Mallee Emu-wren

IUCN Endangered (EN)

About the Mallee Emu-wren

Last updated on 1-Nov 2017

Bird Overview

The Mallee Emu-wren is a tiny bird with a long, filamentous tail. It’s Endangered due to recent bushfires.

Scientific name

  • Stipiturus mallee

Location

Conservation status (IUCN)

Identification

Identification

The Mallee Emu-wren is a tiny bird, up to 15 centimeters long, including its long, filamentous tail, which is 1.5 times the length of its body. The male has a dull rufous cap, and a sky-blue face, throat and upper breast, forming a distinct bib. The upperparts are olive-brown with black streaks. The underparts, apart from the blue bib, are orange-buff, with a white belly. The female is similar but without a blue face and bib.

How to identify the Mallee Emu-wren

Mallee Emu-wren sitting on a diagonal branch, looking and facing left

IUCN Endangered (EN)

Fairy-wrens, Emu-wrens and Grasswrens

Colour

  • Blue
  • Brown
  • Orange

Size

  • Very small (< 15 cm, eg: sparrow)

Shape

  • Small: tail up

Habitat & distribution

Habitat

Mallee Emu-wrens occur in among dense stands of spinifex Triodia in mature mallee woodlands which have remained unburnt for at least 15 years. They have also been recorded in low, semi-arid, mallee–heathland.

Distribution map

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Behaviour

Behaviour

Due to the dense nature of their habitat, little is known about the behaviour of the Mallee Emu-wren.

Feeding

Feeding

The Mallee Emu-wren mostly feeds in clumps of spinifex and low shrubs, where they pick small insects, mainly beetles, from stems and twigs, or from the leaf litter or open ground.

Breeding

Breeding

Mallee Emu-wrens usually lay three eggs in a domed nest made of grass, strips of bark and spinifex leaves, all woven together, and lined with soft material. Only the female incubates, but the young are fed by both sexes.

Similar species

Conservation

IUCN Endangered (EN)

  • EX
  • EW
  • CR
  • EN
  • VU
  • NT
  • LC
  • DD

Species considered to be facing a very high risk of extinction in the wild.

IUCN status reflects the conservation status of this species globally.

Threats to the species

  1. Habitat destruction

    The permanent loss or severe degradation of natural habitat due to land clearing, urban development, agriculture, mining, or infrastructure. 
  2. Climate change

    Long-term changes in temperature, rainfall, sea levels, and extreme weather that alter habitats, food availability, breeding success, and survival.