Predation of Cossid Moth Larvae by Yellow-Tailed Black Cockatoos Causing Losses in Plantations of Eucalyptus Grandis in North Coastal New South Wales.

1978 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 101 ◽  
Author(s):  
RS Mcinnes ◽  
PB Carne

Eucalyptus grandis is the preferred food of larvae of the cossid moth Xyleutes boisduvali. In the Coffs Harbour region of New South Wales, plantations of E. grandis established in the last 10 years for pulping have allowed a great increase in the population of cossids. Woodboring larvae, especially of X. boisduvali and of the cerambycid beetle Tryphocaria acanthocera, are eaten by the yellow-tailed black cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus funereus). Cerambycids live near the surface of the tree, but cossids live in the heartwood and excavation by the cockatoos may weaken the tree so that it snaps in strong wind. The life of the cossid is described in detail; it is a larva for 2 years, may reach 18 cm in length and was highly prized as food by aborigines. Feeding habits of free cockatoos and a captive are described. The bird searches for a frass hole and tests its size by biting. If the size of the hole indicates a fully grown larva, the bird pulls down a strip of bark on which to stand as it excavates. Cossids are eaten at any time of year but mainly in June and July when final instar larvae are most plentiful and the young birds leave the nest and accompany the parents to the plantations. Before the E. grandis plantations were established, the cockatoos often ate seeds of Punis spp. as they do in South Australia. They eat also larvae of a chalcidid gall-wasp and non-boring insects. Formerly the cockatoos controlled the borer population and some thinning of the trees did no harm, but modern plantations are spaced for optimum growth and up to 40% of trees may be lost by cockatoo damage. Proposed methods of control are to reduce cossid infestation by preventing stress to very young trees, using selective weedkillers and fertilizer, and to encourage undergrowth of wood perennials. Because of the flight characteristics of cockatoos they do not forage among undergrowth and are kept away from the lower parts of the trees, where the cossids are. ADDITIONAL ABSTRACT: Wood-boring insect larvae are eaten by the yellow-tailed black cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus funereus). In the Coffs Harbour region of New South Wales, the birds extract larvae of the cossid moth Xyleutes boisduvali Roths. from the trunks of Eucalyptus grandis, a species extensively grown in that area for pulpwood production. In gouging out the larvae, the birds weaken the trees, which may be snapped off by strong winds. Losses of up to 40% of the trees in a plantation have been recorded.The biology and behaviour of both the insect and the bird are discussed. Physiological stress, particularly competition with grasses, predisposes young trees to infestation by the cossid. The birds systematically search for trees containing cossid galleries, and excavate at least 50% of the larvae. Tree losses can be reduced by silvicultural methods that reduce stress on young trees, and that encourage the development of a vigorous understorey of woody perennials. The flight characteristics of the cockatoo are such that the birds will not forage for cossids in plantations where undergrowth impedes their access to the lower portions of the tree trunks where the insects predominantly occur.

1979 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 79 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Miller

The food and feeding habits of two species of cormorant were studied on a group of freshwater lakes in inland New South Wales. P. sulcirostris fed mainly on exotic fish (69% of live weight of prey), captured while fishing communally in the deeper waters. P. melanoleucos fed mainly on native decapod crustaceans (60% of prey) captured while fishing individually in the shallow parts of the lakes, and in nearby billabongs and farm dams. P. sulcirostris took larger common carp Carassius auratus, redfin Perca fluviatilis and yabby Cherax destructor than its congener. Seasonal changes in the diet of P. sulcirostris were similar in each year; its major prey, common carp and redfin, were least available during winter and spring, as fry grew too large to be captured and swallowed. Changes in diet of P. melanoleucos were irregular, as the availability of yabby, its major prey, was influenced by the turbidity, level and temperature of water. Seasonal changes in diets of both cormorants were attributed to changes in prey availability, and not changes in food preference. Food of nestlings sometimes differed from that of adults.


1985 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 317 ◽  
Author(s):  
JB Jennings

Bdellasimilis barwicki is an aberrant planarian, from a predominantly free-living marine family, inhabiting the limb pits of freshwater turtles in Queensland and New South Wales. It appears to feed mainly as an ectosymbiotic predator on aquatic oligochaetes and insect larvae, but laboratory observations suggest that it may also be an opportunistic commensal ingesting accidentally discarded portions of the host's food. The feeding mechanism is unique amongst triclad turbellarians in that food is taken intact into the peripharyngeal chamber, which is capable of very great expansion, and held there while the cylindrical plicate pharynx penetrates it to withdraw fragments piecemeal into the intestine. Intestinal structure is essentially the same as in other triclads, the monolayered gastrodermis being differentiated into gland cells and columnar phagocytes. Digestion, too; follows the characteristic triclad pattern; acidic proteolysis initiated in the gut lumen by endopeptidases from the gland cells is followed by phagocytosis and completion of digestion within the columnar cells by intracellular enzymes of which endopeptidases, arylamidases, and acid and alkaline phosphatases have been demonstrated histochemically. Large deposits of lipid occur in the gastrodermis, mesenchyme and vitellaria, but glycogen is found in only small amounts at these sites and in the musculature, testes and ovaries. The brain and principal longitudinal nerve cords contain large quantities of acetylcholinesterase, arylamidases and alkaline phosphatase.


1980 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 333 ◽  
Author(s):  
RB Floyd

Population densities were determined by counting faecal pellets of W. bicolor in wet sclerophyll forest and Eucalyptus grandis plantations, 1, 2 and 10 yr old, in New South Wales. Numbers were uniformly low in the 1-yr-old plantation and uniformly high in the 2-yr-old plantation. In the 10-yr-old plantation and the native forest numbers were low to moderate in the centres but high at the edges bordering on the 1-yr-old plantation. The different population densities are thought to result from differences in availability of cover and food. From author's summary.


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