Every time I move the potplants in my courtyard, unfortunate little
brown amphipods (landhoppers) are seen hopping about all over the place
- but not for long. The resident Blackbirds rush in and grab all those
that haven't made it back to a cool damp hiding-place. Incidentally,
this is a food source they didn't have back home in Europe, as Wim made
clear. I am sure that forest land-hoppers are among the food items
taken by Lyrebirds and many other ground-feeding species.
Richard Loyn once showed a photo slide of a female Blackbird in a
Victorian fern-gully, which was hard to identify because she had a
bright pink beak, like an Oriole's. It was suggested that this colour
had developed because she had been feeding heavily on amphipods and
obtaining a red pigment (I forget its name). Captive Black-necked Stilts
don't get enough of this pigment in their diet and therefore have pale
legs. I believe captive Flamingoes can also suffer from pallid colouring
for the same reason - in the wild they get it from brine shrimps.
Anthea Fleming
Judy Philip wrote:
> Wim, if only your amphipods (or even those isopods which you mention)
> had a
> common/popular name! We could probably get much more involved.
>
> I suspect that most of us would be really pleased to know more about
> these
> amphipod critters of our region, where they occur, and what they look
> like.
> Could we see them or are these Crustacea (that's what the Web seems to
> say
> they are!) too tiny? What should we be looking out for? As much of
> our
> groundwater comes to the surface at very high temperatures, would
> amphipods
> be present there?
>
> Incidentally, are there any fossil amphipods or are they never
> preserved (or
> not yet found)?
>
> Just to get back on topic - do birds eat amphipods!
>
> Regards,
>
> Judy
>
> --------------------------------------------
> Birding-Aus is now on the Web at
> www.birding-aus.org
>
--------------------------------------------
Birding-Aus is now on the Web at
www.birding-aus.org
--------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message 'unsubscribe
birding-aus' (no quotes, no Subject line)
to
|