Indicative distribution
The areas shown in pink and/purple are the sub-regions where the species or community is known or predicted to occur. They may not occur thoughout the sub-region but may be restricted to certain areas.
(
click here to see geographic restrictions).
The information presented in this map is only indicative and may contain errors and omissions.
Scientific name: Amaurornis moluccana
Profile last updated:
12 Feb 2018
Description
The Pale-vented Bush-hen is a medium-sized (body length 25-30 cm), all-dark waterbird, dark olive-brown above, with a dark-grey face, usually merging to paler off-white chin, and dark-grey on the lower throat, breast and belly and rufous-brown on the lower underbody. The bill is lime-green with an orange-red base to the upper mandible during the breeding season, and paler green without orange when not breeding; the legs are greenish-yellow. The Pale-vented Bush-hen is distinguished from other similarly-sized crakes and rails by the comination of uniformly dark plumage, lacking pale markings to underbody or undertail, its yellowish-green to green bill and its loud and distinctive shrieking calls or wailing duets during the breeding season. The Bush-hen in Australia is now classified as the Pale-vented Bush-hen (Amaurornis moluccana), separate from the Plain Bush-hen (A. olivaceus) of the Philippines, with which it was formerly combined. The Pale-vented Bush-hen is secretive and cryptic, usually remaining in dense vegetation near watercourses or at the edges of wetlands, and often only detected by its loud, distinctive calls. It is active during the day and at night. When walking, it flicks its tail in the manner of most rails and swamp-hens, particularly when nervous; and it swims and wades readily. It apparently flies mainly at night. It occurs solitarily, in pairs, or small family groups of parents and young.
Distribution
In Australia, the Pale-vented Bush-hen occurs mainly in coastal and subcoastal regions from the Top End of the Northern Territory and Cape York Peninsula south through eastern Queensland to north-eastern NSW. There are a few records in the Kimberley Division of northern Western Australia. In NSW, Bush-hens are an apparently uncommon resident from the Queensland border south to the Clarence River, though the species appears to be expanding its range southwards with recent records as far south as the Nambucca River. Outside Australia, the species occurs in the Moluccas, western and southern New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago and the Solomon Islands. The subspecies present in Australia is ruficrissa which also occurs in southern and eastern New Guinea.
Habitat and ecology
- The Pale-vented Bush-hen inhabits tall dense understorey or ground-layer vegetation on the margins of freshwater streams and natural or artificial wetlands, usually within or bordering rainforest, rainforest remnants or forests.
- Also occur in secondary forest growth, rank grass or reeds, thickets of weeds, such as Lantana (Lantana camara), and pastures, crops or other farmland, such as crops of sugar cane, and grassy or weedy fields, or urban gardens where they border forest and streams or wetlands, such as farm dams. Can also occur in and around mangroves, though rarely do so, if at all, in NSW.
- Key elements of their habitat are dense undergrowth 2 to 4 metres tall and within 300 metres of water.
- The diet consists of seeds, plant matter, earthworms, insects and some frogs, taken from ground cover or by wading at edges of streams or wetlands.
- The breeding season is from spring to early autumn, October to April.
- The nest is a shallow bowl or cup of grass stems, often partly hooded, built close to water in thick ground vegetation such as dense Blady Grass (Imperata cylindrica), mat rush (Lomandra) or reeds, often under or growing through shrubs or vine or beneath a tree.
- Birds lay 4 to 7 eggs in a clutch and will re-lay after a successful breeding attempt and make multiple attempts after nesting failures.
- The incubation period is about 3 weeks. The hatchlings are precocial and can run soon after hatching; they are probably dependent on their parents for 4 to 5 weeks after hatching.
Regional distribution and habitat
Click on a region below to view detailed distribution, habitat and vegetation information.
Threats
- Clearing, filling and draining of wetlands for agricultural, residential and industrial development.
- Pollution of wetlands from agricultural, urban and industrial run-off, including herbicides and pesticides.
- Changes to wetlands caused by weed invasion, often associated with sedimentation or grazing.
- Predation by introduced, feral and domestic predators, particularly Red Foxes (Vulpes vulpes) and Cats (Felis catus).
- Destruction of habitat and predation by feral Pigs (Sus scrofa).
- Alteration to the natural flow regimes of rivers and streams and their floodplains and wetlands.
- Loss of dense and rank understorey vegetation near streams and wetlands with clearing associated with urban and semi-rural developments.
Recovery strategies
A Saving Our Species conservation project is currently being developed for this species and will be available soon. For information on how you can contribute to this species' recovery, see the Activities to assist this species section below.
Activities to assist this species
- Control introduced predators, such as Red Foxes and feral Pigs, and restrain domestic Cats, particularly at night.
- Protect wetlands from clearing, filling, draining, sedimentation and pollution.
- Avoid use of herbicides and pesticides near wetlands.
- Fence wetlands to exclude grazing.
- Control weeds in and next to wetlands.
- Rehabilitate and restore wetland vegetation.
- Report records south of the Clarence River to the OEH.
Information sources
- Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water NSW (2010) Northern Rivers Regional Biodiversity Management Plan.
- Marchant, S. and Higgins, P.J. (Eds) (1993) Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic Birds. Volume 2: Raptors to Lapwings. (Oxford University Press, Melbourne)
- Muranyi, M. and Baverstock, P.R. (1996) The distribution and habitat preference of the Bush-hen Amaurornis olivacea in north-eastern New South Wales. Emu 96: 285-287.
- NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (2002) Threatened Species of the Upper North Coast of NSW: Fauna. (NSW NPWS, Coffs Harbour)
- NSW Scientific Committee (2008) Bush-hen Amaurornis olivaceus - Review of current information in NSW.
- Stewart, D.A. and Stewart, A.J. (1994) Notes on the Bush-hen breeding in New South Wales. Sunbird 24: 1-5.
IBRA Bioregion
|
IBRA Subregion
|
Known or predicted
|
Geographic restrictions region
|
---|