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[[image: be-miner.jpg]] '''Common Name:''' Black-eared Miner '''Scientific Name:''' Manorina melanotis '''Size:''' 9-10 ΒΌ inches (23-26 cm) '''Habitat:''' Australia. Murray Mallee region of South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales. It requires large blocks of long, unburnt and uncleared (older than 50 years), 5-8 meter tall mallee type forest, with an understory of small bushes, shrubs and chenopods. Its distribution in Victoria is positively correlated with stable dune fields with a relatively high loam level, amount of decorticating bark (from which it obtains much of its insect food), tree density, stem density, canopy cover and litter cover. '''Status:''' Endangered due to habitat destruction and alteration. This species has a very small population; numbers have declined and several locations have been lost. If present intensive conservation efforts are unable to stop the extirpation of the tiny subpopulations, then the species will be uplisted to Critically Endangered. However, if the early success of conservation actions is confirmed, the status of the species may improve. 2007 Population: >250 '''Diet:''' Invertebrates and lerp. '''Nesting:''' Monogamous and pairs appear to remain together for life, only re-pairing upon the loss of a mate. Breeding males within a colony are close relatives, whereas females, the dispersing sex, are not. Nests have been found in all months. Nests are usually built in mallee eucalypts, either in upright forks, amongst small twigs and foliage, or on epicormic shoots, between 1.5-4.5m above ground. '''Cool Facts:''' For years there has been controversy over the taxonomic status of the Black-eared Miner. Various authors have considered it a species, a subspecies or morphological variant of the Yellow-throated Miner and a subspecies of the Western Australian 'Dusky Miner'. There are morphological and behavioral differences between Black-eared and Yellow-throated Miners and evidence for marked ecological separation exists. DNA evidence finally brought the Black-eared Miner in to its own. Black-eared Miners can interbreed with Yellow-throated Miners, resulting in fertile hybrids that display a range of intermediate plumages. Like other Miners, the Black-eared is social and nest and roosts in small colonies. '''Found in [http://www.daz3d.com/i.x/shop/itemdetails/-/?item=5607&cat=421;refid=653438178 More Threatened Endangered Extinct] and [http://www.daz3d.com/i/3d-models/-/?item=11124;refid=653438178 Songbird ReMix Australia Volume III]'''
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