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How to create skink friendly habitat in your garden | Australian Flora & Fauna | Gardening Australia 

Gardening Australia
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Got time on your hands during COVID-19 social distancing? Put it to good use and 3:58 learn how to create a skink-friendly habitat and 5:48 how to build a DIY skink box at your place!
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A massive 520 species of lizards are found in Australia. They live in almost every environment in Australia - from the coast, to the rainforest, from arid areas to our bustling urban environments and, if we are lucky enough, in our backyards and gardens.
Australian lizards are split broadly into 5 categories:
- goannas and monitors
- dragons
- legless lizards
- geckos
- skinks
Today, our focus is on the little guys - skinks! Emmaline loves skinks and geckos (she has since she was a kid), and is keen to find out more about these beauties, and show us how to get these good guys into our gardens.
To attract skinks, we first need to understand them and the role that they play in our environment. We are to the east of Melbourne, and Emmaline is with Threatened Fauna Expert Nick Clemann, deep in the habitat of the threatened Swamp Skink, which also happens to be deep in the ‘burbs.
Nick explains that “current threats to various skinks include loss, fragmentation and degradation of habitat; elevated predation rates from introduced predators; and climate change affecting the lizards’ thermal biology, but also things like nest temperatures”. “These threats exist both in wild spaces, and in urban areas, like this one, so creating habitat for skinks is important” says Nick.
Geckos and skinks, although generally small, are the unsung environmental heroes of the bush and the backyard. Nick points out that “skinks vary from being almost entirely insectivorous to largely herbivorous, and a handy rule-of-thumb is that the larger a species is, the more herbivorous it will be. Things like Blue-tongued Lizards tend to eat a lot of plant material, whereas the small skinks in the garden will be feeding almost exclusively on tiny invertebrates”.
This makes many skinks extremely efficient pest controllers in their garden, enjoying meals of crickets, beetles, spiders, grasshoppers, moths and cockroaches. Others, like the three-towed skink, will devour worms, beetle larvae and centipedes, while the bigger of the skinks, the bluetongues and land mullets, adore their fruits and vegies, but also LOVE a meal of snails. But, it is this love of pests that often leads to their demise in urban settings. Use of pesticides, insecticides and other chemicals within gardens can have a detrimental impact on the skinks food sources and can, in the case of snail pellets, result in the death of blue tongues if they gobble up snails that have ingested this poison. Reduction of garden chemicals is one easy way that we can encourage skinks back to our gardens. Speaking of pests, our pets can be pests for skinks. Dogs, and especially cats, are generally not good news for garden skinks. As well as the risk of direct predation (especially from cats), “the presence of pets can force lizards to change their behaviour, such as abandoning favoured basking sites in ways that are harmful to the lizards” says Nick.
Another is understanding and creating of suitable habitat for skinks. Nick explains that “some skinks are sun-loving (‘heliothermic’) while others tend to stay under cover, using the temperature of the environment, rather than basking, to control their body temperature (‘thigmothermic’). This is one reason why having a variety of structural and thermal opportunities is ideal for a ‘skinky’ garden”. If you keep pet lizards, creating a suitable outdoor space for them to bask and sunbathe is a great idea.
How to Make a Skink Box
Materials
• 1220 x 810 x 4mm Marine A Grade Plywood
• PVA Wood Glue
• Handsaw
Method
1. Measure and cut the following, using handsaw:
a. 300mm x 200mm - Qty 1 (Base)
b. 250mm x 200mm - Qty 2 (Inner and Top)
c. 150mm x 50mm - Qty 2 (Inner Ends)
d. 300mm x 100mm - Qty 2 (Sides)
e. 200mm x 100mm - Qty 2 (Ends)
2. Place a (base) on flat surface, and attach d (sides) and e (ends) vertically, using PVA glue around edges
3. Once glue has set, place 1 x c (inner end) inside the box, against one end and attach to base (vertically) with PVA glue
4. Measure 250mm from installed inner end, and attach remaining c with PVA glue
5. Once glue has dried, run bead of PVA glue along top of installed inner ends (c) and attach 1 x b. There should now be a smaller “box” with lid, inside the larger box
6. Take remaining b, and place on top of box, covering the “deepest” end, with the opening over the “inner box”
7. Locate the box in an area of part shade, digging into the ground to secure, ideally with some protection from plant coverage.
8. Place a rock on the top of the box to secure, and ensure there is sufficient coverage of leaf litter around the opening to make the box appealing for skinks.

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3 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 31   
@wellingtonsboots4074
@wellingtonsboots4074 4 года назад
Enjoyed this thank you. I have small skinks in the backyard and I always enjoy watching them scurry around
@Samuel-Matta
@Samuel-Matta 4 года назад
I love this channel. Saludos desde México.
@sydthegoat6773
@sydthegoat6773 4 года назад
I used to have Blue Tongues in my back yard. We had plum trees and there was one big dominant male who used to eat the rotten plums and get drunk. He was the most aggressive and was thicker than my forearm. The place is now developed and sadly none of these animals are there anymore.
@sudipbhetwal9026
@sudipbhetwal9026 3 года назад
Sad
@SteveSmith-zz4ih
@SteveSmith-zz4ih 4 года назад
i found 2 different species of legless skinks about a month apart, lucky i found them as one owner thought it was a small snake, but i showed him the difference, otherwise it would have been a disaster. My son was gaedening one day and thought oh a legless lizard he picked it up (gloves on) upon a closer inspection it was a baby copperhead, it didn't try to bite him though, as he had a soft grip on it. So be careful.
@wwfarmhouse9055
@wwfarmhouse9055 2 года назад
Enjoyed this story. I love lizards! Thanks for all the tips to encourage more to come to our yards.
@TraderSamsara
@TraderSamsara 3 года назад
Nice. Ihave some of this guys. And will prepare some boxes for them.
@simpleperrydiselife
@simpleperrydiselife 4 года назад
Nice! I love all kinds of lizards. Those boxes look very effective as protection. I love the way she set it. Thanks for sharing. ❤🙏
@rgruenhaus
@rgruenhaus Год назад
When it rains too much a box like you show would end up underwater!
@coobye
@coobye 4 года назад
Rule #1 don't have a dog. As placid as mine is she has killed all my common skinks and the neighbours dogs have done the same with all our Blue tongues. So sad. I loved my blueys and I never had a snail problem when they were around.Not all dogs are like that, my past dogs have been great but this one just won't leave them alone.
@myname1syurname418
@myname1syurname418 3 года назад
Rule #2 don't have cats. I saw my neighbor's cat eat a blue tongue
@camdflage
@camdflage 4 года назад
Great advice. I've recently discovered and am now protecting brown tree frogs in my suburban garden near the city in Melbourne. May I also say the presenter is a very beautiful lady :) 100% subscribed now xo
@chrism3845
@chrism3845 4 года назад
A great video to inspire gardeners to encourage skinks into their gardens. The 1st must do is remove cats from this environment, that's so obvious. Man-made timber boxes are really not necessary and a waste timber resources and money. The timber rots in a few months and there are simple things like placing different size rocks and boulders and rotting logs in both shady and part shade areas that will last a long long time.
@camdflage
@camdflage 4 года назад
Chris M I wish I could stop my neighbours cat from entering my back yard. I have a cat that is strictly indoors.
@Womble1252
@Womble1252 2 года назад
@@camdflage we just trap them with a humane trap and take to council to deal with contacting owners..
@babochon
@babochon 4 года назад
0:26 OK ... let me change my mindset a little bit. Thanks! :)
@philiphernanenervida3023
@philiphernanenervida3023 2 года назад
Beautiful 💤 💥 🖐 atsuuup 👍
@vulturedrawz
@vulturedrawz Год назад
I have a dog, we haven’t seen a single blue tongue since my old dog (very calm, placid, never ever aggressive, always careful around little animals) died, but since we have a new one who’s…very big, curious, playful and NOT very nice to small animals there’s been know blueys. Only little garden skinks. We do have a fenced off area of the garden but all the neighbours have dogs too, so no blueys are able to enter our garden :(
@marcuselders2772
@marcuselders2772 3 года назад
my dream girl
@speedythelizard9810
@speedythelizard9810 3 года назад
I have a pet common garden skink
@rgruenhaus
@rgruenhaus Год назад
If a small skink 8" long gets into a home how can I catch it to release it outside? I'm in Northwest Florida
@SamStone1964
@SamStone1964 Год назад
Maybe try a live rat trap with some mealworms in a little cup as bait?
@Loogiemistress
@Loogiemistress 4 года назад
Land mullet???
@Fjsbdjdh
@Fjsbdjdh 4 года назад
Is skink friendly not exactly the same thing as snake friendly.....
@Gabriel1o1
@Gabriel1o1 4 года назад
Am i the only one who read the title as "SKIN friendly habitat"?
@syeduddin3114
@syeduddin3114 4 года назад
Why do we need skinks in garden? Your arrangement will also encourage snakes , leech and mosquitoes which are dangerous.
@MuffFlux
@MuffFlux 4 года назад
You don't NEED. They never said that ya salty sue!
@syeduddin3114
@syeduddin3114 4 года назад
I won’t say dirt; it’s live soil full of organisms and life.
@camdflage
@camdflage 4 года назад
Mosquitos are easily controlled, leeches are only common in more tropical areas, and snakes are really only likely in those habitats closer to urban fringes or country residences. This program is generally targeted at suburban gardens/gardeners. The lizard boxes the presenter was showing, are far too small to encourage dangerous snakes anyway, as most of our dangerous snakes are much larger than the lizard box opening. I'm sure you made your statement with good intentions. I hope this remedies some of your fears.
@TheYoghurt42
@TheYoghurt42 4 года назад
Skinks are beneficial because they eat insects and slugs which can be garden pests. They also provide food for native birds like magpies which we like to see and hear in the garden. :) Basically, they contribute to the garden being a healthy ecosystem.
@matthewfarrell317
@matthewfarrell317 3 года назад
@@camdflage um what? Leeches are extremely common in colder climates, I am in Victoria and go out gold prospecting all the time, and there is tons of leeches in the cold creeks around me.
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