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19 Mar 2024

Hey NatureMaprs!Some of you would have already noticed the 'Maps' page is currently missing from the platform. The lengthy list of polygons in regions of heavy use had become difficult to scroll/sort ...


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20 Feb 2024

A Charm of Native Bees - an Art ExhibitionDid you know that there are over 2000 bees that are native to Australia? Although the most common bee we see around Canberra is the exotic European Honey Bee,...


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Discussion

ibaird wrote:
25 min ago
i think too indistinct to say its M. decisissima.

Unidentified Moth (Lepidoptera)
ConBoekel wrote:
28 min ago
Don
No worries. It was worth a try! My problem with getting a record is that the Swampie (I think there is only one) in this location is extra skittery. Instead of bolting and then stopping for a photo op it keeps right on going.

Wallabia bicolor
DonFletcher wrote:
41 min ago
Not convinced, sorry Con. The classic Swampie scat is more elongated and contains some coarser material than these do. Most local macropods can produce scats that look like each other's, so they might be from a Swampie, but they looks much more like standard RNW or EGK scats.

Wallabia bicolor
BrianLR wrote:
1 hr ago
On another look at this image I agree it’s probably a pygopid. Scales are also round and short which support pygopod. So happy to change ID. I originally thought it was a snake based on the more triangular shape of the body, better pictures would be the only way to confirm this.

Pseudonaja textilis
Steve818 wrote:
1 hr ago
Features that point towards Eucalyptus viminalis subsp. viminalis: ribbons of shed bark; juvenile leaves that are lanceolate, opposite & sessile; fruit in 3s; fruit hemispherical-cup shaped with raised disc and exert valves; densely reticulate leaves with many island oil glands; & location.

Eucalyptus viminalis subsp. viminalis

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