This scale insect, Callococcus acaciae, is endemic to Australia and is associated with plants in the Kunzea (Burgan), Leptospermum (Tea Tree) and Acacia (Wattle) families.
Scale insects feed on the sap of their host plant (and sometimes on fungi). There is an enormous variety of scale insects and of course, in a garden situation, they are considered as pests and if left uncontrolled, either naturally or by the gardener, they can devastate your favourite garden plant.
The female Burgan Woolly Scale insect has interesting morphology: it has no wings and no legs. There are glands on its back from which it exudes a stretchy-waxy substance.
These images were taken on some of the shrubs in Golden Whistler Reserve Drouin.