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 |  | This page is about Bird of Paradise Flies (Silver Phoenix) that found in Western Australia.
Pictures and information are supplied by Margaret Owen in Western Australia. 
 Body length winged male 10mm, wingless female 40mm After visiting our web page Bird of Paradise
 Fly (Violet Phoenix), Margaret sent us emails and photos, telling us that
 there is the similar interesting insect in Western Australia. Here we would
 like to thank Margaret for premising us to put the pictures and information in
 this web page.
  
  
                        The Bird of Paradise Fly males found in Western
                        Australia are
                        silver-grey to grayish black in colour, which is
                        different from the one that we found in Brisbane. We
                        called the insects found in Western Australia the Silver
                        Phoenix and those in Brisbane the Violet Phoenix.   The Silver
                        Phoenix females and males are in the bushland for only a
 few weeks during early winter. They are found on banksia tree trunk. Females
 are seen crawling up the trunks of banksias and sometimes
                                    Jarrah
                                     trees.  
 
     
     The photos show males mating with
                  females, a female with males attached trying to get into a
                  crack in the tree. Sometimes the females have one or up to six males
   attached to
                                     their bodies. 
    
     
    
                                      Mike Bamford, a naturalist who writes in newspaper, the West
                                      Australian,
                                       has written an article in which he said that the young develop in the
                                        females bodies. The above first photo
                                    shows old female desiccated bodies, side by
                                        side
                                         on a tree trunk and there had been bark covering them but the bark had
                                          fallen off.
    
 The second photo shows an amazing stage of the insect, the rounded-bodied
                          female. Margaret lifted up a piece of tin
                             and
                              there was what look like a wingless moth. She was however a Callipappus but
   perhaps she was not developed into an adult. She was covered in whitish powder and so was the ground around her, to a diameter of 15cms. Her
                                body
                                 was not flattened, like an adult female, but was rounded.. Her antennae were back over her body, thus making
 she look like a moth. 
  
 Instead of pre-matured adult, the rounded-bodied
                          female  could be a matured female in 'incubation' period, i.e., the young is developing and may come out from it body
               very soon. This need more observation. The rounded-bodied
                          female
                                    under the tin having the young developing inside
 her makes sense. Margaret went back to the bush and found a
                                     black dead female in the open and on a dead burnt fallen-over Banksia
                                     trunk.
                                      This dead female had some powdery stuff attached to her underside. 
                                          The bushland in which these creatures are living (Underwood Avenue
                                          bushland,
                                           and right in the suburbs, only about 6kms from the
                                        city) is planned for
                                            destruction by the University of Western Australia, who were given it
                                            by the
                                             government in 1908. Margaret and
                                        her friends are fighting to preserve it.
 Back to Top [ Up ] [ Cotton Cushion Scale ] [ Snow Ball Mealybug ] [ Bird of Paradise Flies - Violet Phoenix ] [ Bird of Paradise Flies - Silver Phoenix ]
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