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Originally Posted by Ekka Hmmm, we dont get any birds doing stuff like that, oh, we get cockatoos eating bark off mainly around crotches of eucs...... |
Luckily...by all appearances.
It's useful to be able to recognize habitat trees and the resulting lesions.
Here in Aust. there are mammals which include Eucalypt sap in their diet, and wound the tree to obtain sap flow...and may re-visit and re-wound many times over. The Yellow Bellied Glider is ususlly the culprit.
http://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/re...55ybglider.pdf