Biology of the Southern Scrub-robin (Drymodes brunneopygia) at Peron Peninsula, Western Australia
Belinda Brooker
Emu 101(3) 181 - 190
Abstract
The ecology of the Southern Scrub-robin was examined at a 55-ha study site on
the eastern side of Peron Peninsula, Western Australia. The scrub-robin was a
sedentary, ground-dwelling species occurring in pairs, and sometimes alone.
Pairs maintained permanent, all-purpose territories throughout the year, and
males regularly defended the boundaries of their territories by song and by
chasing intruders. Territory sizes ranged from 2.8 to 7.1 ha, with a mean of
4.0 ha. The female alone was observed building the nest and incubating the one
egg, but both adults were seen feeding young. The incubation period was
estimated at 16 days and the nestling period at 9–12 days. Scrub-robins
primarily gleaned prey from leaf litter and sand. Analysis of scats showed
that ants comprised a major component of the diet in both spring and summer.
Other dietary items in spring included beetles, lepidopteran larvae, termites,
hemipterans, spiders and fruit of Enchylaena tomentosa.
In summer there was a higher proportion of termites in scats than in spring.
The ant fauna within scrub-robin scats was dominated by a species of
Iridomyrmex and a species of
Crematogaster, both 2–3 mm in length. The
Crematogaster species was selected more frequently than
it occurred in litter samples, while the Iridomyrmex
species was eaten in a lower proportion than sampled in the litter. The
scrub-robin’s use of litter substrates for feeding and nesting, and its
clutch size of one and potentially low reproductive rate, suggest that it may
be vulnerable to changes in the quantity and quality of the litter layer in
the Western Australian wheatbelt.
Full text doi:10.1071/MU00035
© CSIRO 2001





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