It may be hard to explain why I wanted to go to Two Peoples Bay. For a birder, of course, it's almost the only spot for two of Australia's rarest birds, the Western Bristlebird (Dasyornis longirostris) and the famous Noisy Scrub-Bird (Atrichornis clamosus). However, they are both extraordinary skulkers, and my chance of seeing either of them on a single morning's visit was remote indeed (true to form, and to spare you the suspense, I didn't see either one). In a way, though, that didn't matter. The Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve is one of the shrines of avian conservation, and on September 12, 2013, I was on a pilgrimage.
The story goes back to 1961. Global birding was in its infancy, and the idea that a bird long-thought extinct could come back from the dead - now almost a commonplace - was still extraordinary. The Noisy Scrub-Bird had not been seen or heard since 1889. It was gone and, pretty much, forgotten despite extensive searches early in the twentieth century. Then came the announcement: a population, of what proved to be about 100 birds, had been found at Two Peoples Bay - not in a remote area, but only a short drive east of Albany, within reach of the area's main picnic ground. The news went round the world, and this obscure, almost flightless little brown bird became the focus of an intense conservation and recovery plan that continues to this day. This was a place I had to see - and it doesn't hurt that it is a very beautiful spot.
It's also a very popular one - not surprisingly. Most visitors, of course, come for the beach (at least in warmer weather).
Of course I was more interested in the heathland behind the beach...
...and soon left Eileen to relax at the picnic area while I went off for a it of botanical/ornithological exploration.
Though Two Peoples Bay is famous for its (skulking and very shy) rarities, the only birds I managed to photograph were common ones. This is a White-browed Scrubwren (Sericornis frontalis), as common here as in eastern Australia. Note the spotted breast, typical of the western races which were once treated as a separate species, the Spotted Scrubwren (S. maculatus).
And here is the ubiquitous New Holland Honeyeater (Phylidonyris novaehollandiae).
The heathland behind the beach was impenetrable, packed with densely-grown, often prickly bushes. This is Wedge-leaved Dryandra (Banksia obovata), a heathland endemic near the western edge of its range.
Coastal Woolly Bush (Adenanthos sericeus) is even more local, found only around Albany and further east near Esperance. It is one of the few members of the protea family (Proteaceae) with individual flowers, rather than masses of small flowers clumped into a larger inflorescence (as in the Dryandra above).
Blue Smokebush (Conospermum caeruleum) is another member of the Proteaceae endemic to the southwest. It is one of over fifty species in its genus, all confined to Australia.
Paperbarks (Melaleuca) belong to the Myrtaceae, the same family as Eucalyptus. Many of them are trees including the infamous M. quinquinerva, a serious invasive pest in Florida. This one, which I think is M. striata, is one of the shrubby species.
I think this is a Melaleuca too, but it is odd to see one with yellow flowers instead of the usual pink, purple or white.
Australia is loaded to the teeth with members of the pea family. This is, if I have identified it correctly, Hairy Red Pea (Gastrolobium leakeanum, formerly Nemcia leakeana). It's certainly something similar, but leakeanum is supposed to be a montane plant, restricted to the nearby Stirling Ranges, so it could be a coastal relative.
Painted Lady (Gompholobium scabrum) is another shrubby pea, with very attractive flowers. It is widespread through the Southwest.
I knew that my chances of finding the Noisy Scrub-Bird were pretty much nil, but I had to at least try. This required a trek up a hillside trail into an area that was supposed to hold Scrub-Bird territories. Using a tape was, of course, an absolute no-no, so I had a quiet listen first just to give me some idea of what the bird sounded like (beyond the fact that it was, presumably, noisy).
Singing Scrub-Birds (if that's what they were) aside, the hillside trail was worth it for the flowers. In older books this flower is listed as Milkmaids (Burchardia umbellata), but that species has been subsumed into another (B. congesta). That may be what this is, or it could be the similar, but narrower-petalled, B. multiflora, which also occurs near Albany. Anyway, Burchardia is a member of the autumn-crocus family (Colchicaceae).
This is certainly a Goodenia, and I think it is the widespread G. berardeana. There are, however, an awful lot of Goodenias in Western Australia, and I haven't ploughed through them all.
There are a lot of Pimeleas, too, but I think this handsome flower is Banjine (Pimelea longiflora). Pimelea is a member of the Thymelaeaceae, a diverse family that includes garden shrubs like Daphne and the ramins (Gonostylus), tropical Asian rainforest trees now hard pressed by illegal loggers.
I think these are a sort of banjine too, but I have no idea which one.
This may be a species of Conostylis, a member of the kangaroo paw family (Haemadoraceae), but to be honest I'm not at all sure. It's flowers aren't exactly like anything in my guidebooks, and they don't match any photos I've found on the web either. Can anyone out there lend a hand?
These I do know; in fact I featured them in my last posting. They are flower heads of the peculiar Drumsticks (Dasypogon bromeliifolius), a member of the altogether peculiar Australian family Dasypogonaceae.
Grasses, sedges and the like, dominant though they may be in the world's flora, are usually not a focus for a wildflower watcher. Most are wind-pollinated, have (as a consequence, since they aren't trying to attract anything) unobtrusive flowers, and are miserable for a non-expert (and, as I have repeatedly declared here, 'non-expert' describes me to a T when it comes to botany) to identify.
There is one group, however, that I find quite fascinating and, often, very beautiful. These are the restios (Restionaceae) and their relatives, frequently spectacular-looking rushes with a centre of distribution in Southern Africa and Madagascar. There are about 150 species in Australia and a few others scattered through the Southern Hemisphere, so the family looks like another Gondwanaland relic (despite the fact that the single species in South America may be a wind-blown recent arrival from New Guinea.
A few southwest Australian restio-like plants are placed in a family of their own, the Anarthriaceae. This is one of them, a member of Anarthria itself, one of only three genera the family.
All the plants in this series of photographs appear to be Anarthia scabra. The drooping inflorescences on the first two are apparently typical of a male plant, with the remainder being the upright inflorescences of the female (yellow when young, reddish when older).
Creamy Candles (Stackhousia monogyna) was formerly placed, with a few other genera, in the tiny family Stackhousiaceae, but recent reclassifications have dumped it (with its relatives) into the much larger bittersweet family (Celastraceae).
These clusters of colourful stamens are typical Eucalyptus flowers, possibly of Bell-fruited Mallee (E. preissiana) but don't quote me.
Mountain Kunzea (Kunzea montana) is a localized endemic found only in the Albany region and its surrounding mountains. Like Melaleuca, it is a member of the myrtle family (Myrtaceae). Kunzea is a large genus confined to Australia (except for two species in New Zealand), with most of its species in the southwest.
The aptly named Southern Cross (Xanthosia rotundifolia) is an austral member of the carrot family (Apiaceae, or Umbelliferae as we used to call it). It is one of the most distinctive southwestern flowers - or, to be more accurate, inflorescences, as the structure that catches your eye is not the flower but a set of bracts decorating the whorled flower head, or umbel. The flowers themselves are the small structures at the centre of each arm of the 'cross'.
From the height of the trail I could look out from the Scrub-Bird's territory over the bay (which is called Two Peoples, by the way, not in reference to native Australians but (according to Wikipedia) to an 1803 incident in which an American and a French vessel anchored here at the same time).
Before we headed back to Albany to resume our route, I came across a sign that although I had seen none, I was not the only large mammal in the vicinity. A Western Grey Kangaroo (Macropus fuliginosus) had passed this way, probably the night before. By dusk it would be active again, hopping along the trails where I had walked, but by then Eileen and I would be away to the north.
Creamy Candles (Stackhousia monogyna) was formerly placed, with a few other genera, in the tiny family Stackhousiaceae, but recent reclassifications have dumped it (with its relatives) into the much larger bittersweet family (Celastraceae).
These clusters of colourful stamens are typical Eucalyptus flowers, possibly of Bell-fruited Mallee (E. preissiana) but don't quote me.
Mountain Kunzea (Kunzea montana) is a localized endemic found only in the Albany region and its surrounding mountains. Like Melaleuca, it is a member of the myrtle family (Myrtaceae). Kunzea is a large genus confined to Australia (except for two species in New Zealand), with most of its species in the southwest.
The aptly named Southern Cross (Xanthosia rotundifolia) is an austral member of the carrot family (Apiaceae, or Umbelliferae as we used to call it). It is one of the most distinctive southwestern flowers - or, to be more accurate, inflorescences, as the structure that catches your eye is not the flower but a set of bracts decorating the whorled flower head, or umbel. The flowers themselves are the small structures at the centre of each arm of the 'cross'.
From the height of the trail I could look out from the Scrub-Bird's territory over the bay (which is called Two Peoples, by the way, not in reference to native Australians but (according to Wikipedia) to an 1803 incident in which an American and a French vessel anchored here at the same time).
Before we headed back to Albany to resume our route, I came across a sign that although I had seen none, I was not the only large mammal in the vicinity. A Western Grey Kangaroo (Macropus fuliginosus) had passed this way, probably the night before. By dusk it would be active again, hopping along the trails where I had walked, but by then Eileen and I would be away to the north.
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