Your search returned 41 results
By Page Type
By Tag
- All
- fish (907)
- fishes of sydney harbour (399)
- blog (230)
- insect (124)
- Blog (119)
- archives (116)
- AMRI (106)
- Fish (83)
- International collections (77)
- wildlife of sydney (77)
- Labridae (75)
- podcast (74)
- staff (69)
- geoscience (62)
- First Nations (59)
- AMplify (54)
- ichthyology (52)
- past exhibitions (50)
- people (50)
- earth sciences (48)
- Pomacentridae (45)
- Gobiidae (43)
- Indonesia (43)
- Serranidae (43)
- history (42)
- staff profile (42)
- bird (41)
- past exhibition (41)
- shark (41)
- Earth and Environmental Science (39)
- Syngnathidae (39)
- dangerous australians (39)
- death (39)
- exhibitions (39)
- Chaetodontidae (38)
- Bali (37)
- Eureka Prizes (36)
- australia's extinct animals (35)
- invertebrate guide (35)
- geological processes (34)
- frog (32)
- Ancient Egypt (31)
- Carangidae (30)
- Digivol (30)
- megafauna (30)
- minerals (30)
- Anthropology (29)
- Birds (28)
- Monacanthidae (28)
- geology (28)
-
Diamond Firetail
https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn/animals/birds/diamond-firetail/During courtship, the male Diamond Firetail holds a long piece of green grass in his bill, then flies to a branch where he sits near the female and begins to bob up and down. When she approaches, he twists his neck around and opens his bill just like young begging for food.
-
Spotted Pardalote
https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn/animals/birds/spotted-pardalote/The Spotted Pardalote is sometimes known as the "Headache Bird" because of the continuous "sleep-may-be" call it gives during the breeding season.
-
Cape Barren Goose
https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn/animals/birds/cape-barren-goose/The Cape Barren Goose is able to drink salty or brackish water, allowing many of them to remain on offshore islands all year round.
-
Black Kite
https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn/animals/birds/black-kite/The Black Kite is the most abundant raptor (bird of prey) in the world.
-
Crimson Chat
https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn/animals/birds/crimson-chat/When a potential predator approaches the nest of a Crimson Chat, one or both parents will fake an injury on the ground in a distraction display to draw the predator away. It is also known as a 'rodent-run'.
-
Bourke's Parrot
https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn/animals/birds/bourkes-parrot/Another name for Bourke's Parrot is 'Night Parrot', as it will fly into watering places at night. However it is not to be confused with the real, and extremely rare, Night Parrot, Pezoporus occidentalis.
-
Yellow Wattlebird
https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn/animals/birds/yellow-wattlebird/The Yellow Wattlebird is Australia's largest honeyeater with the very distinctive yellow-orange wattles on the sides of the head.
-
Splendid Fairy-wren
https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn/animals/birds/splendid-fairy-wren/The nest of the Splendid Fairy-wren is so small that the female's long tail is bent during incubation.
-
Tawny Frogmouth
https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn/animals/birds/tawny-frogmouth/With their nocturnal habit and owl-like appearance, Tawny Frogmouths are often confused with owls, but are actually more closely related to the nightjars. Their feet are weak however, and lack the curved talons of owls.
-
Gouldian Finch
https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn/animals/birds/gouldian-finch/The Gouldian Finch is the only grassfinch that nests exclusively in tree hollows or holes in termite mounds.