Black honeyeater

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Black honeyeater
A male

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Meliphagidae
Genus: Sugomel
Species:
S. nigrum
Binomial name
Sugomel nigrum
(Gould, 1838)
  Approximate distribution of the black honeyeater
Synonyms
  • Myzomela nigra Gould, 1838
  • Certhionyx niger (Gould, 1838) Salomonsen, 1967
  • Glyciphila nisoria Salvadori, 1878
  • Sugomel nigrum (Gould, 1838)

The black honeyeater (Sugomel nigrum) is a species of

arid areas of the continent, through open woodland and shrubland, particularly in areas where the emu bush
and related species occur.

A

of Endangered species.

Taxonomy

Illustration of a brown female and black male on a plant
John and Elizabeth Gould's illustration of a female and male drawn from nature

The black honeyeater was first described by English naturalist

Certhionyx,[9] which also contained the banded honeyeater (Certhionyx pectoralis) and pied honeyeater (Certhionyx variegatus), and later authorities accepted this classification.[10] Australian ornithologists Richard Schodde and Ian J. Mason kept the three in the same genus, but conceded the basis for this was weak and classified each species in its own subgenus—Sugomel for the black honeyeater.[11]

In a 2004

International Ornithological Committee's (IOC) Birdlist.[16] Mathews described two subspecies—Myzomela nigra westralensis from Western Australia on the basis of smaller size and darker plumage,[17] and Myzomela nigra ashbyi from Mount Barker, South Australia, on the basis of larger size and paler plumage[18]—neither of which is regarded as distinct today.[2]

DNA analysis has shown the honeyeater family

Maluridae (Australian fairy-wrens) in a large superfamily Meliphagoidea.[19] The Papuan black myzomela, (Myzomela nigrita), found in Indonesia and Papua New Guinea is also known as the black honeyeater. It is a different but related species.[20]

Black honeyeater has been adopted as the official name by the IOC.[16] It is also known as the charcoal bird from collecting ashes after campfires.[3]

Description

Female bird perched in a Jacaranda tree
A female on a Jacaranda

The black honeyeater has a long, slender, down-curved bill, a small rounded head and slender neck set on a plump body, and a short, slightly cleft tail. It is between 10 and 13 cm (3.9 and 5.1 in) long, with an average wingspan of around 19 cm (7.5 in) and a weight of 9.5 g (0.34 oz).[21] It has relatively long, pointed wings for a honeyeater,[22] and very long wings for such a small bird, the development of which has been attributed to its feeding behaviour of flying between shrubs and hovering over flowers.[23]

The species is strongly sexually dimorphic.[22] Adult males are black and white, with a black head, neck, wings and upperparts, and a black stripe running down from the centre of the chest to the abdomen, and with a white belly, flanks and under-tail coverts. The female's crown, ear coverts and upper parts are buff brown, scalloped paler, with a pale eyebrow, and the chest is speckled grey-brown grading into a dull white belly. In both male and female the iris is dark brown and the bill and legs blackish brown. Immature birds are similar to the adult female; however, the upper breast and throat tend to be more uniform grey-brown and the base of the bill is paler;[24] they are not distinguishable from adult females at a distance.[21]

The black honeyeater is quiet when not breeding, but calls before and during the nesting season, often early in the morning.[21] The calls include a soft metallic "chwit, chwit"; a louder note, a "tieee", with a monotonously even pitch and spacing at intervals of several seconds between notes; and a weak "peeee", usually uttered by breeding males.[24][25] A soft scolding call is given by both sexes after the young hatch, which may be a call to alert the young they have food.[21] The species is also heard making a bill snap when hawking insects.[21] It is constantly on the move, hovering and hawking when feeding, and chasing intruders at food sources.[22] Gould described its flight as "remarkably quick, and performed with zigzag starts".[26]

Distribution and habitat

An emu bush growing in the desert
An emu bush, Eremophila, in the Simpson Desert

The black honeyeater is a bird of the dry inland of Australia, being generally widespread though scattered in western

Wimmera regions. In South Australia, it occurs in the south-east and it is widespread in the central and northern regions of Western Australia, with some rare sightings in the south near Kalgoorlie. In the Northern Territory, it is widespread around Alice Springs, with some vagrants to the Top End.[27]

It is dependent on the presence of the berrigan emu bush (

paperbarks occur. It has been noted that the black honeyeater is able to locate emu bushes, even when clumps consist of only two or three and are separated by many kilometres of country, which suggests the importance of this plant–bird association.[29]

The black honeyeater is considered to be

droughts it has been recorded south of Bendigo and in the Hunter Region.[30] Irruptions (sudden population increases) can occur in some areas after rain or the movement of floodwaters.[27] Breeding has generally been recorded in the drainage basins of Cooper Creek and the Darling River in southwestern Queensland and northwestern New South Wales, as well as in the Pilbara and Gascoyne regions in Western Australia. However, favourable conditions may result in it breeding anywhere during an irruption.[21]

Behaviour

The black honeyeater is usually encountered alone or in pairs, though up to 50 may gather at stands of plants in flower.[21]

Breeding

The breeding season is from July to December (mostly between August and November), or opportunistically after rain. There is apparently some variation based upon location, with birds in Western Australia nesting earlier, whilst those in Queensland breed as late as March.[31] Black honeyeater populations concentrate for breeding wherever the right plants are in flower and there is an abundance of insects, both essential for feeding the young.[32] At the beginning of the mating season, males can be seen soaring in "song flights", which consist of a series of zigzagging movements, high into the air, accompanied by constant calling. The birds appear to stiffen themselves, with wings pointed downward, as they rise, while uttering a two-note call.[24]

Black honeyeaters gather into loose groups of up to fifty birds during the breeding season, with only several pairs within the group breeding. The males agonistically defend a small breeding territory against members of their own species as well as other

spiderweb, lining it with grass, roots, fibre, horse hair, flowers, or wool.[27] As the young grow, the nest can become flattened to a saucer shape, and may be an almost flat platform by the time the chicks fledge.[30]

The female lays two to three eggs, which are 15 mm (0.6 in) long, 12 mm (0.5 in) wide and have an unusual swollen oval shape. The eggs are slightly lustrous, buffy white in colour and dotted with reddish-brown and grey blotches that often appear in a cloud over the larger end of the eggs.

incubates alone, leaving the eggs exposed for short periods during the day to take insects in the air.[24] When approached, the sitting bird attempts to hide by sinking into the nest and, if unsuccessful in deterring the intruder, will tumble to the ground with outstretched wings, giving weak calls in an effort to lure the intruder away from the nest.[30] While the female is incubating, the male remains on guard at one of several regular vantage points. The incubation period is around sixteen days, and the fledging period approximately eighteen days.[24] On hatching, the young birds' eyes are closed, and they are naked except for tufts of down on the head, nape and back.[30] Both sexes feed and care for the young,[27] taking all the insects for the young birds in the air.[24] At one nest, two small young were fed every ten minutes or so, with the male bringing food three to four times more often than the female. All birds leave the vicinity of the nesting site within a few days of the young fledging.[21]

Food and feeding

Male bird feeds on nectar from a Jacaranda flower
A male feeding in a Jacaranda

The black honeyeater feeds on nectar, probing flowers and foliage with its long, fine bill. It is mainly found in the crowns of eucalypts, at clumps of mistletoe or in shrubs, especially emu bushes (Eremophila). Observations over a twelve-month period in South Australia recorded black honeyeaters visiting the flowers of berrigan emu bush, twin-leaf emu bush (Eremophila oppositifolia), lerp mallee (Eucalyptus incrassata), and holly grevillea (Grevillea ilicifolia). The species was also frequently observed hawking for small insects.[23] The black honeyeater hovers around flowers, feeding briefly at each one.[25] It may sometimes form large mixed flocks at food sources, associating with other birds such as pied honeyeaters and white-browed woodswallows (Artamus superciliosus). Like many other honeyeaters, the black honeyeater catches insects in flight.[24] The male, in particular, flies up to a height of 15 metres (50 ft) to seize an insect in mid-air, and then drops to a regularly used perch.[30]

A study of black honeyeaters at seven sites in Western Australia regularly recorded breeding females eating ash from campsite fires and often making repeated visits over a brief period of time.[22] It was noted that the birds seemed attracted to the remote campfire with groups of around six hovering around and landing beside the fire, an activity described as similar to "bees buzzing around a honeypot".[22] After pecking at the ash, some of the females foraged for insects, sallying from the foliage of nearby Wheatbelt wandoos (Eucalyptus capillosa) before returning for more ash.[22] The activity of the females approaching the fire ranged from a single peck to sustained feeding for a minute or more. Male birds occasionally landed near the fire, but none were seen to take ash.[22] Well-developed brood patches on the birds mist netted near the fires, suggest that the females take ash around the time of laying, and throughout the incubation and feeding period. Wood ash is rich in calcium and it was hypothesised that the females were eating ash to form medullary bone before egg-laying or to repair a calcium deficit after laying.[22] When other small birds, such as American hummingbirds, were recorded eating calcium-rich ash, bones or shell, it was suggested that the bones of small species may not be able to store enough calcium for egg production.[34]

Conservation status

Despite the fact that the population trend appears to be decreasing, the decline is not believed to be particularly rapid; the current population seems to be of sufficient numbers, and the species has a sufficiently large range, for the species to be evaluated as a

species of least concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).[1] However, biologist Claire A. Runge and colleagues observed that the black honeyeaters' range across inland Australia contracted after years of low rainfall and showed a slow and incomplete recovery even after several years. They added that although nomadic species such as the black honeyeater may have a large distribution, they are often habitat specialists and hence may occupy only a small area within their range. Thus the risk of extinction of these species may be underestimated.[35] The black honeyeater may be adversely affected by the loss of the emu bush due to grazing and weed control by farmers.[27]

References

  1. ^ .
  2. ^ a b Australian Biological Resources Study (30 August 2011). "Species Sugomel niger (Gould, 1838)". Australian Faunal Directory. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts, Australian Government. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
  3. ^ .
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  5. ^ Salvadori, Tommaso (1878). "Descrizione di trentuna specie nuove di uccelli delle sottoregione papuana, e note intorno ad altre poco conosciute". Annali del Museo Civico di Storia Naturale, Genova (in Italian). 12: 317–47 [335].
  6. .
  7. ^ Mathews, Gregory M. (1913). A list of the birds of Australia : containing the names and synonyms connected with each genus, species, and subspecies of birds found in Australia, at present known to the author. London, United Kingdom: Witherby. p. 264.
  8. ^ Mathews, Gregory M. (1922). "Additions and corrections". Austral Avian Records. 5: 1–9 [7].
  9. ^ Paynter, Raymond A. Jr, ed. (1986). Check-list of Birds of the World. Vol. 12. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Museum of Comparative Zoology. p. 338.
  10. ISSN 0301-4223
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  14. ^ "Taxonomic Updates « IOC World Bird List". www.worldbirdnames.org. Retrieved 2022-01-28.
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  16. ^ a b Gill, Frank; Donsker, David, eds. (2020). "Honeyeaters". World Bird List Version 10.1. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  17. .
  18. ^ Mathews, Gregory M. (1912). "Additions and corrections to my Reference List to the Birds of Australia". Austral Avian Records. 1: 81–103 [98].
  19. PMID 15263073
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  20. ^ Lepage, Denis (2011). "Black Myzomela,(Myzomela nigrita) Siebers, 1928". Avibase: The World Bird Database. Bird Studies Canada. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
  21. ^ .
  22. ^ .
  23. ^ .
  24. ^ .
  25. ^ .
  26. ^ Gould, John (1848). The Birds of Australia. Vol. 4. London: Self-published. Plate 66.
  27. ^ a b c d e "Black Honeyeater". Birds in Backyards. Birds Australia, Australian Museum. 19 February 2007. Archived from the original on 3 May 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2010.
  28. ISSN 0158-4197
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  29. .
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  32. .
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  34. .
  35. .

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