Western Grasswren
A species of Grasswrens Scientific name : Amytornis textilis Genus : Grasswrens
Western Grasswren, A species of Grasswrens
Botanical name: Amytornis textilis
Genus: Grasswrens
Content
Description General Info
Description
A species of Amytornis, the western grasswren is a small, shy, mainly terrestrial bird. It has brown plumage, finely streaked with black and white, and a long, slender tail. Males are slightly larger than females, with adult males weighing 22–27 g and females 20–25 g. Females develop distinctive chestnut patches on their flanks beneath their wings at 1–2 months old. They are usually found in groups of two or three.
Size
20 cm
Feeding Habits
Western Grasswren is omnivorous, consuming seeds, fruits, and invertebrates. It primarily forages on the ground, gleaning in leaf litter near shrubs, with unique adaptations for ground feeding.
Habitat
The western Grasswren thrives in arid and semi-arid shrublands, where key vegetation includes saltbush, bluebush, acacia, along with Ptilotus and Thryptomene species. These environments are characterized by a sparse yet diverse flora adapted to dry conditions.
Dite type
Insectivorous
General Info
Distribution Area
The species once occurred through much of southwestern Australia, with an outlying subspecies in the Gawler Ranges of South Australia. The range of the nominate subspecies, which used to inhabit inland locations, has contracted westwards to the Shark Bay region since 1910. The cause is probably the decline in habitat quality resulting from overgrazing, which has reduced the availability of cover and nesting sites. Its preferred habitat is low, often Acacia dominated, semiarid shrubland, no more than a metre in height, that forms densely foliaged clumps and thickets. The Southwest Australian subspecies (A. t. macrourus) is now extinct. Its preferred habitat was dense thickets within a variety of eucalypt communities.
Species Status
The population size of the nominate subspecies (A. t. textilis) has been estimated at 21,500 individuals occurring over an area of 20,000 km, with an area of occupancy of 1200 km. The population comprises a large subpopulation within Francois Peron National Park and a second subpopulation consisting of several disjunct groups on nearby pastoral lands. The generation length has been estimated at four years. Although the subspecies has suffered a severe reduction in range and population decline in the past, the remaining population is healthy and stable, and is not considered eligible for listing under Australia's Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC). The Gawler Ranges subspecies (A. t. myall) has an estimated population of about 8400 mature individuals, with a range area of 12,000 km and an area of occupancy of 600 km. Its generation length has been estimated at 9.7 years and the population trend is one of decrease.
Scientific Classification
Phylum
Chordates Class
Birds Order
Perching birds Family
Australasian wrens Genus
Grasswrens Species
Western Grasswren