Clusterpod

My name is Andrei Nikulinsky.
Western Australian.
Jaded, cynical, tired.
Photography, Electronic music,
Bugs and spiders
Permaculture, alternative living

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  1. Mallee Dragon (perhaps perhaps Ctenophorus fordi) amongst mallee roots.

Lake Ballard, Western Australia

    Mallee Dragon (perhaps perhaps Ctenophorus fordi) amongst mallee roots.

    Lake Ballard, Western Australia

     
  2. Another Mallee Dragon (perhaps Ctenophorus fordi)

Near Lake Ballard, Western Australia.

    Another Mallee Dragon (perhaps Ctenophorus fordi)

    Near Lake Ballard, Western Australia.

     
  3. Mallee dragon of some kind, perhaps Ctenophorus fordi.

Near Lake Ballard, Western Australia.

    Mallee dragon of some kind, perhaps Ctenophorus fordi.

    Near Lake Ballard, Western Australia.

     
  4. Ornate Crevice Dragon, Ctenophorus ornatus.

Mount Cuthbert, Bibbulmun track, Monadnocks Nature reserve, Western Australia

    Ornate Crevice Dragon, Ctenophorus ornatus.

    Mount Cuthbert, Bibbulmun track, Monadnocks Nature reserve, Western Australia

     
  5. Ornate Crevice Dragon (Ctenophorus ornatus)

Mount Cuthbert, Bibbulmun Track, Western Australia.

Exclusively inhabiting granite outcrops across southern Western Australia, the Ornate Crevice Dragon has had its habitat increasingly fragmented by forestry and agriculture. One possible threat for the species is inbreeding depression.

I would note that the practise of building cairns with much of the available free slabs of granite on the outcrops along the Bibbulmun track as a navigation aid for walkers is a needless degradation of the habitat of many of the outcrop inhabitants.

    Ornate Crevice Dragon (Ctenophorus ornatus)

    Mount Cuthbert, Bibbulmun Track, Western Australia.

    Exclusively inhabiting granite outcrops across southern Western Australia, the Ornate Crevice Dragon has had its habitat increasingly fragmented by forestry and agriculture. One possible threat for the species is inbreeding depression.

    I would note that the practise of building cairns with much of the available free slabs of granite on the outcrops along the Bibbulmun track as a navigation aid for walkers is a needless degradation of the habitat of many of the outcrop inhabitants.