Sugar Glider, Western Lake Macquarie, 28th March 2018 |
Working with endangered frogs I learned very quickly that MANY species are far more common than originally thought, it just people are not in the field in the correct weather pattern, because it's not very pleasant. For example, the winter breeding frogs had relatively little known about them until recently because humans would rather be tucked up in bed or in front of a fire in the middle of winter when temperatures are at their lowest and it's pouring rain, muddy, wet and very slippery.
There was a species of locally very common frog formally named for the first time recently. What is not revealed in the literature was that I found the very first specimens because I was in the field at the right time back in the early 1990's. I have the precise locality data and dates for them in my log books. I spent hours and hours and hours in the field, spent thousands of dollars, drove my car hundreds and hundreds of kilometres and was lucky enough to find them, and show them to the person they would eventually be named after. At the time, he thought they were simply a strange colour variation, not a completely new species to science.
On Wednesday night, we found this Sugar glider photographed above, with my mobile phone in an urban area. Last night we found a Yellow bellied glider in a very similar area, close to my home. We've seen Ring-tailed possums, Brush-tailed possums, owls, fruit bats, bush rats, dear little antechinuses and bandicoots in remnant vegetation patches all over the Lake Macquarie area. It truly is all about spending time in your local patch of bush.
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