Search Results for: Birds live
with fields of wildflowers in bloom. the xanthorrhoea plant, with its grass-like skirt and tall flower spike, is common throughout the park. there's an amazing diversity of animals here too, including rare forester kangaroos, wombats, echidnas, tasmanian devils, bennetts wallabies and pademelons. birds
are particularly abundant, with honeyeaters, wrens, robins, finches and pardalotes found in the park. yellow-tailed black cockatoos are common, and migratory birds such as mutton birds, silver-eyes and swamp harriers also drop by, while albatross, white-bellied sea eagles and wedge-tailed eagles soar...
https://www.discovertasmania.com.au/about/national-parks-and-wilderness/mt-william-national-park
about eight extant species, two of which are known as alligators and six of which are known as caimans. members of alligatoridae provide a valued ecological function in food chains . they consume invertebrates , such as snails and crustaceans, and vertebrates , such as fish, mammals such as capybara , birds
, and turtles , and in turn the young alligators are prey to a large number of animals, such as birds of prey, wading birds, cats, otters , large fish, and turtles. however, alligators and caimans exhibit substantial parental behavior in guarding their nests and protecting their young. contents overview...
https://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Alligatoridae