Author:
Bradford M. G.,Harrington G. N.
Abstract
Sap-feed trees of the yellow-bellied glider
(Petaurus australis reginae) were located in a 1600-ha
site in north Queensland by aerial survey and ground survey. The ground survey
located 77 active sap-feed trees, of which only seven were seen from the
air.Thus we conclude that aerial survey is not a reliable means of censusing
yellow-bellied glider populations. Sap-feeding scars made by gliders were
found only on Eucalyptus resinifera even though four
other species of Eucalyptus, which are used for
sap-feeding in New South Wales, were also present in the area.In addition to
the active feed trees, we found 156 trees with old sap-feeding scars, giving a
total of 233 scarred trees in all.All but two of these were located within 500
m of mature E. grandis trees, which are believed to be
the prime source of glider dens.Of the E. resinifera
trees with diameter at breast height greater than 40 cm in the study area
1.06% were scarred and 0.35% were in active use by the
gliders.The sap-feed trees had significantly fewer other trees in their
immediate vicinity than the mean for all E. resinifera
trees in the study area.The early stages of rainforest invasion investigated
here did not indicate a reduction in use for sap-feeding by gliders.However,
in the long-term E. resinifera is unable to thrive or
reproduce within a rainforest, suggesting that the gliders’ habitat will
be reduced as the E. resinifera trees die out.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
11 articles.
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