Let’s ask two questions?
Where are GB and Consort?
Does the male of a breeding-pair sometimes assist the female to defend their territory?
Yes. He does. And how do we know?
From plentiful direct observations.
Now bear with me for a minute:
over on the old Oudman place – across the road from me – there is a tiny pasture just next to a gap in the fence; and if you check it at certain times, you’ll find an amazing density of fresh emu poops.
Why?
Because the gateway is between the hard scrabble area of the south-east corner of that block and the yummy grass in the house-clearing of that block. (The emus go into the old sheep yards there because even after twenty years the sheep poop is still producing lush grass.)
So emus crossing from that barren area to the house-clearing and nearby pastures stop just inside that gateway – the whole ‘pasture’ is only half the size of a tennis court – and graze. And poop.
We’re not muckin’ about here, readers. That hard-scrabble area is 250-300 acres (but has permanent water and good tracks).
If you swing east from that area, it’s 1,000 acres down to the river crossing, which takes you to Spring Valley, which is 2,000 acres.
If you swing west, its maybe 4,000 acres to the edge of the Lake Muir wetlands. (and south? It’s fifty miles to the coast).
So, where are GB and Consort?
We don’t know because we have limited data.
And the plentiful poops on the tiny gateway pasture are a good example of this sort of data.
Critters don’t (usually)
wander aimlessly. They have mind maps of where they’ve been and what was there (and at
what time of year it was there).
Suppose that
you were that pair standing at that gateway. Has either of you been beyond it? Very likely. Is this a good time of year to cross this stretch? Yes. There’s still plenty of grass.
Where are we headed? What destinations do we have to choose from? Well, Spring Valley has great water and pastures. (Gotta cross the river first but.) And it abuts the National Park.
What about west? Well, you need to skirt a property that has sound fences -- the old Masters place. The next permanent water from Oudman's is probably the Lake Muir wetland. So, when you get to Pindicup – the place west of the Masters’ – you are on the edge of the wetland.
[So it's Spring Valley, the river, a block of National Park, Oudman's, Master's, Pindicup, the wetland.]
Here’s a tiny slice of it the Lake Muir wetland:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/eb/Lakemuir.JPG/426px-Lakemuir.JPG
So, as I noted, welcome to the project! We have quality data, on some things, from plentiful observations. And we have ‘fuzzy equations,’ about other things, that we construct from various data.
And we have wild unproven theories that either do or do not get proven over time.
SE