Di Bickers: Nature Photos from My Garden

Di Bickers: Nature Photos from My Garden 🧡Learn about the Birds, Butterflies, Bees, other Invertebrates & Creatures in our garden ecosystem🧡

💚💚What a fabulous little song💚💚
02/04/2025

💚💚What a fabulous little song💚💚

well have a reasonand know whydon’t do it jus so they’ll dieif yer gonna kill a bugdon’t do it jus becauseI like bugsand i’ll tell ya whythey’re aliveand so ...

21/12/2024

🤎A baby Laughing Kookaburra visited this morning after Mum & Dad were taking it out on its first excursion🤎Poor little bubba ran out of energy and stopped for a rest in the driveway before mustering enough strength to fly up to the shadesail🤎I’m currently sitting with my coffee watching Mum & Dad chattering to encourage flight into the big world🤎
Subject: Laughing Kookaburra
Location: Southwest Qld
Date: December 2024
Camera: iPhone13
Lens: No additional lens

💚☹️A WORTHWHILE READ……💚🥲“More than 95% of Australian animal species are invertebrates (animals without backbones – spide...
20/12/2024

💚☹️A WORTHWHILE READ……💚🥲
“More than 95% of Australian animal species are invertebrates (animals without backbones – spiders, snails, insects, crabs, worms and others). There are at least 300,000 species of invertebrate in Australia. Of these, two-thirds are unknown to western science.

This means there are huge gaps in our knowledge of Australia’s invertebrates. Our new study, published today in the journal Cambridge Prisms: Extinction, indicates there has been a catastrophic under-recording of Australia’s species extinctions.

Our best estimate is that 9,111 invertebrate species have become extinct in Australia since 1788. This dwarfs the current official estimate of the total number of extinctions across all plant and animal species in Australia: 100.

The extinction of so many invertebrate species is not an arcane concern for those few people who care about bugs. Invertebrates are the building blocks of almost all ecological systems.

Loss of invertebrates will destabilise those systems. It will negatively impact the resources we depend upon, like pollination, cycling of nutrients into the soil, clean air and waterways.

Re-calculating species loss
To date, assessments of historic and ongoing biodiversity loss in Australia have been heavily skewed towards vertebrates, especially mammals and birds. This bias has also driven the efforts to prevent the loss of such species.

These conservation efforts are important. But in having such a focus, we have neglected the invertebrates. We haven’t adequately recognised which invertebrates are at the highest risk of extinction, or which have already been lost.

The most widely used estimate for the total number of extinctions of all Australian plants and animals since 1788 is “just” 100 species.

Of these, only ten are invertebrates. And only one invertebrate species, the Lake Pedder earthworm, is officially listed as extinct by the Australian government.

In our study, we used a range of approaches to estimate a more realistic figure for the number of invertebrate extinctions, and to predict how many will become extinct in 2024.

We took the proportional extinction rates of Australian vertebrates and plants and extrapolated this to the number of Australian invertebrates. Separately, we also extrapolated the proportion of extinctions recognised among all of the world’s invertebrates to the number of Australian ones.

To estimate the current extinction rate – the number of invertebrates that are going extinct as you read this article – we had to make assumptions. One option was that our estimated number of extinctions from 1788 to 2024 fell equally across the years.

However, it’s more likely the annual rate of extinctions of Australian invertebrates has increased over time. This is due to increasing habitat loss and other threats as Australia’s human population has grown.

Any such study will have many unknowns, unavoidable uncertainties and caveats. Because of this, we derived broad bounds to our estimate of Australian invertebrate extinctions. It ranges from about 1,500 species at the lower end to nearly 60,000 at the upper end.

This vast number of extinctions is not simply a historical blemish. Importantly, we estimate that the current rate of extinctions of Australian invertebrates is between one and three species every week.

Most of the Australian invertebrate species that have gone extinct will not yet have been formally described. Many may never be so. We have coined the term “ghost extinctions” for those species that have been lost without a trace – with no evidence they ever existed.

Why so many extinctions?
Many of the factors that have caused extinctions in Australian plants and vertebrates also threaten invertebrates. These include extensive habitat destruction, invasive species, degradation and transformation of aquatic environments, and changed fire regimes.

For invertebrates, added to that cocktail of threats is the widespread use of insecticides, pesticides and herbicides.

Many invertebrates are at high extinction risk because they live in small areas, can’t easily move, and are highly sensitive to change. They also often share habitats, so we get entire groups of highly at-risk invertebrate species hanging on in remnant islands of habitat (known as “centres of endemism”).

Many of these at-risk invertebrates are also members of ancient lineages which stretch back millions of years. They would have survived through a world with dinosaurs and the arrival of mammals. Now, they have met a world with humans.

How can we stop invertebrate extinctions?
Currently, conservation priorities in Australia are informed by formal listings of individual threatened species. It’s an important conservation mechanism, but it fails the vast majority of invertebrate species.

We just don’t have enough data, evidence or resources to list each one. As a result, most imperilled invertebrates are excluded from protection.
Our results are a wake-up call.

Preventing extinctions of invertebrate species is a formidable challenge. A first step is for everyone to be aware of the huge distortion in conservation efforts and awareness, and the likely magnitude of invertebrate extinctions.

We can help lower the rate of invertebrate extinctions, but it will take a shift in thinking.

To provide better protection across all of Australia’s biodiversity, we need to better protect centres of endemism and better control key threats (such as habitat destruction and broad-scale use of insecticides).

Governments and research organisations must give more priority to taxonomic research – the naming and describing of new species. We also need more comprehensive monitoring by government agencies, conservation groups and citizen scientists of invertebrate populations, to identify new threats as they arise and to protect species and places.

In 2022, Australia signed the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. It joined 196 countries pledging a commitment to zero new extinctions.

If Australia is losing one to three invertebrate species per week, the “zero extinctions” goal is pushed into a whole new realm of accountability. Unless we address this decline, that pledge of zero extinctions is destined to failure.”

John Woinarski, Professor of Conservation Biology, Charles Darwin University and Jess Marsh, Visiting researcher in ecology, University of Adelaide
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

https://cosmosmagazine.com/news/catastrophic-species-loss-goes-unrecorded/?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAR2YnqL9JD2QDMHUiMQ9mhWKCzYSGsaM342cGKmNrLmrNk1ns_aij1uU15o_aem_KVxO5meKKqKYN6IixJCRmg

There are at least 300,000 species of invertebrate in Australia of which two-thirds are unknown to western science.

💛💛I always do a few laps around the yard looking for bugs🙃So Thursday I bowled out through the laundry door at a million...
01/11/2024

💛💛I always do a few laps around the yard looking for bugs🙃So Thursday I bowled out through the laundry door at a million miles an hour like I usually do at lunchtime🙃😂& I was momentarily stunned, when about 1.5m in front of me, I saw this big beauty standing next to the sand/gravel mix surveying the backyard💛💛Roll on the cogs turning in my brain for 5-10secs & I dashed inside to get the camera, albeit still with the macro lens attached for bug pics🙃no time to change it😂😂I knelt down beside it and grabbed a few photos💛💛It slept under the laundry floor that night and my cat was stretched out like a fluffy log sniffing at the floorboards and then sporadically scaring the s**t out of himself (launching a foot in the air each time)😂😂Anyway, this gorgeous creature & I had lunch together again yesterday… obviously I had to take more photos🥰
Subject: Eastern Argus Monitor (Varanus panoptes panoptes)
Location: Southwest Qld
Date: 31/10/24 & 01/11/24
Camera: Nikon D3300
Lens: Nikkor AF-S Micro 60mm
& Nikko AF-S DX VR 55-300mm

💙💙A juvenile Blue-faced Honeyeater having an early morning stretch up in the Tipuana Tree💙💙When they’re young, they have...
20/05/2024

💙💙A juvenile Blue-faced Honeyeater having an early morning stretch up in the Tipuana Tree💙💙When they’re young, they have a yellow-green eye patch which will develop into a striking blue once they have reached maturity💙💙Their diet is mainly insects and other invertebrates which is quite handy around the garden for pest-control💙💙They are also rather fond of nectar and fruits, and love sipping sweet treats from the Bottlebrushes in my yard💙💙
Subject: Blue-faced Honeyeater
Location: Southwest Qld
Date: September 2022
Camera: Nikon D3300
Lens: Nikkor AF-S DX VR 55-300mm

💜🐝Celebrating World Bee Day🐝💜Worldwide we have approximately 20,000 known species of bee🐝💜We have close to 2,500 native ...
19/05/2024

💜🐝Celebrating World Bee Day🐝💜Worldwide we have approximately 20,000 known species of bee🐝💜We have close to 2,500 native species in Australia🐝💜There are so many bees that visit our gardens🐝💜Here’s my tally from the last 4yrs and hoping to see more as the years pass🐝💜There are many bees which cannot be identified beyond Family or Genus based on photos & more still which have not yet been described (studied & named)🐝💜The ones I have found range in size from approx 4mm through to 20mm🐝💜I have added their names and sizes to each photo🐝💜With the exception of the last two photos, all the other photos are of our precious native bees (our little unsung heroes)🐝💜
Subject: Native & Introduced Bees
Location: Southwest Qld
Date: 2020-2024

💙💙My apologies everyone💙💙I’m a bit behind on the nature page with the recent distraction of our local show & a fundraise...
13/05/2024

💙💙My apologies everyone💙💙I’m a bit behind on the nature page with the recent distraction of our local show & a fundraiser at a nearby town💙💙I donated a framed canvas print to the fundraiser which was part of a silent auction💙💙The event was a huge success and they’re well on the way to having raised the funds needed to purchase a much-needed bladder scanner for the hospital💙💙I’m also super-excited to say I entered a few photos into our local show for the first time ever and placed 1st & 3rd in the macro-photography section💙💙I’ve never won a ribbon for anything my entire life & this weekend I was humbled to receive two💙💙It’s been both an eventful and nerve-wrecking experience over the last couple of weeks with the joyous culmination over the weekend just gone💙💙Thankyou to everyone for your patience, and I’ll try to sort new posts for the coming week over the weekend😘

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