Koala Walk

Kangaroo Island, South Australia, 8 July 2024.

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Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Sleeping koala, high in the trees.

It is late morning and we are undertaking the Little Sahara Guided Koala Walk.  The koalas here are not enclosed; they are just in a suitable area of eucalypts.

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. Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

All these koala images are taken at very long focal lengths as they are quite some distance up in the trees.

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. Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

One of our guides remarked that the koalas were unusually lively that morning.

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. Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Koala ancestors lived in rainforest and ate a much more varied diet.  About 15 million years ago, they adapted to an arid climate change by specialising in eating the leaves of particular eucalypt trees.  They have to go through a lot of leaves for this and spend much of the rest of their time sleeping.  They have adapted to a low-energy lifestyle and have a small brain in a large brain case, so may have shrunk their brain to conserve energy.

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. Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Koalas are most closely related to wombats.  They shared a common diprotodont ancestor around 40 million years ago.  They are also related to the extinct palchorestes (giant marsupial ant-eaters that may have been the mythical bunyips) and the also extinct thylaceo (marsupial lions).

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. Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

There were about 20 species of extinct koala.  One of them was a so-called giant koala, perhaps a third larger than the current koala, that co-existed with it until around 50,000 years ago.

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. Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Koalas are classified as vulnerable.  They were extensively hunted at the beginning of the twentieth century, mainly for their fur and there are now between 43,000 and 100,000 of them, as compared to 8 to 10 million at the beginning of that century.

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.Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Stream.

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. Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Funghi.

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. Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Xanthorrhea stalk.

Aboriginals had many uses for xanthorrhea.  These included making a drink from the nectar, eating parts of the leaves, using the stalk as the shaft of a spear and using resin as a glue for weapons and axes.

There was also an early European use of xanthorrhea resin as a gunpowder substitute.  This involved killing the plant (as has happened naturally here), something of a travesty since they grow very slowly.

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. Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Reflections.

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. Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Kangaroo Island Kangaroo.

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Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Bee hive in a tree that was maybe hollowed out by fire.

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Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Here’s a closer look.

Quick – how many bees can you see here?

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Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Bee hive in  another tree.

(Note:  In counting the bees in the previous hive I favour using the Yanomami counting system of one, two, many.  Now, let’s see….)

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Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Back in the car park, a Bush Stone-Curlew.

Looks like a wader but actually favours dry environs.

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Bees, Bush stone-curlew, Kangaroo Island, Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, Koala, Landscape, Nature, Photography, South Australia, Travel, Wildlife, Xanthorrhoea

Beyond is the Little Sahara dunes.   You can zot around on the sand in dune buggies, electric bikes or boards.

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