R. Noske, BREEDING BIOLOGY, DEMOGRAPHY AND SUCCESS OF THE RUFOUS-BANDED HONEYEATER, CONOPOPHILA-ALBOGULARIS, IN DARWIN, A MONSOONAL TROPICAL CITY, Wildlife research, 25(4), 1998, pp. 339-356
The rufous-banded honeyeater, Conopophila albogularis, is probably the
commonest small bird species in the suburbs of Darwin, Northern Terri
tory. Nearly twenty pairs of this species were colour-banded on the Ca
suarina campus of the Northern Territory University, where they occupi
ed territories of 0.15-0.47 ha all year-round, indicating a density of
up to 12 birds ha(-1). Six out of 48 birds survived 5 or more years,
one individual being 9 years old at the time of writing. Males were la
rger in the four morphological dimensions measured. Breeding behaviour
was recorded in every month of the year, but was concentrated in the
late dry and wet seasons (September-March), commencing about two month
s before the rains. Over half of 274 nests were built in black wattles
, Acacia auriculiformis, a common pioneer species both within urban Da
rwin and monsoon rainforest ecotones of the Northern Territory. Contra
ry to the literature, both sexes participated in building the nest, an
d the incubation and nestling periods each lasted 14 days. The clutch
size was usually two (78%), and mean clutch size for 85 nests was 2.1
eggs. Nest success was about 70%, hatching success of eggs was 74% and
fledging rate of nestlings 87%. Four broods per season were common, a
nd two pairs successfully raised five broods in one season. Average an
nual pair productivity was 5.8 fledglings (possibly the highest yet re
corded for an Australian passerine species), one pair raising a remark
able 32 young over five seasons (6.4 fledglings per season). The excep
tionally high nest success and productivity were probably mainly due t
o the scarcity of predators, and the long breeding season, respectivel
y, the latter being facilitated by artificial watering of gardens and
lawns during the dry season. The colonising success of this species in
Darwin is attributed to Darwin's coastal location and the close proxi
mity of favoured natural habitats, as well as the generalised diet of
the species and its predilection for the abundant black wattle.