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Egrets? I’ve had a few…

Egrets? I’ve had a few…

by Paula Peeters | Apr 22, 2015 | Tales of science, Wildlife illustration, Writing

  Over the last couple of months four species of egret have been frequenting Dowse Lagoon. Sometimes I see them together in the same muddy corner near the bird-hide. They are the great egret Ardea alba, plumed or intermediate egret Ardea plumifera, little egret...
The strangler fig: everyone’s favorite killer

The strangler fig: everyone’s favorite killer

by Paula Peeters | Apr 17, 2015 | Tales of science, Writing

A rainforest tree is subject to many mortal perils: shade, cyclones, fires, chainsaws. One of the most grotesque and extended deaths is carried in a tiny seed, rained down from above by complicit birds and bats. Many such seeds drop harmlessly to the forest floor, or...
Why is the house gecko noisy while most lizards are silent?

Why is the house gecko noisy while most lizards are silent?

by Paula Peeters | Apr 12, 2015 | Tales of science, Wildlife illustration, Writing

A recent visitor to our house – a keen naturalist from southern Australia – was startled the first time he heard the sound of an Asian House gecko, and was even more surprised that a gecko was responsible for the call. It is unusual for a lizard to be so...
Of bugs and booyongs

Of bugs and booyongs

by Paula Peeters | Apr 8, 2015 | Tales of science, Wildlife illustration, Writing

The rainforest holds many secrets in its high vaulted green ceilings, swooping loops of vines, a million soft mossy pockets and damp rotting piles of leaves. So many tales to tell. Of tree and leaf, beast and bug, season and storm. This one is about the black booyong,...
Little red nomads head north for the winter

Little red nomads head north for the winter

by Paula Peeters | Apr 1, 2015 | Tales of science, Wildlife illustration, Writing

  Around Easter-time it starts. The stirring of retired folks – the ‘grey nomads’ – as they load up their 4WD’s and caravans and head north for the winter. In south-east Queensland you see them on the freeways, mostly up from the colder south. On...
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