Another not a bird question

Hi Birding Ausers

Since coming to Brisbane in the late 90’s, we have a summer visitor that is definitely not a bird, but I have never been able to work it out. It is arboreal and calls mainly in the day but occasionally at night. It gives three repeat monosyballic calls that sounds like a halyard banging against a yacht mast….’plock, plock, plock’. A gecko perhaps?? Any suggestions??

Thanks

Judith

Judith Hoyle Brisbane 0437 549301 ============================== To unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message: unsubscribe (in the body of the message, with no Subject line) to: birding-aus-request@vicnet.net.au

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3 comments to Another not a bird question

  • Syd Curtis

    CORRECTION CORRECTION CORRECTION CORRECTION

    On December 13, I sent an email which began:

    “Hi Judith,

    ” Like Greg Clancy, my first thought was Asian House Gecko, but they are indeed house animals by choice, and your friend is arboreal, you say.

    “So I think there is little doubt that what you have is one of Brisbane’s more unusual animals. Unusual, in that it’s very common … and very little understood.

    “My pet-name for it is the “Bipping Cicada”, but officially it is the Bladder Cicada (Cystosoma saundersii).”

    Old and incompetent am I. It ‘s some years since I made my recordings of the cicadas and when I was typing my email I took the wrong name off page 83 of the Museum book.

    Your cicada, Judith, is actually the Bottle Cicada Glaucopsaltria viridis, and not the Bladder Cicada which appears on the same page.

    My apologies.

    Syd

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  • Syd Curtis

    Hi Judith,

    Like Greg Clancy, my first thought was Asian House Gecko, but they are indeed house animals by choice, and your friend is arboreal, you say.

    So I think there is little doubt that what you have is one of Brisbane’s more unusual animals. Unusual, in that it’s very common … and very little understood.

    My pet-name for it is the “Bipping Cicada”, but officially it is the Bladder Cicada (Cystosoma saundersii).

    [What is the behaviour that Albert Lyrebirds and Bladder Cicadas have in common? My answer later in this email.]

    If you haven’t got a copy already, I’d strongly recommend that as a Brisbane resident you buy a copy of the Qld Museum’s book, “Wildlife of Greater Brisbane”. In my 1995 copy the bladder cicada is on page 83, but unless it has been added in a more recent edition you won’t find any reference to the sound you describe. Even the Museum didn’t know about it back in ’95, it seems.

    During the day, the males at longish intervals give the ‘plock, plock, plock’ call that you describe, but at dusk they change to something quite different – a loud continuous buzz; a more typical cicada call.

    I should perhaps qualify that “quite different”. Their continuous buzzing “evensong” is in fact no more than those same ‘plock’ sounds, repeated so rapidly that it makes that continuous buzz.

    Unfortunately, I understand that I am not permitted to post the sounds to birding-aus, but I’ll send you a private email with an attached mp3 file, and hope that you can use it. It will contain:

    1. An example of the day-time Œbipping¹ call, (this one with four bips) which I expect to be the sound you are hearing.

    2. A sample of the cicada¹s continuous Œevensong¹.

    3. an artificial evensong made by repeating a single bip from the day-time calls. First the single bip; then the artificial song; and finally a sample of the real evensong again.

    If I succeed in sending you a readable mp3 file, you can then tell birding-aus whether my diagnosis of your sound is correct. (And if not, why then you can start listening for my ‘bipping’ cicada.)

    And what is the behaviour that Bladder Cicadas have in common with Albert Lyrebirds? A male establishes a territory and calls (a) to exclude other males from his territory (his day-time bipping call); and (b) to attract females for mating (his continuous ‘evensong’).

    If you want proof of the above, record the sound of his daytime bipping call and play the sound near him, and see the reaction you get. And (if you’re lucky!) listen to and record the change in performance of his evensong when a female does come to him.

    [BTW, in case it’s of significance, about 60 years ago I planted in our garden a Red Bottlebrush tree, a Wheel-of-Fire, and a Water-gum (Tristaniopsis collina). I don’t know if any of these were necessary to encourage the Cicadas to come to live with us.]

    Cheers

    Syd

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  • "Greg & Val Clancy"

    Sounds like an Asian House Gecko call to me. They are common in Brisbane and are now heading south down the NSW coast. An introduced species.

    Greg Clancy Ecologist Coutts Crossing NSW