The 'Brolga' (''Grus rubicunda''), formerly known as the "'Native Companion'", is a
bird in the
crane family. The bird has also been given the name "'Australian Crane'", a term coined in 1865 by well-known
ornithological artist
John Gould.
The Brolga is a common gregarious
wetland bird species in tropical and eastern
Australia, well known for its intricate mating dance.
Taxonomy and naming
When first described in 1810, the Brolga was misclassified as ''Ardea'', the
genus that includes the
herons and
egrets. It is in fact a member of the
Gruiformes – the
order that includes the
crakes,
rails, and
cranes, and a member of the genus ''
Grus''.
In 1926 the
Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union made ''Brolga'', a popular name derived from
Gamilaraay ''burralga'', the official name of the bird.
The Brolga is closely related to other cranes like the
Sarus Crane of Australia and
Southeast Asia, with which it can easily be confused. However the Sarus' red head colouring extends partly down the neck while the Brolga's is confined to the head. Additionally, in Australia the range of the Sarus is limited to a few scattered localities in northern Australia, compared to the more widespread distribution of the Brolga. The bird is also related to the Old World
Common Crane, and, more distantly, to the
Blue Crane of
South Africa.
Description
The full-grown Brolga is a tall, mid-grey to silver-grey
crane, 0.7 to 1.3
m (3.3-4.3 feet) high, with a wingspan of 1.7 to 2.4 m (5.6 to 7.9 ft), and a broad red band extending from the straight, bone-coloured
bill around the back of the head. Juveniles lack the red band. Adult males average at a little under 7
kg (15.4 lbs), females a little under 6 kg (13.2 lbs).
Distribution and habitat
Brolgas are widespread and often abundant in north and north-east Australia, especially north-east
Queensland, and are common as far south as
Victoria. They are also found in southern
New Guinea and as rare vagrants in
New Zealand and the northern part of
Western Australia. The population is estimated at between 20,000 and 100,000 and is not considered to be threatened. The
International Crane Foundation began a captive breeding population with three pairs of wild Brolga which were captured in 1972. Brolga are non-migratory but do move in response to seasonal rains.
Ecology and behaviour
Brolgas are gregarious creatures; the basic social unit is a pair or small family group of about 3 or 4 birds, usually parents together with juvenile offspring, though some such groups are nonfamilial. In the non-breeding season, they gather into large flocks, which appear to be many self-contained individual groups rather than a single social unit. Within the flock, families tend to remain separate and to coordinate their activities with one another rather than with the flock as a whole.
Diet
Brolga are
omnivorous and eat a variety of wetland plants, insects, invertebrates, and small vertebrates such as
frogs. They also eat wetland and upland plants,
seeds,
mollusks, and
crustaceans. Northern Austalian populations of Brolga are fond of the
tubers of the
bulkuru sedge which they dig holes to extract but this is not available south of
Brisbane.
Mating and breeding
Brolgas are well known for their intricate
mating dances. The
dance begins with a bird picking up some
grass and tossing it into the air, catching it in its bill, then progresses to jumping a metre into the air with outstretched wings, then stretching, bowing, walking, calling, and bobbing its head. Sometimes just one Brolga dances for its mate; often they dance in pairs; and sometimes a whole group of about a dozen dance together, lining up roughly opposite each other before starting.
In the breeding season, which is largely determined by
rainfall rather than the time of year, the flocks split up and pairs establish nesting territories in wetlands. In good
habitat, nests can be quite close together, and are often found in the same area as those of the closely related but slightly larger Sarus Crane. The nest is a raised mound, built by both sexes, of sticks, uprooted grass, and other plant material sited on a small
island, standing in shallow water, or occasionally floating. If no grasses are available, mud or roots unearthed from marsh beds are employed. Sometimes they make barely any nest at all, take over a disused
swan nest, or simply lay on bare ground.
A pair of spotted or blotched white
eggs are most common, but sometimes the clutch is one or three, laid about two days apart. Both birds incubate and guard the young. Hatching is not synchronised, and takes about 30 days. The
chicks hatch covered in grey down and weighing about 100
g. They can leave the nest within a day or two, have body
feathers within 4 or 5 weeks, and are fully feathered after three months, and able to
fly about two weeks after that. When threatened, chicks hide and stay quiet while the parents perform a broken-wing display. The parents continue to guard the young for up to 11 months, or almost two years if they do not re-nest.
Gallery
References
★ MacDonald JD (1987) ''The Illustrated Dictionary of Australian Birds by Common Name'', Reed, p40, ISBN 0-7301-0184-3
★ Slater P, Slater P and Slater R (1995) ''The Slater Field Guide to Australian Birds'', Landowne Publishing Pty Ltd, Sydney, NSW, Australia, p50, ISBN 0-947116-99-0
External links
★
International Crane Foundation's Brolga page
★
Unique Australian Animals– Brolga "reddish crane"
★
All Info About Myths– a copy of the Brolga's Dreamtime myth
★
Australian Museum fact sheet
★
Gould's ''
The Birds of Australia''
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