Day 6 we drove to Yungaburra. After lunch and booking into our motel we did the circuit around Lake Eacham, a flooded volcanic crater.
Mammals
14. Platypus Ornithorhynchus anatinus
Birds
116. Yellow-spotted honeyeater Meliphaga notata
117. Bassian thrush Zoothera lunulata
118. Victoria's riflebird Lophorina victoriae (new Family)
119. Bower's shrikethrush Colluricincla boweri
120. Grey-headed robin Heteromyias cinereifrons
121. Grey whistler Pachycephala simplex
Reptiles
4. Australian water dragon Intellagama lesueurii
5. Elegant rainbow skink Carlia decora
Fish
1. Barred gunter Amniataba percoides (new Family)
plus one more we will be able to identify later.
We had engaged a well-known local guide, Alan Gillanders, to take us around mammal sites in the evening. I'm not a fan of organised group tours over a period of days or weeks, although I enjoyed watching a series of "virtual tours" during COVID. However I am all in favour of using local guides who have special insights into their areas. In this case we were taken to see yellow-bellied and feathertail gliders, and got wonderful views with a yellowbelly feeding at eye leval only a metre or two away, feathertails gliding and interacting with the yellowbellies etc. A great experience we could not have achieved alone. Of course for me a tour is a business expence.
Mammals
15. Broad-toed feathertail glider Acrobates frontalis (new Family)
16. Yellow-bellied glider Petaurus australis
17. Coppery brushtail possum Trichosurus johnstonii
18. Lemuroid ringtail possum Hemibelideus lemuroides
19. Green ringtail possum Pseudochirops archeri
20. Herbert River ringtail possum Pseudochirulus herbertensis
21. Rufous bettong Aepyprymnus rufescens
Birds
122. Eastern barn owl Tyto delicatula
123. Lesser sooty owl Tyto multipunctata
Amphibians
2. Rain whistling frog Austrochaperina pluvialis (new Family)
3. Northern barred frog Mixophyes schevilli
Mammals
14. Platypus Ornithorhynchus anatinus
Birds
116. Yellow-spotted honeyeater Meliphaga notata
117. Bassian thrush Zoothera lunulata
118. Victoria's riflebird Lophorina victoriae (new Family)
119. Bower's shrikethrush Colluricincla boweri
120. Grey-headed robin Heteromyias cinereifrons
121. Grey whistler Pachycephala simplex
Reptiles
4. Australian water dragon Intellagama lesueurii
5. Elegant rainbow skink Carlia decora
Fish
1. Barred gunter Amniataba percoides (new Family)
plus one more we will be able to identify later.
We had engaged a well-known local guide, Alan Gillanders, to take us around mammal sites in the evening. I'm not a fan of organised group tours over a period of days or weeks, although I enjoyed watching a series of "virtual tours" during COVID. However I am all in favour of using local guides who have special insights into their areas. In this case we were taken to see yellow-bellied and feathertail gliders, and got wonderful views with a yellowbelly feeding at eye leval only a metre or two away, feathertails gliding and interacting with the yellowbellies etc. A great experience we could not have achieved alone. Of course for me a tour is a business expence.
Mammals
15. Broad-toed feathertail glider Acrobates frontalis (new Family)
16. Yellow-bellied glider Petaurus australis
17. Coppery brushtail possum Trichosurus johnstonii
18. Lemuroid ringtail possum Hemibelideus lemuroides
19. Green ringtail possum Pseudochirops archeri
20. Herbert River ringtail possum Pseudochirulus herbertensis
21. Rufous bettong Aepyprymnus rufescens
Birds
122. Eastern barn owl Tyto delicatula
123. Lesser sooty owl Tyto multipunctata
Amphibians
2. Rain whistling frog Austrochaperina pluvialis (new Family)
3. Northern barred frog Mixophyes schevilli
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