


QUICK INDEX

Natural History
- Eucalypts
- Weirdly Wonderful Plants of Australia
- Botany—or Anatomy?
- The World’s Deadliest Snakes
- The Meaning of Spiders
- Birds of the Rainbow
- That Giant, Fiendish Cuckoo
- Deceptive Corellas
- A Hollow is a Home
- Birds’ Beaks and How to Stuff ’em
- Wallabies Rock!
- Without Tasmania, Where Would Alfred Hitchcock Be?
- Wombat
- The Gold Medal Frog
- Praying for Birds of Prey
- The Water Hunter
- Cane Toads Invade Top End
- Foxes That Fly
- Redback!
- Ecotourism »
- People »
- Native Plants »
- Health & Wellbeing »
- Lifestyle »
- Photography & Art »
- Full Index »
Nature Features available for license:
The Water Hunter
They were considered a living embodiment of the water spirit by the aboriginal people of the Kimberley and so water monitors were never hunted. Consequently, they do not fear humans and if you come across one basking on a sunny rock, it will not run away. In fact, they can be so relaxed that they will continue their normal hunting routines.
But that’s if you can find one, for they are not in great numbers. Esther came across this Merten’s Water Monitor shedding its skin while it took a break from hunting for fish in a fast flowing stream.
An extended caption is available to accompany this series of photos.
If you want to enquire about viewing and licensing a complete version of this story, please use the Contact page.
Click an image to see an enlarged view
All photographs and text are copyright Esther Beaton and other parties.
The images shown throughout this website may not be downloaded, copied, stored, or reproduced in any way, whether digital, electronic, film or paper, with the exceptions mentioned in the Stock Library Terms of Use. Prohibited reproduction will be considered a breach of the Copyright Act 1968 (Commonwealth) and of the Berne Convention. To obtain permission to reproduce any images, you are invited to go to the Contact section of this website and to make your request in writing.



