Native animals
Find out more about our native animals.
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- The Australasian grebe is a fairly common sight on reed-fringed ponds across much of Australia and parts of the Pacific. 
 - Although there are 7 species of bandicoots known to inhabit Australia, only 2 species might be encountered on the Sunshine Coast. 
 - Among birds it is almost always the male who is the most beautiful and showy, and there’s good reason for this. 
- There are around 10,000 bird species on the planet. They all share certain physical characteristics, including beaks. 
- The black browed albatross is the most commonly seen albatross in southern Australian waters, it is only rarely seen in South-east Queensland. 
- The eastern blossom bat has an almost identical distribution to the eastern tube-nosed bat. 
- The most distinctive feature of the brown cuckoo dove is its long tail, which it uses for balance to get to fruit. 
- The brush turkey is one of only 3 Australian birds that builds a nesting mound to incubate its eggs. 
- The bush stone curlew has significantly diminished in number, if you are lucky enough to share your surrounds with this bird its haunting call is unmistakable. 
- Chocolate wattled bats occupy a diverse range of habitats and roosts, including Sunshine Coast tree hollows. 
- The Christmas Island pipistrelle is Australia’s only recorded microbat extinction. 
- During breeding season, the male develops a plumage that turns the head, throat and breast a golden colour. 
- Bluetongues will happily live in suburbia if they can find suitable habitat. 
- Eastern forest bats prefer moist conditions and are common in rainforest gullies and neighbouring wet sclerophyll habitat. 
- Tucked away in caves and old tunnels on the Sunshine Coast, you will find a little bat that always wears a lucky horseshoe. 
- Find out more about the eastern sedge frog. 
- Eastern water dragons have a row of spikes that run over the ridge of their back to protect them from predators. 
- View research on flying fox habitats. 
- The world’s largest bats are known as flying-foxes, and despite evolving in warm tropical and subtropical regions, they suffer on hot days. 
 - Read about flying-foxes and how mums look after their pups. 
- Find out how to identify our local frogs. 
- The Sunshine Coast region is home to a very unique, yet unfortunately threatened species of cockatoo, the glossy black cockatoo. 
- This tiny bat will wait patiently and use its enormous ears and large eyes to ambush sonar-sensitive insects as they flutter past. 
- Green tree frogs are one of Australia’s most recognised and loved species of wildlife. 
- Take our quiz to find out if bats are a friend or foe. 
- As our big trees with ideal hollows and habitat get rarer and rarer, it must be noted how important nest boxes are for our native fauna now and for the future. 
- The eastern grey kangaroo is one of the most well-known animals in Australia. 
- Large-footed myotis, known as Australia's fishing bat, use their long toes and claws to trawl the surface of creeks and ponds for food. 
- The little bent-winged bats roost mostly in stormwater drains, tunnels and old mines on the Sunshine Coast. 
- These little bats can double the size of existing colonies! They are nomadic and move in the thousands, pollinating large stands of eucalyptus and corymbia trees. 
- Have you ever wondered why some organisms live extraordinarily long lives, while others, even with all the luck running their way, get just a fleeting glimpse of the planet? 
- The masked lapwing can often be seen in parks, sports fields, urban nature strips, and even small traffic islands near busy motorways. 
- You can help with habitat shortages by learning to live alongside microbats, wherever possible. 
- The keelback is a small non-venomous snake that rarely exceeds 75-80cm in length. 
- Non-breeding seals unbound to a breeding territory frequently occur in smaller numbers off our coast. 
- Pied currawongs form long-term pair bonds that extend across many seasons. 
- Rainbow bee-eaters are widespread across the Australian mainland, with the exception of the driest desert regions. 
 - Antechinus are actually small carnivorous marsupials that belong to a family of native animals 
- Red-backed fairy-wrens may have developed a strategy to outwit brood parasites. 
- All organisms on the planet, from the smallest bacteria to the largest mammal, share one driving force, the need to reproduce themselves. 
- Distinctive with its coat of quills, the echidna is a small but powerful little animal with short limbs and strong claws able to move surprisingly large objects. 
- The silver gull is Australia’s most common gull, usually, but not exclusively, nesting in large colonies on offshore islands. 
- The brown tree snake is generally found in forest covered areas including woodlands, rainforests and even some urban areas. 
- By the time the pied butcherbird has reached adulthood it has not only perfected its own song but also incorporates some impressive mimicry. 
- The striate anglerfish is a very intriguing species. 
- Swamp wallabies are usually solitary animals of the forest. 
- A master of camouflage, the tawny frogmouth, can usually be found sitting motionless in a tree during the day where it can be almost indistinguishable from the bark and branches. 
- Some species of bat rely on vision that is in some ways even better than ours! 
- Mystify is taking the mystery out of loggerhead turtle movement 
- Read about one of the few amphibious mammals found in Australia. 
- We have embarked on a once-off tracking project in collaboration with Queensland Government to gain insight into the inter-nesting habitat use of loggerhead turtles. 
- This tiny critter is known to build large mounds in mangrove areas for nesting and shelter. 
- Find out more about common names vs the binomial nomenclature system. 
- The most easily heard local microbat call is that of the white-striped free-tailed bat. 
- Learn what to do when coming across injured or orphaned wildlife.