has been a great month for 
birdwatchers, with over 100 species reported. 


Robins have returned (Pink, Rose and Flame), and five lorikeet 
species were noted. Flocks of Musk, Purple-crowned and Little 
move into the area near the start of April. Yellow-faced and 
White-naped Honeyeaters have been passing through on 
migration, but some birds remain in the area to feed on 
blossoming gums. The has been another record of a Painted 
Honeyeater at the You Yangs. This species, although rarely seen 
south of the Divide, has regularly reported over the past few 
years. 


Hooded Plovers have been seen in larger groups. Yellow-tailed 
Black-Cockatoos have also been seen in bigger flocks—of more 


Species Number 


... Barry Lingham 


than 60 birds. The first Orange-bellied Parrot observations for the 
season have been made, while some of the cuckoos have not 
left the region. It appears that some cuckoos over-winter—keep 
an eye out for them. The record of Painted Button-quail at 
Batesford is significant as these birds have only been recorded in 
a few sites where open woodland habitat is found. 


The following observations are a selection of those submitted. All records 
will be published in the annual Geelong Bird Report. 


Observers: AW, Allison Watson; BAt, Bryant Attwood; BH, Brian Hart; 
BL, Barry Lingham; CMo, Craig Morley; DHe, Dean Hewish; GFI, Glenn 
Fletcher; GMc, Gordon McCarthy; GMcC, Glenn McCarthy; HS, Hans 
Streefkerk; JCo, Joan Cohen; JH, Joe Hubbard; JN, John Newman; LFI, 
Linda Fletcher; LPh, Lorraine Phelan; MHe, Marilyn Hewish; MHw, Mark 
Holdsworth; PWa, Phil Watson; RGa, Rob Ganly; TFl, Tom Fletcher; VC, 
Vern Cohen 


Comments Observer 


Darter 


Little Pied Cormorant 
Cattle Egret 

Royal Spoonbill 
Black-shouldered Kite 
Black Kite 


Whistling Kite 


1 
Present 
106 

5 

10 

1 

1 

4+ 

1 
Present 


Deakin University, Waurn Ponds, a female. 

Avalon Beach 

Alcoa wetlands 

Barwon River, Newtown, roosting above Darter nests. 
Avalon Beach 

Gnarwarre 

Pigdons Rd, Waurn Ponds 

Limeburners Bay 

Batesford/Stonehaven. A pair on 11/4. 

Avalon Beach 


LPh 

VC, JCo 
RGa 
BAt 

VC, JCo 
BAt 

LPh 

JH 

RGa 
VC, JCo 


Queens Park BAt 
Batesford, on private property. RGa 
Grey Goshawk Drysdale, present for most of March. GMcC 
Serendip, a white bird. 
Buckley Falls Park, a white bird, flying with Sulphur- 
crested Cockatoos. 
Ocean Grove 
Fairmont Rd, Newtown 
Wedge-tailed Eagle Moriac 
Portreath Rd, Bellbrae 
Fyansford 
Batesford/Stonehaven 
Bellbrae, flying low. 
Alcoa wetlands 
Forest Rd, Anglesea 
Batesford 
Gnarwarre 
Peregrine Falcon Newtown, a juvenile. 
Brolga Hospital Lakes 
Black Rocks in lucerne paddock. 
Batesford, on private property. More than 150 platelets 
found but birds not seen or heard. 
Avalon Beach 
Alcoa wetlands 
Balyang Sanctuary 
Lake Victoria, 5 adults and 1 juvenile. 
Black Rocks, a pair, one banded. 
Point Roadknight, 4 adults and 2 juveniles (one banded). 
Batesford, on private property. 
Connewarre, on SW corner of Bluestone School Rd and 
Black Rocks Rd. 
Corio Bay 
Bellbrae, flying N. 
Bellevue Ave, Highton, flying S at 1645. 
Newcomb, flying S at 0845. 
Highton, flying N at 1000. 
Bellbrae. 80-100 on 5/4. 
Bluestone School Rd, Connewarre 


Collared Sparrowhawk 


Brown Falcon 


Painted Button-quail 


Banded Stilt 
Double-banded Plover 
Black-fronted Dotterel 
Hooded Plover 


Red-kneed Dotterel 
Banded Lapwing 


a ANON A = 


Arctic Jaeger 
Yellow-tailed Black-Cockatoo 








14 Geelong Naturalist May 2007 


Species 
Gang-gang Cockatoo 


Long-billed Corella 
Rainbow Lorikeet 


Scaly-breasted Lorikeet 
Musk Lorikeet 


Little Lorikeet 
Purple-crowned Lorikeet 
Swift Parrot 
Orange-bellied Parrot 
Fan-tailed Cuckoo 


Shining Bronze-Cuckoo 
Southern Boobook 


Tawny Frogmouth 
White-throated Needletail 
Striated Fieldwren 
Speckled Warbler 


Weebill 


Yellow-faced Honeyeater 


White-naped Honeyeater 


Painted Honeyeater 
Jacky Winter 
Scarlet Robin 


Flame Robin 


Rose Robin 

Pink Robin 

Hooded Robin 
Spotted Quail-thrush 
Olive Whistler 


Rufous Fantail 


White-winged Triller 
Olive-backed Oriole 


Grey Currawong 
Beautiful Firetail 
Bassian Thrush 


Number 
Present 


60+ 
Present 
2 
Present 
50+ 

72 
Present 
Present 
127+ 
Present 
Present 
Present 
1 
Present 
28+ 

5 


1 


Present 
Present 


Present 
Present 


Present 


-ANA BRAD — = 


© 


+ 


annan U 


=a a KR -— 3 2 2 GNM WD = 


Comments 
Zillah Crawcour Park/Geelong College, Newtown. Seen 
every day feeding primarily on small green pine cones. 
{See front cover & p. 10] 
Queens Park. No feeding observed. 
Newcomb 
Bacchus Marsh, rare in town 
Ocean Grove 
Ocean Grove 
Bacchus Marsh 
Wensleydale 
Newcomb 
Point Henry 
Wandana Heights 
Deakin University, Waurn Ponds, many present. 
Ocean Grove 
Wensleydale. First record here. 
Wensleydale 
Alcoa grounds, in flowering gums. 
Harkness Rd, NW of Melton, in remnant Grey Box/Yellow 
Gum woodland in farmland. 
Point Henry, flying NW. 
Lake Connewarre 
Batesford, calling repeatedly after dawn chorus. 
NW of Rowsley, calling frequently. 
Batesford, a dead bird caught on barbed-wire. 
Manifold Heights, a juvenile in the Primary School grounds. 
[See photo on p. 13] 
Dickins Rd, Freshwater Creek 
Barwon River, Fyansford 
Alcoa wetlands, doing aerial displays and songs. 
White Elephant Reserve, Rowsley Valley, 2 in Grey Box 
woodland, 1 in Messmate, 1 in Yellow Gums. 
Batesford, small flocks (one of 8+) moving through the tops 
of tall eucalypts. First record here in 4 years. 
Stony Creek, Brisbane Ranges, calling from epicormic 
growth. Unusual here. 
Point Addis, continuous small flocks flying NNW. 
Fairmont Rd, Newtown, 3 flying W at 0812, 2 flying W at 
0830, 2 flying W at 0845. 
Newtown, a small flock. 
Small flocks continually flying through Bacchus Marsh, 
Werribee Gorge, Rowsley, White Elephant Reserve. 


Point Addis, flying NNW following the coast. 
Drysdale Rd, You Yangs, possibly a female. 
Bellbrae 

Ironbark Basin, in carpark area. 

Bald Hills Rd, Anglesea 2 males and 2 females. 
Jarosite Rd, Bellbrae 

Drysdale Rd, You Yangs 

Dickins Rd, Freshwater Creek, a pair. 

Bellbrae, 2 males and 2 brown birds. 

You Yangs, Hovells Creek 


Lake Elizabeth 

Queens Park river walk/Buckley Falls Park, a male. 
Fyansford, a brown bird. 

Gnarwarre, a brown bird. 

You Yangs, western boundary off Stockyards, heard mid- 
morning. 

N Brisbane Ranges, Spring Creek Track 

Brisbane Ranges, Durdidwarrah Track 

Lake Elizabeth 

Carlisle SP, a pair. 

Lake Elizabeth 

Anglesea in thick teatree. 

Batesford, on private property. 

Balyang Sanctuary 

Deakin University, Waurn Ponds 

Deakin University, Waurn Ponds. 

Carlisle SP, a male. 

Portreath Rd, Bellbrae, sifting through leaf litter. 


Geelong Naturalist May 2007 





Observer 


AW 

MHe 

TFI, GFI, LFI 
BL 


TFI, GFI, LFI 
JN 

JN 

RGa 

MHe, DHe 


RGa 
MHw 
RGa 
MHe 
RGa 
JH 


HS 

BAt 

RGa 

MHe, DHe 


RGa 
MHe, TFI 


GMc 
CMo 


JH 
MHe 


BL, CMo. et al 
BAt 

JH 

BAt 

MHe 


MHe 

MHe, DHe, TFI 
BL, CMo, et al 
BH 

BL, CMo, et al 





15 


Mid-week Bird Group excursion 


Brisbane Ranges 


Thursday 24 May 
Leader: Kay Campbell 


8.30 am at Balyang Sanctuary car park to 
share transport or 9.00 am at the Anakie store, 
Geelong—Ballan Rd. [Velway Key Map 11 A11 
or Tour Map 611, D4] 

About 12.30 

Morning tea 


Finish: 
Bring: 


Enquiries: Kay 5243 3311 or Polly 5244 0182 


Campout 
Kerang wetlands 


9—11 June 2007 


The lakes around Kerang are internationally significant 
and have a RAMSAR rating. We will explore some of the 
lakes between Kerang and Swan Hill as well as the 
Loddon River and some mallee reserves. 


Accomodation will be at the Pelican Waters (formerly 
Hiawatha) Caravan Park at Lake Charm (which does 
have water in it!). There are 4 ensuite units and 6 non- 
ensuite units on site as well as the usual caravan and 
tent sites. Phone Murray on 5457 9318. There is a shop 
and petrol at Lake Charm. 


If you want motel accommodation there are several at 
Kerang, about 10 minutes south of Lake Charm. 


For more details contact Lorraine Phelan 5243 0636 


Eco Book Group 
Tuesday May 29 2007 


Unbowed: My Autobiography, 
Wangari Maathai 


Wangari Maathai is a Kenyan who won a Nobel Peace 
Prize for her work with the very successful Green Belt 
Movement that encourages women to plant trees near 
their villages. 


Contact Lorraine for venue details. Ph. 5243 0636 


16 Geelong Naturalist May2007 


Excursion 


Small mammal habitat in Otway Ranges 
Sunday 20 May 2007 


Leader Trevor Pescott 


Meet: 9.00 am at rear of Geelong Botanic Gardens on 
the corner of Eastern Park Circuit and Holt Road to 
Car pool. 

Bring: all the usual things including lunch, snacks and 
drinks. 


We will visit the mammal trapping sites in the Anglesea 
area, then move on to other parts of the Otway Ranges 
to see what various species frequent. 


Enquiries: Trevor Pescott ph 5243 4368, email 
ppescott@optusnet.com.au 


Boneseed Pull at the You Yangs 


Saturday, May 26 


9.30 am start 
3.30 pm finish 


Rob Beardsley, Dennis and Claire Greenwell look 
forward to seeing you at this worthwhile activity. 


All levels of fitness can be utilised, the agile and not so 
agile: your help would be appreciated not only by the 
leaders but also by the environment! The improvement 
over the years has to be seen and experienced to have a 
full appreciation of the efforts by members in previous 
years. Please come, bring your lunch (we have a 
wonderful day socialising as well), gloves and suitable 
clothing. 


Directions: Travel via the Great Circle Drive following the 
GFNC signs and arrows to Rockwell Road. The gate will 
be unlocked, please replace it behind you as this road is 
closed to the general public. We will be at the top of the 
Saddle road. 


Phone contact: Claire 5243 7047 or 0408 108992 


Next OBP count 


May 13, 2007 
Contact: Craig Morley 5221 4604 








GFNC COMMITTEE 2006-2007 


President Vacant 
Vice-President Vacant 
Immediate Past President Deborah Evans 5243 8687 Deborah.Evans@deakinprime.com 
Secretary Tim Billington 5221 1169 tbil@gotalk.net.au 
Treasurer Deborah Evans 5243 8687 Deborah.Evans@deakinprime.com 
Minute Secretary Barry Lingham 5255 4291 lingham@tpg.com.au 
Committee Member Lynne Clarke 5243 8774 alynneclarke@ozemail.com.au 
. " Bruce Lindsay 5223 2394 brucelindsay@aapt.net.au 
i 1 Neil McInnes 0408 102 802 neil.mcinnes@ozemail.com.au 
i | Lorraine Phelan 5243 0636 lphelan@bigpond.com.au 
E Diana Primrose 5250 1811 primrose@sunet.com.au 
" " Hans Streefkerk 5264 5235 streef@bemail.com.au 
i i Peter Williams 5221 3503 peter. w@westnet.com.au 


SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP CONVENERS and OTHER CLUB POSITIONS 


Belmont Escarpment Group Dick Southcombe 5243 3916 
Bird Group Barry Lingham 5255 4291 
Conservation Group Dick Southcombe 5243 3916 
Editor Lorraine Phelan 5243 0636 
Geelong Bird Report Marilyn Hewish 5367 3196 
Jerringot Group Valda Dedman 5243 2374 
Mammal Study Group Trevor Pescott 5243 4368 
Membership Officer Peter Williams 5221 3503 
Plant Group Dick Southcombe 5243 3916 
Web-master Barry Lingham 5255 4291 











Coming events 
MAY 2007 JUNE 2007 


1 General Meeting: Small mammals of Victoria’s South General Meeting: Biodiversity conservation within the 
West—Trevor Pescott Corangamite Region: Lessons learnt—Cnhris Pitfield 
8 Plant Group: Workshop Meeting Campout: Kerang Wetlands and district 
17 Bird Group: Lorikeets—Valda Dedman Wider Geelong Flora Lecture: Valuing Riparian 
Mammal Group Survey Vegetation—Greg Peters 
20 Excursion: Small mammal habitat of the Otways Excursion—River environment 
Leader: Trevor Pescott Bird Group 
24 Mid-week Bird Group Excursion: Brisbane Ranges— Mid-week Bird Group Excursion 
Leader: Kay Campbell 
26 Boneseed pull—You Yangs. Leaders: Rob Beardsley, 
Claire & Dennis Greenwell 
29 Eco Book Group 


Consider this for your bookshelf 


Melbourne's Wildlife: a field guide to the fauna of Greater Melbourne 
Museum Victoria and CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne, 2006 


This book contains identification information for wildlife in the terrestrial and marine environments of the wider Melbourne area (and 
this includes Geelong). Worms, snails, beetles, insects, butterflies, lizards, birds, mammals, sea stars, molluscs, fishes, marine 
mammals and crustaceans are just some of the catagories covered. There are notes and a photograph for each animal as well as 
informative introductory paragraphs for each group. 


The closing date for the next magazine will be Monday evening, 28 May, 2007. 

Early lodgement of articles (small & large) would be a great help—late copy may not be accepted. 
Hard copy or diskette (saved as a Word document or .rtf please) 
Photographs—digital as .jpg (100 to 250 KB approx. if sending by e-mail), slides or prints for scanning to 
5 James Cook Dve Wandana Heights, 3216 —OR—e-mail: |lphelan@bigpond.com.au 
For further details and a copy of 'Guidelines for Authors' phone Lorraine Phelan: 5243 0636 


DISCLAIMER Meetings start at 8.00 pm at: 
The responsibility for the accuracy of information and opinions 
expressed in this magazine rests with the author of the article. Geelong Botanic Gardens Friends Room. 
Entrance is at the intersection of Holt Rd and 
The Geelong Naturalist may be quoted without permission provided Eastern Park Circuit in Eastern Park. 
that acknowledgement of the Club and the author is made. [Melway Map 452 G4] 





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