Reminiscent of a troupe of wide-eyed clowns, Acorn Woodpeckers live in large groups in western oak woodlands. Their social lives are endlessly fascinating: they store thousands of acorns each year by jamming them into specially made holes in trees. A group member is always on alert to guard the hoard from thieves, while others race through the trees giving parrotlike waka-waka calls. Their breeding behavior is equally complicated, with multiple males and females combining efforts to raise young in a single nest.
Resident’s backyard kookaburra photo highlights mistake commonly made by Aussies
Australia is blessed with around 850 species of native birds, but some are more cherished than others, as…
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JK Rowling is going to have all these birds exterminated....
@david
I love #kookaburras and all #corvids
I moved to #Tasmania a few years ago and was surprised to learn that Kookies are an introduced species here.
Also there are no #emus or #koalas in #tas
But as there are no foxes and not too many feral cats and dogs small #marsupials are everywhere! See them constantly. (Except #thylacine 😿 😭 )
I think thats why in open grasslands here the grass is always very short.
Rarely need to mow. My friends do it nightly for me!