Helmeted Honeyeater
Apperance

 Honeyeater beaks are thin, curved and sharply pointed, reflecting to some extent the sorts of flowers they frequent. Most honeyeaters are nectar feeding birds with long, brush-tipped tongues which function in the same way as a paintbrush, soaking up fluids by capillary action.  It is brightly marked with golden-yellow feathers on the throat, crown and ear tufts. The crown feathers can be raised giving the bird its characteristic helmeted appearance. A black patch extends from its bill over the eye and cheeks. The back of the bird is olive-brown, while the undersides are streaked with pale yellow.


Weight
The Helmeted Honeyeater has a weight up to 32 grams.
Length
The Helmeted Honeyeater grows to a length in excess of 200mm.

Habitat
It is dependent upon streamside and swamp vegetation for its habitat. The dominant tree species are Manna Gum (Eucalyptus viminalis), Mountain Swamp Gum (Eucalyptus camphora), and Swamp Gum (Eucalyptus ovata), while the understorey contains Prickly Currant Bush (Coprosma quadrifida) which is used by the bird for both food and nest sites. They supply shelters from the weather by perching in the surrounding vegetation.


Eating and Diet Habits
Helmeted Honeyeaters gather most of their food from the bark, twigs and leaves of the eucalypts.  Manna is a key source of food.  Manna is the substance exuded by trees at the point of injury to trunks and branches. Nectar is gather from eucalypt flowers when it is available. Berries are gathered from shrubs such as the Prickly Currant Bush. Insects and spiders provide essential proteins in the Helmeted Honeyeater diet.  Honeydew, a sweet substance exuded by certain insects is also gathered. Most honeyeaters can protrude their tongues well beyond the tips of their beaks, enabling nectar collection from the base of long tubular flowers or honeydew extraction from deep, narrow cracks in bark

Predators
The Helmeted Honeyeater is food for many feral animals and dingos and feral cats.

Breeding Habits
Each breeding pair has a territory of its own, which is an exclusive feeding area around half a hectare in size. Young from the previous breeding season will be accommodated within a territory until they find a partner and territory of their own. The breeding season runs from early August through to early February.  Birds are sexually mature at one year of age.  Nests are made of strips of bark, grasses, dried leaves and bound loosely with cobwebs. Nests can range from as low as 1 metre from the ground to as high as 4 metres in dense shrubs. The female sits on a clutch of 2-3 eggs for 2 weeks before the young hatch.  The young are fed in the nest for a further 2 weeks by both parents

Locations
The Helmeted Honeyeater is now only found in the Yellingbo State Nature Reserve, 50km east of Melbourne.

Numbers
Critically endangered.  Numbers declined from a counted 167 birds in 1967 to a low of 50 birds in 1990.  There has been a steady increase since 1990 to just over 100 birds in the wild in 2000.

Problems

Solutions

  • Some of the actions taken for the Helmeted Honeyeater are tougher laws and larger penalties for illegal trafficking.
  • Join the honeyeater group and get membership for $10 and $5 for pensioners,  If you can afford more than $10 membership fee, consider sponsoring plants at $1 per plant. This money is then spent on potting mix to grow the plants for future habitat.
    CLICK HERE for a membership form
  • Plant habitat in and around Yellingbo Reserve. The backdrop of blue mountain ranges and green foothills is a magnificent one. You can join the Friends group at 10am on the 2nd Sunday of every month.  All you will need to provide is lunch and your Blundstones or gumboots.  Call 59 648341 to register your interest and receive further details.
  •  grow habitat plants at their nursery at Yellingbo call Call them on 59648341 for further details. Visit their site for more information on all of the above.
  • you may want to join a group from the Australian Trust for Conservation Volunteers. They provide transport to and from Yellingbo from central Melbourne. The ATCV run 3 or 4 different days at Yellingbo each year. Click here to find out more about ATCV.
  • protection of there natural habitats from destruction.
  • allowing people to breed the Helmeted Honeyeater and then release them back into the wild.
  • tougher laws and penalties for smugglers.
  • make it allot harder to export these animals.
  • inform the public about threatened species issues.
  • encourage habitat retention and restoration.
  • encourage the community-based collection of more information about the species and its habitat.
  • ongoing habitat management.
  • translocation to other sites.
  • ongoing monitoring and biological studies.
  • genetic assessment of all populations.
  • support your local environment groups.
  • raise money for the rehabilitation of sites for Helmeted Honeyeater.
  • learn more about endangered animals, particularly those native to your area.
  • be a responsible pet owner so they do not impact on Helmeted Honeyeater or other wildlife.
  • help in the eradication of foxes, cats and rabbits.
  • protect remnant native vegetation under Heritage Agreement and by excluding stock .
  • revegetate cleared land with indigenous plants.