The Fassifern Field Naturalists Club Inc. would like to acknowledge the Yugarapul People, the Traditional Custodians of the land on which our Club is founded, and pay our respects to their Elders past and present, their languages, customs, culture and connection to this wonderful country.

Tuesday, 23 February 2016

Fantastic Figs

Have you noticed that the birds are gorging on figs at the moment?

A female Australasian Figbird eating a fig 
in a Ficus watkinsiana
Figs are fascinating plants as they have some very unusual characteristics.
  
Strangler figs grow in and around other trees. This is known as being hemi-epiphytic. An epiphyte such as an orchid growing on trees in the wild is a plant which grows on another but is not parasitic. A hemiepiphyte starts by growing on the plant until its aerial roots reach the ground and then becomes independent. In the Strangler Fig's case, it surrounds the host tree which eventually dies. 

Non-strangler figs grow in the ground or over rocks. Early settlers often planted them for shade and as you travel around the Scenic Rim you'll see them in the gardens of old homesteads. 

Unripe, green figs
of the Ficus watkinsiana
Most figs have both male and female flowers on the same plant. This is known as being monoecious from Greek meaning 'one house'. However you won't see them because they are actually inside the fruit! This seems very strange, but in true botanical terms the fig isn't really a fruit, it is a cluster of hundreds of flowers enclosed in a smooth skin.
      
Being flowers they have to be pollinated in a very special way. So, along comes the tiny fig wasp. The female wasp, carrying pollen, squeezes through a minute opening in the fig. She lays her eggs on one type of flower, pollinating the other at the same time. The young wasp larvae develop, and the adult wasps mate, inside the fig. The males are wingless and die while the females exit from the opening gathering pollen on the way. Each fig species has to be fertilised this way with its own species of wasp. The fig depends on the wasp and the wasp depends on the fig. 
Cleaning her beak after her meal

Birds love the figs. In the dense forest the patter of half-eaten fruit falling on the leaf-litter alerts you to the birds in the fig trees. Figbirds, Bowerbirds, Pigeons, Catbirds, Koels, and Crows are just some of the birds which love figs. 

Aborigines used the fruit, the bark and the latex for food, medicines and tools.

If you want to know more about native figs try these links: Native Figs: Food for WildlifeNoosa's Native PlantsFigs suitable for your garden, How figs are pollinated.

Sunday, 21 February 2016

GUEST SPEAKER: Megan Prance "Fabulous Fungi and some Photography"


The formal part of the meeting will be, as is our custom, quite short, followed by -

Megan Prance speaking at the Lockyer Valley
Land for Wildlife Forum

GUEST SPEAKER:  Megan Prance "Fabulous Fungi and some Photography"

Megan became seriously interested in fungi & photography in 2007 after seeing a magnificent Stinkhorn while on a bush walk at Lamington National Park. It took 6 months to find out what it was. To learn about macro fungi she joined Queensland Mycological Society. 
She is a former nurse and has an Applied Science Degree majoring in Biology. She currently works at
Queensland Herbarium assisting with the Fungal Collection, the new DNA lab and  running the Botanical library. Megan is past president of Wolston & Centenary Catchments Inc. With Dr Sapphire McMullan-Fisher she conducted a fungal survey of West Brisbane Fungi in 2014-15.


The annual general meeting of the Fassifern Field Naturalists Club Inc. will be held at 6.30pm on Saturday, 19th March 2016 in the Boonah Baptist Hall, corner of Church and Macquarie Streets, Boonah.

This will be followed by our guest speaker, supper and socializing with time to view the interesting items and photos brought in by members.


Admission for members and non-members is $4 and includes supper.


Early morning bird walk, 17 January 2016 - adapted from the report of our leader, Lindsey

Knehr Road Bird Walk (click to enlarge)
It is a tradition with the Fassifern Field Naturalists that the January outing is a bird walk in the early morning. This is to avoid the heat of midsummer. Not heat, but heavy rain and strong winds throughout the night did not deter a larger than expected number of enthusiastic bird watchers who had travelled locally and from many parts of Brisbane to Knehr Road, Wyaralong. The walk winds its way around the banks of the Wyaralong Dam and is home to many water and bush birds.

Despite the weather conditions through patches of rain and drizzle - 70 birds were identified which was a remarkable number considering the conditions. 

There were three species with chicks and the Little Black Cormorant seemed to be sitting on a nest lined with plastic bags until the young ones started to raise their hungry little heads. 

Where we walked
Koala, not the one seen on the walk, 
but included purely because it is so photogenic
It is difficult to choose the bird of the day as there were some good sightings - Nankeen Night Heron, White-bellied Sea-Eagle, Red-kneed Dotterel, Comb-crested Jacana, and Horsfield's Bronze-Cuckoo to name a few. However because most of our party had good views the Latham's Snipe wins the prize.

Watching us pass by was a koala yawning and stretching providing a perfect photo opportunity for all of us that did not bring a camera out because of the rain! 

Ed: Lindsey's comment about not having a camera is so true. Sorry there's not many photos to go with this report.



Species Lists

Birds:
Brown Quail, Australian Wood Duck, Grey Teal, Pacific Black Duck, Australasian Grebe, Bar-shouldered Dove, Australasian Darter, Little Pied Cormorant, Little Black Cormorant with chicks, Australian Pelican, Eastern Great Egret, White-faced Heron, Nankeen Night-Heron, Royal Spoonbill, White-bellied Sea-Eagle, Whistling Kite, Purple Swamphen with chicks, Dusky Moorhen with chicks, Eurasian Coot, Black-winged Stilt, Red-kneed Dotterel, Comb-crested Jacana, Latham's (Japanese) Snipe, Sulphur-crested cockatoo, Little Corella, Rainbow Lorikeet, Scaly-breasted Lorikeet, Little Lorikeet, Australian King-Parrot, Pale-headed Rosella, Pheasant Coucal, Eastern Koel, Channel-billed Cuckoo, Horsfield's Bronze-Cuckoo, Fan-tailed CuckooBrush Cuckoo, Azure Kingfisher, Laughing Kookaburra, Sacred Kingfisher, Rainbow Bee-eater, Dollarbird, Superb Fairy-wren, Red-backed Fairy-wren, White-throated Gerygone, Yellow Thornbill, Striated Pardalote, Noisy Miner, Brown Honeyeater, White-throated Honeyeater, Blue-faced Honeyeater, Little Friarbird, Striped Honeyeater, Grey-crowned Babbler, Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike, Cicadabird, Rufous Whistler, Australasian Figbird, Olive-backed Oriole, Pied Butcherbird, Australian Magpie, Willie Wagtail, Torresian Crow, Restless Flycatcher, Magpie-lark, Golden-headed Cisticola, Tawny Grassbird, Welcome Swallow, Tree Martin, Common Myna, Red-browed Finch.
Golden Orb-Weaver, another photo not taken on the walk

Marsupials:
Koala, Eastern Grey Kangaroos.
Spiders: Golden Orb Weaver, Leaf-curling Spider.

Butterflies: Large (Common) Grass-yellow, Meadow Argus, Lesser Wanderer, Wanderer.