South-East Australia Road Trip Spring 2019: Part 6 – Bruny Island
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Forty-spotted Pardalote |
During
our last evening at Port Arthur I saw Eastern Barred Bandicoot but
managed just poor images in the by now predictably dreary, damp and
unexpectedly (for November) cold weather conditions. (My external
flash had also died.)
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Eastern Barred Bandicoot |
We then headed south to Bruny Island, the
best-known hotspot in Tasmania for finding the state's endemic birds. It
didn't disappoint. A
short distance from the ferry landing, I checked out Missionary Road
and quickly found several Forty-spotted Pardalotes within a few
hundred metres of the main road. I'd heard that North Bruny was
unusually dry and that the pardalotes had become more difficult to
find. Dusky Robin was also here.
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Dusky Robin |
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Forty-spotted Pardalote |
We
spent the first night behind the pub at Alonnah on South Bruny, the
next morning checking out the Cape Bruny Lighthouse and Jetty Beach.
A flock of Strong-billed Honeyeaters was foraging in eucalypts about 1km before the
lighthouse. Several Flame Robins were around the lighthouse.
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Cape Bruny |
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Flame Robin |
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Strong-billed Honeyeater |
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Strong-billed Honeyeater |
We
moved to the caravan park at Adventure Bay on the eastern side of South Bruny for the next three nights.
Plenty of Tasmanian Native-hens were seen earlier during the trip
but I hadn't got around to photographing them until here.
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Tasmanian Native-hen |
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Adventure Bay |
Several
Tasmanian Scrubwrens were in the caravan park grounds.
Nest boxes for Swift Parrot in the grounds were used last year by the
parrots but this year only European Starlings were occupying them.
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Tasmanian Scrubwren |
During
several days on Bruny I heard just a couple of Swift Parrots at
Adventure Bay, regarded as a stronghold for the critically endangered
species: Bruny Island's significance for the bird is noted in a sign prominently positioned at the
ferry landing. (As noted earlier, plenty of parrots were present at
Port Arthur.)
A
visit to the Mavista Nature Walk behind Adventure Bay turned up a few
Scrubtits – the last of Tasmania's 12 endemic species that I wanted
to photograph. While several endemics were seen earlier in the trip, all 12 were spotted easily on Bruny Island.
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Scrubtit |
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Scrubtit |
We
went looking for Eastern Quoll one night, beginning at the jetty
landing an hour after sunset and slowly driving the roads east and
south, detouring via Missionary Road. We saw a total of 8 quoll
including two dark phase individuals but all were seen fleetingly
crossing the road or leaving its verges, or distantly in paddocks.
None offered a photographic opportunity. Quoll feeding on roadkill on
Bruny had in the past been easily photographed but these days, road kill is removed by the island's commercial wildlife company,
Inala. According to the company, this is to prevent raptors and quoll feeding on dead
animals from being hit by cars. The only other vehicle we saw
during our quoll foray was an Inala tour car; the company presumably knows where road kills are relocated. Inala charges $285 per person for a three-hour evening tour.
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Morepork |
A
Morepork showed well roadside during our return to Adventure Bay. At
a well-known breeding colony of Little Penguins at The Neck, which
divides North Bruny from South Bruny, I saw a couple of penguins
close to the carpark.
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Little Penguin |
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