About Me

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Canberra-based naturalist, conservationist, educator since 1980. I’m passionate about the natural world (especially the southern hemisphere), and trying to understand it and to share such understandings. To that aim I’ve written several books (most recently 'Birds in Their Habitats' and 'Australian Bird Names; origins and meanings'), and run tours all over Australia, and for 17 years to South and Central America. I've done a lot of ABC radio work, chaired a government environmental advisory committee and taught many adult education classes – and of course presented this blog, since 2012. I am a recipient of the Australian Natural History Medallion, the Australian Plants Award and most recently a Medal of the Order of Australia for ‘services to conservation and the environment’. I live happily in suburban Duffy with my partner Louise surrounded by a dense native garden and lots of birds.

Thursday, 28 November 2024

Magnificent Mallee: #3 some mallee animals

This posting concludes my series on the mallee, among my very favourite habitats, which began here if you missed the start. It isn't necessary to read that in order to appreciate this one, but a bit of background might help.

As with the plants, which I talked about in offering number two, some animals are true mallee specialists, and many more live in the mallee as part of a wider arid and semi-arid range. (In reference to birds the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage refers to these species as 'mallee dependents', ie they are 'dependent on mallee where it is present, but also utilise non-mallee woodland or shrubland habitat that intergrades with mallee vegetation'.) All the photos which follow were taken in mallee.

While we're mentioning birds we might as well start with them. Firstly a few specialists; I should admit that among these mallee specialists are three of the very few southern Australian terrestrial birds that I've not seen. And there's one mallee specialist that really needs to open the conversation. 

Mallee Fowls Leipoa ocellata, Dubbo Zoo. And it really pains me to have to use
a photo (and an old slide scan at that) of captive birds, but while I've seen wild
Mallee Fowl it's not been often, and never have I been able to lay camera on one.
I regard that as a major failure, but sadly it alo reflects how this extraordinary bird,
along with other mallee specialists, is struggling from habitat loss and feral
animal predation.
It was this bird, or rather the remarkable 1950s and 60s field research and surrounding publicity of Doctor Harry Frith of the CSIRO (Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), that did more than most other things to spark a public interest in the mallee, and its need for conservation. I could write an entire blog post on this bird - and probably would if I had the photos to back it up! - but I'll try to be concise here, out of respect to the other animals which are waiting their turn.

Mallee Fowl are megapodes ('big feet'), a group of 12 ancient species from Australia and islands north, all but one - this one - being rainforest birds. The general pattern is that the male does all the work, collecting a mighty mound of forest litter to form a huge compost heap, into which a female, if impressed, lays her egg - and so, potentially, do other females. He manages the temperature precisely, using his tongue as a very accurate thermometer, adding or scraping away vegetation as required. The chicks hatch deep in the mound, have to dig their way unassisted to the surface and make their way in the world all alone. That's all very well in a rainforest, but the hot dry mallee is not where I'd choose to build an essential compost heap. However, as Australia dried out in millennia past, the ancestral Mallee Fowl adapted, rather than retreating to the coast with the wet forests. 

To help cope with the extra challenges they differ from all other megapodes in forming bonded pairs, but the male still does most of the heavy work. After the early winter rains he starts to dig out the sand to make a hole three metres across and a metre deep. Later in winter he begins to fill the hole with litter, bringing it in from up to 50 metres away and clearing the ground around. An egg chamber is dug in the litter and sand raked back over the top and fermentation begins.

Apparently abandoned mound in Wyperfeld NP, north-western Victoria; this was in
October and the cavity should have been full of fermenting vegetation by now.
The scale of the mound is clear though.
A truly historic photo, and it shows! Taken 50 years ago near Keith, south-eastern
South Australia. Look at the size of the sticks in the nest.

Now the female takes an interest and she's been saving her energy for this. Each egg weighs a bit more than 10% of her body weight and she lays from 15 to 30 of them - ie in all up to three times her body weight, an extraordinary energy investment. Meantime he is every morning opening the mound to let it cool a bit, then immediately replaces it all. By summer the fermentation has slowed and the sun maintains the temperature, so he only has to open it every few days. By autumn the fermentation has finished and all heating must come from the sun so mid-morning he spreads most of the sand to warm, and replaces it all as the hours pass. Finally he gets a month off, then the whole cycle starts again.

This wasn't as succinct as I'd hoped, but it's a big story. Time to move on however, with a couple more mallee specialists (and slightly better photos).

Male Regent Parrot Polytelis anthopeplus, Hattah-Kulkyne NP, north-west Victoria.
While this lovely endangered parrot breeds only in old River Red Gum hollows
along the River Murray in western Victoria and NSW, and adjacent SA,
it needs mallee within 20km for foraging for seeds.
(An isolated, though large, population in the south-west of WA
lives in open forests and woodlands.)
Chestnut Quail-thrush Cinclosoma castanotum, Wyperfeld NP. Quail-thrushes can be
pretty elusive, but this one was quite unconcerned by me early one morning. It is found
only in mallee, especially with a spinifex or shrubby understorey.
(I have to comment on the seriously weird common name. It was for a long time called
Chestnut-backed for the obvious reason, and from Gould's species name. Further this was
a useful distinguisher from the Chestnut-breasted Quail-thrush. The fairly recent and
utterly regressive name change leaves me totally perplexed.)

The next few species are ones that I know mostly as mallee birds, but which also utilise other habitats.

Southern Scrub-robin Drymodes brunneopygia, Coorong NP, South Australia.
A mostly ground-living robin, one of the familiar calls of old mallee. I think of it
as a mallee bird, but it is also found in associated heathlands.

Chestnut-crowned Babbler Pomatostomus ruficeps western NSW.
I always find this babbler a difficult species to get close to, and
this one was no exception, though the diagnostic cap and wing bars
are clear enough. Mostly a mallee bird, but does also extend into
the dry Mulga Acacia aneura and Belah Casuarina cristata lands beyond.

Splendid Fairywren Malurus splendens, Hattah-Kulkyne NP.
Splendid indeed, though perhaps not a very helpful name. In eastern
Australia this lovely bird lives widely in mallee, and I expect to see it in almost
any mallee I'm in, but it is also found well to the north in the mulga.
In the south-west, in the absence of the Superb Fairywren, it lives in wetter habitats.

Grey-fronted Honeyeater Ptilotula plumula, Gawler Ranges NP, SA.
This is not a common honeyeater in the mallee, but can be found throughout
most of it (and is possibly mistaken for Yellow-plumed Honeyeater at times);
however it continues through dry country to the north and north-west coasts.
 
Yellow-plumed Honeyeater Ptilotula ornata, eating lerps on mallee,
Nundroo, western SA. Again this is one I think of as essentially a mallee
honeyeater - perhaps the dominant smaller honeyeater there - in
eastern Australia, but extends its habitat preferences in the west.
And I'll wrap up this gallery of mallee birds with some which, while widely found in the mallee, are also at home in other habitats, both in southern Australia and beyond. While there might seem to be a generous sprinkling of honeyeaters here, bear in mind that the honeyeaters comprise some 10% of all Australian bird species, and more than that if we only consider land-based species.
Brown-headed Honeyeater (Melithreptus brevirostris, Gluepot Mallee Reserve,
South Australian Riverlands. A member of a genus of short-billed insect-eating
honeyeaters, found throughout the mallee and in drier forests and woodlands beyond it.
(And more on this very significant Birds Australia mature mallee reserve here.)

Striped Honeyeater Plectorhyncha lanceolata, Gluepot (on one of the above-ground
water troughs, out of the reach of kangaroos and goats). One of my favourite honeyeaters,
no doubt because it's so strange, not really looking like a honeyeater at all. Another
straight-billed insect-eater, again found throughout the eastern mallee (east of
Eyre Peninsula) but also beyond in dry forests, plus a seemingly anomalous population
in eastern subtropical swamp forests. The only member of its genus.
Spiny-cheeked Honeyeater Acanthagenys rufogularis, another with no close
relatives, whose fluting calls provide a key part of the soundtrack throughout the mallee
and beyond pretty well anywhere west of the Great Dividing Range. I love
its pink bill, blue eyes and salmony throat.
 
White-eared Honeyeater Nesoptilotis leucotis, Gluepot. I grew up in South Australia
thinking of this as a quintessentially mallee bird, but when I came east I discovered
that it is equally at home in any eucalypt habitat, including up in the Snow Gums!
Pink Cockatoo Cacatua leadbeateri, Mutawintji NP, western NSW.
An exquisite, and sadly declining, cockatoo found throughout arid and
semi-arid woodlands, including the mallee.

Another truly exquisite parrot, a male Mulga Parrot Psephotellus varius, Wyperfeld NP,
equally at home in the mallee and other dry woodlands as it is in the mulga.

Australian Ringneck Barnardius zonarius, Gluepot. This one belongs to a
subspecies known as the Mallee Ringneck for the obvious reason, found
throughout the eastern mallee and further north in other arid woodlands.
It seems to fill the ecological niche of rosellas in these drier areas.
Male Purple-backed Fairywren Malurus assimilis, Dhilba Guuranda–Innes
National Park, Yorke Peninsula, South Australia. It is found throughout most of the continent
in a series of subspecies, but in the mallee lands that is key habitat for it.
Rainbow Bee-eaters Merops ornatus, here in south-western NSW,
can turn up pretty well anywhere in southern Australia where they migrate
from the north to breed, but this one was in mallee, so why not?
Red-backed Kingfisher Todiramphus pyrrhopygius, is the Australian arid land
kingfisher, and is found throughout the mallee.

Male Red-capped Robin Petroica goodenovii, Cocoparra NP, near Griffith central western NSW.
This is another widespread inland bird which is also very much at home in the mallee.
White-browed Babblers Pomatostomus superciliosus, Flinders Rangers NP, SA.
The same habitat comments apply as for the previous species.

Mammals are of course an important part of the mallee, but most of them are small and nocturnal. A couple are more conspicuous though, none more so than the ubiquitous Western Grey Kangaroo Macropus fuliginosus, which is also known as the Mallee Kangaroo though it's certainly not limited to mallee. For a long time it was thought to be the same species as the Eastern Grey Kangaroo M. giganteus, until CSIRO scientists in Canberra noticed that the 'brown' kangaroos in an enclosure didn't interbreed with the 'grey' ones. They are found in much of drier southern Australia and originally didn't overlap much with the more moisture-dependent Eastern Greys. However in recent decades the Easterns have penetrated further and further inland, taking advantage of agricultural water supplies, to the apparent detriment of the Western Greys (my observation, I'm not sure that it's been studied).

Western Grey Kangaroos, Mungo National Park, south-western NSW.
Long ago a friend who'd spent his working life as an ecologist in the dry country
commented to me that the two Grey Kangaroos should be called Grey and
Brown Kangaroos respectively, and I've seen it like that ever since.
And another 'historic' photo I'm afraid (ie a poor scan of an old slide) though this one is barely 30 years old!
Southern Hairy-nosed Wombats Lasiorhinus latifrons, Brookfield CP,
near Blanchetown, SA. One of three wombat species, a highly specialised
arid land dweller found only on limestone in mallee and saltbush shrubland
in limited areas centred on South Australia but extending a little way into
south-western NSW and far eastern WA, on the Nullarbor Plain.
They are very good at conserving water, and produce very dry faecal pellets. They also conserve energy via a very low resting metabolic rate. They are much more communal than Common Wombats, sharing burrows and living in a warren of connected burrows. Interestingly there is also a ring of single burrows 100 metres or so out from the warren, where young wombats live when ousted from the central warren. Year round the burrow temperature ranges between 14 and 26 degrees, while outside it can vary between two and 40+ degrees.

Of course there are tens of thousands of invertebrate species found in the mallee, many of them doubtless specialising in the habitat. However none of the small sample I've selected here are limited to the mallee, indeed all of them seem to be found widely. Butterflies and moths are of course ubiquitous, at least in the right conditions.

Bardi, or Rain Moth Abantiades atripalpis, one of the ghost moths in the
Family Hepialidae, Mungo NP. The genus is restricted to Australia, and this
species is found across the southern part of the country, including of course
the mallee. This one seemed to have recently emerged from its pupal case.

Bardi Moth pupal case by the burrow from which it has emerged, triggered
by the previous night's rains (hence the Rain Moth name)

Australian Painted Lady Vanessa kershawi, feeding on Poached Egg Daisy
Polycalymma stuartii in mallee in Hattah-Kulkyne NP. A very familiar
butterfly right across the southern half of Australia.

Satin-green Forester Pollanisus viridipulverulenta Yeldulknie CP,
Eyre Peninsula, SA. Found widely in south-eastern Australia,
the larvae feed mostly on Hibbertia spp.
Ants are truly ubiquitous in Australia; indeed it seems to be a world hot spot for the number of species here. Here are a couple of nests, though I can't tell you anything about them.

If I had to guess at these ants, in the Gawler Ranges NP, north of Eyre Peninsula, SA,
I would suggest Polyracchis sp, but I really don't know.

As for this strange structure at Gluepot, I'm only assuming it's an ant nest!
I'd not seen anything like it.

This one on the other hand I'm confident is a Colourful Burrowing Cockroach
Macropanesthia kraussiana; they too were out and about after the rain at
Mungo NP. The Atlas of Living Australia has only seven records for it,
two of them at Mungo and the rest scattered between there and south-east Queensland.
On the other hand Dave Rentz's Guide to the Cockroaches of Australia shows
it as occurring throughout Victoria and up the east coast, but not in NSW...

This Huntsman Spider in Wyperfeld NP had been temporarily disturbed from its
rather risky home in a metal 'envelope' with a hinged lid on a pole. The envelope
contains good information on the site, on a laminated sheet of paper. I assume that
this disturbance happens regularly and that the spider resumes its home when we've moved on.
Finally reptiles, and the mallee is particularly rich in them. In fact almost a quarter of all Autralia's reptile species are found there. The mallee-spinifex communities in particular contribute to this richness, with the dense spiny clumps of Triodia providing safe haven for not only reptiles, but numerous invertebrates, plus small mammals and birds as well.
Central Military Dragon Ctenophorus isolepis, Great Sandy Desert, eastern WA.
These dragons never ventured far from the spinifex clumps, and the feral cat
footprints everywhere in the sand explained their caution. They were the only
lizard we saw regularly and the spinifex, plus their lightning speed,
ensured their survival. This desert supported 'open' mallee, not as
dense as in less arid situations, but a mallee habitat nonetheless.
This dragon genus is common and diverse in mallee; here are a couple of other species of it.
Painted Dragon Ctenophorus pictus, Cape Bauer, western South Australia.
This colourful dragon is found throughout the eastern mallee lands and north
beyond them.

Eastern Mallee Dragon Ctenophorus spinodomus, Hattah-Kulkyne NP. Unlike the two
previous dragon species, this one is a true mallee specialist, and found in the
mallee-spinifex habitat eastward from the far east of South Austalia, but not outside of it.
Until 2019 it was included with Ctenophorus fordi, found in mallee lands to the west
of this one's range; C. fordi is now known as Mallee Military Dragon, though
the inclusion of 'Western' would seem logical!

Western, or Dwarf, Bearded Dragon Pogona minor, Lesueur NP, south-western WA.
Though it is found throughout much of WA, it is very much at home in the mallee, as here.
And the other major Australian lizard groups are also represented here.
Leopard Skink Ctenotus pantherinus, just alongside its sheltering spinifex clump,
in Sharp-capped Mallee Eucalyptus oxymitra habitat in a harsh gravel landscape
near the start of the Ormiston Pound walk in Tjoritja/Western MacDonnells NP.
They live largely on termites, which are also largely dependent on the spinifex.
Boulenger's Skink Morethia boulengeri, Gluepot Reserve. Clearly any animal living
in Gluepot lives in mallee, but this skink is also found across most of arid
and semi-arid Autralia.
Shingleback (or Sleepy Lizard as I grew up calling them) Tiliqua rugosa,
south of Broken Hill. It's a skink, though the similarity between this and
the more typical skink above is not at all obvious. It is very common
in mallee, but is found in semi-arid areas from the Indian Ocean to
Canberra and north into central Queensland. It's also one of my
favourite lizards...

Eastern Tree Dtella Gehyra versicolor, peeping out from its home in one of the toilet
blocks at Gluepot Reserve. Here it is certainly deep within the mallee but it is
also found in other semi-arid habitats throughout much of eastern Australia.

Sand Goanna Varanus gouldii, lower Darling River, NSW. It is typical
of many goannas that they stand erect to examine their surrounds.
Another species which is at home in the mallee but is not confined to it.
Well, I hope you've enjoyed meeting - or reacquainting yourself with - some of the wonderful wildlife of the wonderful mallee. I've certainly enjoyed putting it together. Thanks for joining me.

NEXT POSTING THURSDAY 19 DECEMBER
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Thursday, 7 November 2024

Magnificent Mallee #2: some plants of the mallee

Last time, I offered something of a blogging ode to one of my favourite habitats, the wonderful mallee lands of inland semi-arid Australia. If you missed it you might want to look at it for some background before reading this addendum to it, but if you don't feel like doing that then this post can stand alone - it's really just a photo homage to a range of plants other than the mallee eucalypts themselves that I've encountered and enjoyed over the years across the country. I do notice now that plants from Western and South Australia dominate here, but those states do have a lot of the mallee too! To avoid appearing to be showing favouritism (or actually doing so!), I'm going to offer the poster plants below alphabetically in order of Family (though even that's not simple these days). 

The current trend among plant taxonomists is to lump previous Families into sometimes vast 'super-families'. It's not a matter of right of wrong - the actual relationships don't change - but the question of where to draw the lines between related Families is ultimately a human conceit. But enough of that, the important thing is the plant themselves. The plants I've selected were photographed in mallee habitat, and many of them are mallee specialists. In each family there are other - sometimes many other - mallee species I could have chosen.

It's really pretty much just a photo essay to celebrate some rather lovely plants that you may not be familiar with unless you're another mallee meanderer, in which case I hope it brings some good memories.

ANTHERICACAE
One of several families of Australian lilies; I talked more about them in a series beginning here. I see though that that was a decade ago, so things might have changed again, but I don't think very significantly.
Mangles' Fringe Lily Thysanotus manglesianus, Kalbarri NP, near Geraldton, Western Australia.
It grows widely in the south-west, but especially in the mallee.

ASTERACEAE

The familiar daisy family, which no-one has tried to redefine as far as I know!
Invisible Plant (or Wiry Podolepis) Podolepis capillaris Pinkawillinie Conservation Park,
Eyre Peninsula, South Australia. I love this name and, though it's not
terribly invisible here, the threadlike stems and pale flowers can be hard to
see in some lights. I do have another photo that illustrates this, but then you
wouldn't be able to see much! It does have a wide distribution in sandy
soils in southern and central Australia, but I've mostly seen it in mallee.

Poached Egg Daisy Polycalymma (fomerly Myriocephalus) stuartii,
Hattah-Kulkyne NP, north-western Victoria. Another sand-lover, found
widely in the mallee and beyond.

FABACEAE
The peas, one of the most familiar and largest plant families in the world, at least until the recent conglomerations of families.
Cockies' Tongues Templetonia retusa, Dhilba Guuranda–Innes National Park,
Yorke Peninsula, South Australia. This has always been a favourite of mine, partly
because it really is a striking shrub, and partly because it was one of the first
native plant names I learned. It grows in coastal limestone (and in the Flinders
Ranges), much of which is among mallee.
Granny Bonnets Isotropis cuneifolia, Badgingarra National Park,
south-western Australia. Again the species grows in a variety of sandy
and gravelly habitats (especially soon after fires), but this one was in mallee.
Common Eutaxia or Mallee Bush-Pea Eutaxia microphylla, Wyperfeld NP,
north-western Victoria. Mostly found in the mallee

GOODENIACEAE
The goodenia family in eastern Australia is probably best-known for yellow-flowered herbs and shrubs of Goodenia, and the purple-flowered Dampiera. In Western Australia however the various Lechanaultia species are truly dramatic. It's worth noting that in honouring the splendidly named chief botanist on the mighty Baudin scientific expedition to Australia in 1801, Jean-Baptiste Louis-Claude-Theodore Leschenault de la Tour, the great Scottish botanist Robert Brown, normally so meticulous, misspelt his name. Too late though, once it was published.
Blue Lechenaultia L. biloba, Yandin Hill Lookout, north of Perth.
Here it was growing near another WA special, the amazing
Mottlecah mallee E. macrocarpa. See the previous posting for photos of it.
Red Lechenaultia L. formosa, Stirling Ranges NP, south-western WA.
Sandhill Goodenia G. Goodenia willisiana is a much more modest member of
the family, found in mallee in north-western Victoria and adjacent South Australia
and NSW. Here it is in Wyperfeld NP.
Velvet Dampiera V. marifolia, also in Wyperfeld NP.
This striking plant, abundant on a recent spring trip to the area,
has a similar mallee lands distribution to the previous species.

HALORAGACEAE

A relatively small family, mostly in Australia but also has species spread across much of the world, ranging from aquatic herbs to small trees. No species is likely to be familiar to non-specialists, and this lovely mallee herb is the only one I could readily name.

Golden Pennants Glischrocaryon behrii, Pinkawillinie NP, Eyre Peninsula,
South Australia. It is found in mallee from here east to western Victoria
and south-western NSW. It can grow in extensive golden colonies, and
always brings a smile to my face.

 LAMIACEAE
A much more familiar family, including many garden culinary herbs and well-known native shrubs such as Prostanthera and Westringia.

West Coast Mintbush Prostanthera calycina, High Cliffs, at the southern tip
of Eyre Peninsula. A true mallee specialist, it is endemic to Eyre Peninsula,
growing on limestone outcrops.
Stiff Westringia W. rigida, Nullarbor cliffs, South Australia.
Usually on limestone and in mallee, though it also extends to dry forests from
Western Australia to NSW.
MALVACEAE
This is one of the newly defined 'superfamilies' that I mentioned at the start of this post. Already a large family, Malvaceae (based on hibiscuses and hollyhocks) now has a mind-numbing 4200 or so species, after the 1500 or so species of the family Sterculiacae were moved into it. All four species featured here were previously included in that family.
Pink Velvet Bush Lasiopetalum behrii, Caralue Bluff Conservation Park,
Eyre Peninsula, South Australia. It is found in mallee from
Western Australia to south-western NSW.
Coast Velvet Bush Lasiopetalum discolor, Dhilba Guuranda–Innes National Park,
Yorke Peninsula, South Australia. It grows along much of the south coast,
in Western and South Australia, though also in the Bass Strait and northern Tasmania.
On the mainland it is found primarily in mallee, and on dunes.
Paper Flower Thomasia petalocalyx, growing in mallee in the Coorong NP, South Australia.
It is also found in other habitats along the coast and hinterlands in the
south-west and south-east.
Trailing Commersonia Androcalva (formerly Commersonia) tatei,
Heggaton CP, Eyre Peninsula, South Australia.
An interesting little plant which is almost endemic to the mallee of Eyre Peninsula
- disqualified only by one totally isolated population in far north-western Victoria.
MIMOSACEAE
Yes, I'm going to break my self-imposed rule by not using the official family taxonomy for this one. A little while ago the wattles (ie family Mimosaceae) were lumped in with the already huge pea family Fabaceae to form a mighty megafamily of almost 20,000 species. While wattles are certainly closely related to peas (look at the pods), they form such an obviously distinct and familiar group that I'm going to be pragmatic and look at them separately from the (other) peas. There are of course very many wattles growing in the mallee; here are just three typical species.
Grey Mulga Acacia brachybotrya, Wyperfeld NP, north-west Victoria.
I'm not sure of the significance of the 'mulga' appellation, it certainly doesn't
resemble 'real' Mulga, Acacia aneura. It is an important part of mallee
communities from the edge of the Nullarbor Plain in South Australia
across to Victoria and NSW.
Wallowa Acacia calamifolia, Rudall CP, Eyre Peninsula, South Australia.
A distinctive wattle, it is found throughout the mallee lands of South Australia
and Victoria, and beyond into woodlands of NSW. It is said that its seeds are
important food of Mallee Fowl, but I suspect that this could be said of many
other wattles too.
Sandhill Wattle Acacia ligulata, Gawler Ranges NP, South Australia.
(I learnt it as Chainpod Wattle for its constricted seed pods but in retrospect
I think that this was a descriptive name coined by a clever teacher.)
While it is found in all the mallee lands of Australia, it is also found
far to the north, in every mainland state and the Northern Territory.
 MYRTACEAE
A very familiar family, and of course the one to which the mallee eucalypts themselves belong, but we met some of them last time. Here are three others.
Common Fringe-Myrtle Calytrix tetrogona, Dhilba Guuranda–Innes
National Park, Yorke Peninsula, South Australia. Another plant which,
while found in most of the mallee lands, also grows well beyond them too.
But, far too attractive to be left out!

Black Teatree Melaleuca lanceolata, growing alongside mallee in Coorong NP,
South Australia. It often grows within the mallee itself, and is especially
common near the coast and inland watercourses.
Woolly Featherflower Verticordia monodelpha, Kalbarri NP, central west coast
of Western Australia. This species isn't found far from Kalbarri. The genus is,
in my opinion at least, one of the most glorious in Australia; indeed 'verticordia'
means 'heart-turner'! It is endemic to the west.
ORCHIDACEAE
Well, anyone who knows me will know that I'm not going to miss a chance to allow some orchids to flaunt themselves, and I'm not going to disappoint you! There isn't the variety of orchids in mallee that we find in moister habitats, but here are some good ones to look for.
Long Golden Club Spider Orchid Caladenia (Arachnorchis) aurulenta,
Yeldulknie Conservation Park, Eyre Peninsula, South Australia.
This is a fairly rare species and limited to the northern Eyre Peninsula.
(Of course I could be wrong about this one - there are several quite similar species -
but it seems to meet all the relevant criteria.)
West Wind Spider Orchid Caladenia (Arachnorchis) zephyra, Wanilla Conservation Park,
Eyre Peninsula, South Australia. Apologies for the photo, but it's the only one
I've seen. (Therefore I'm obviously not familiar with it, so again any corrections
would be welcomed.)
Zebra Orchids Caladenia cairnsiana, Stirling Ranges NP.
This is one of the orchids I most look forward to seeing when I go west (not often enough!).
These were growing in mallee but they are also found in a range of habitats.
The same comments about habitat could be made about the Ant or Clown Orchid
Caladenia roei, here in roadside mallee near Hyden, south-west WA.
Tiny Rustyhood Oligochaetochilus pusillus, here in Gawler Ranges NP in South Australia,
is scattered in mallee and open forest across semi-arid southern Austalia.
    
PITTOSPORACEAE
Members of this diverse family, of a couple of hundred species of shrubs, trees and vines, are generally found in moister habitats than the mallee, but one species is very much at home there.
Berrigan or Native Apricot (and many other local names) Pittosporum angustifolium,
Mungo NP, south-western NSW. I am fascinated by its story. Nearly all Pittosporum
species live in east coast rainforest or wet eucalypt forest, but this one adapted as the country
dried out and, instead of retreating with the forests, evolved to the drying conditions.
It is an elegant small tree with weeping foliage found throughout the mallee lands,
and also well beyond to the north.

PROTEACEAE
This is one of the dominant Australian families, an old Gondwanan, found in every Australian habitat. Here is a selection of four, all from different genera (three of them very familiar), which are found in the mallee.
Gland Flower Adenanthos terminalis, Heggaton CP, Eyre Peninsula, South Australia.
It belongs to a genus of over 30 species, all but two of which are endemic to WA.
This species is limited to the mallee lands of South Australia and western Victoria.
Like most of the family it is bird-pollinated.
Fox Banksia B. sphaerocarpa Badgingarra NP, south-western WA.
This low shrub grows in deep sand in mallee, heath and woodlands.
Its dull colours and ground-hugging nature (to hide from birds) suggest that
this flower is one of the many pollinated by native mammals.
Candelabra Grevillea G. candelabroides Kalbarri NP, mid-west coast, WA.
A spectacular grevillea which is restricted to the mallee and heathland
of the northern sandplains in this region.
Emu Tree (I have no idea why, sorry!) Hakea francisiana, Pinkawillinie CP, South Australia.
Most hakeas have fairly small white flowers, so this one is especially impressive.
It grows in mallee and associated heathlands across southern WA and as far
east as Eyre Peninsula (where this one was).

RUTACEAE
A familiar family even if we don't realise it - eg citrus fruit, boronias, correas etc. 

Boronia (also now known as Cyanothamnus) coerulescens, Wanilla Conservation
Park,  Eyre Peninsula, South Australia. This attractive species has flowers ranging
from bright blue (very unusual in Boronias) to greenish to pink to white;
this one appears to be on the bluish end of that spectrum. It is also the only boronia
that I know of that grows in mallee, but there are probably some I don't know
about in the west. It is found in mallee from WA through South Australia
to Victoria. (It was recently determined that Boronia contains more than
one distinct group of species, and 24 of them were moved to Cyanothamnus.)
Desert Phebalium P. bullatum, Gawler Ranges NP, South Australia.
Another mallee specialist, found from the Eyre Peninsula to western Victoria.
The yellow flowers and long stamens are unmistakably Phebalium.
('Desert' in southern Australian plant names is often a codeword for mallee -
see more in the previous posting, and also the next two species.)
SANTALACEAE
The sandalwood family is a widespread one, whose members are all at least partially parasitic on other plants - photosynthesising their own sugars, but pilfering other nutrients, especially from the roots.
Quandong (or Desert or Sweet Quandong, to distinguish it from other related Australian species)
Santalum acuminatum, Nambung NP, south-west WA. Quandongs grow throughout
the mallee lands, but also in woodlands well to the north. There is now quite an
industry (especially around the Flinders Ranges in South Australia) selling jams
and chutneys from the fruit. When I was a child, my grandmother had a cheap
Chinese Checkers set using painted quandong seeds as the moving pieces.
SAPINDACEAE
This is a large world-wide family, best known elsewhere for lychees, maples and horse chestnuts, and in Australia for the native hops, Dodonaea spp. Here there are some 60 species, with another 10 elsewhere in the Southern Hemisphere.
Desert Hop-bush Dodonea stenozyga, near Yalata, eastern end of the Nullarbor Plain,
South Australia. The three-corner papery fruits are typical, but this one is
pretty well limited to the mallee.
SCROPHULARIACEAE
An unlovely name for this large cosmopolitan family. In this post all three members of the family I am introducing are species of (the 'desert lovers', in my Big Three of favourite Australian plant groups, along with orchids and banksias). Previously eremophilas, along with boobiallas (Myoporum) and a small WA genus, comprised the family Myoporaceae, but all have been moved into Scrophulariaceae. All Eremophila are arid-land plants, including the mallee.
Tar Bush Eremophila glabra, here at the eastern end of the Nullarbor Plain in South Australia,
is found right across southern arid and semi-arid Austalia.
Weeooka Eremophila oppositofolia, Whyalla CP, South Australia.
It has a similarly wide distribution to Tar Bush, above.
Scotia Bush Eremophila scoparia, Lake Gilles CP, South Australia.
Again grows very widely across the mallee lands, and into the adjacent Mulga.
And I'm sure you'll agree that that's probably enough for today! If you're really not that interested in Australian wildflowers you'll have given up reading this long ago, so I don't really know why I'm addressing you... :-) If you are still here, thank you and I hope you've enjoyed this floral display that the mallee has produced. I'll be back once more with some more mallee delights, this time some animals. I hope you'll come back then.

NEXT POSTING THURSDAY 28 NOVEMBER
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