Skip to main content

Intriguing Logan wildlife active on a humid night last weekend

White-throated nightjar, Cedar Creek.

A foray into Plunkett Regional Park last Saturday night resulted in many excellent wildlife sightings, the highlight being white-throated nightjars (Eurostopodus mystacalis).

Judging from the chuckling calls reverberating through the hilly woodlands, quite a number of these nocturnal birds were present.

Two were found sitting rather sedately on the walking tracks, the second one not being noticed by me until I was only six or seven metres away.

If the nightjar was the most impressive sighting of the night, then the most amusing had to be a beetle (Elephastomus gellarus) that came buzzing and bumbling down the track towards me.

Bolboceratid beetle, Cedar Creek.

When it was close by, I could hear that it was making a high-pitched, comical, chattering noise, an ability shared by other beetles in the Bolboceratid family, but something that put a smile on my face nevertheless.

Ornate burrowing frog, Cedar Creek.

Scarlet-sided pobblebonk, Cedar Creek.
Recent wet conditions allowed for some rewarding frog encounters also, with ornate burrowing frogs (Platyplectron ornatus) and scarlet-sided pobblebonks (Limnodynastes terraereginae) being found along the waterlogged tracks.

In one of the more elevated sections of the park, a squirrel glider (Petaurus norfolcensis) was seen perched atop some dead timber.

In the same area and also on some dead timber were two very impressive giant centipedes (Ethmostigmus rubripes), one restless and shy, the other placid and allowing a close approach.

As evidenced by all the other times I’ve raved on about this place, Plunkett never fails to produce interesting wildlife and plant sightings, and would have to be one of my favourite locations in South-east Queensland.

Triangle-bearing wasp moth (Amata trigonophora), Cedar Creek.

Comments

  1. What a great collection of wildlife encounters! Fantastic Christian.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

North Queensland Trip, Part 1.

Eungella National Park Eungella National Park location; Image courtesy of Google Maps. My home state of Queensland is a huge place. Bigger than any of the United States, it is considered the sixth largest sub-national entity in the world, behind such remote provinces as Nunavut in Canada, and the Danish territory of Greenland. Though I've lived in and travelled through Europe and Canada, much of my birthplace remains a mystery to me. To rectify this situation, I planned a road-tripping holiday this year with my sister and her partner, in the Northern section of the state. My first visit to anywhere in the Tropics, I have since returned home with some of the most amazing wildlife experiences possible!

Wild Plants of Ipswich

I've never really taken much notice of plants until recently, regarding them usually as just the thing that a bird perches on while you're watching it. This week I decided it was time to change that attitude by trying my hand at plant identification in Denmark Hill Conservation Park, located in the centre of Ipswich. The park is just 11.5 hectares in size, but preserves a patch of bushland that acts as an 'island refuge' in a sea of suburbia. I did my best to focus on the trees and not be too distracted by birds or the resident Koala   (Phascolarctos cinereus)  population, and came up with nine interesting trees and plants seen on the Water Tower Circuit.

Tadpoles of South-eastern Australia: A Guide With Keys

Book review Reed New Holland Publishing, 2002. It’s noon on a warm autumn day and I am driving south along Beaudesert Road towards the peripheral suburbs of Brisbane’s southside that remain largely a mystery to me. I have decided that not knowing the amphibian fauna inhabiting the suburb of Algester is a personal error that I simply must rectify. My favourite way to search for frogs is to go spotlighting on humid spring and summer nights, but I have left it a little late this year and doubt my chances at finding them now that the evenings have mercifully turned cooler. Instead, I am going to survey the local amphibian population in a way that is quite new to me, aided by a secret weapon sitting in the passenger seat next to me: Marion Anstis’s book, Tadpoles of South-eastern Australia: A Guide With Keys .