birding-aus

Using a dog for Night Parrots

To: Dion Hobcroft <>,
Subject: Using a dog for Night Parrots
From: brian fleming <>
Date: Wed, 06 Jun 2012 17:14:48 +1000
One difficulty might be that it is illegal to take a dog into National Park areas. I seem to recall that Gould and others claimed that a Ground Parrot is as strongly scented to a gun-dog as a quail, so it might well be practicable to train a dog, and then try in the inland..

A story I was told was that a riding-camel made the ideal mobile observation platform for Night Parrots. A camel's feet are silent on sandy country, so it is not likely to disturb the parrot till it actually comes up against the Triodia clumps. The observer is up above the tussocks and Saltbush, and the camel could carry two observers keeping a look-out in all directions for any parrots that flew off. One difficulty would be that one cannot use binoculars on board an animal - however quietly an old horse stands, it still breathes, and the movement is enough to disturb the image; I expect a camel would be just as bad. Still a camel-mounted search travelling in line abreast might be successful.

Anthea Fleming

On 6/06/2012 3:59 PM, Dion Hobcroft wrote:
I have often wondered why no-one has trained a dog to search for Night
Parrot. Get them tracking Ground Parrots and then move to the desert with a
muzzle (to avoid eating 1080 baits and Night Parrots). Our Kiwi friends use
this strategy successfully for finding Kakapo.

===============================

To unsubscribe from this mailing list,
send the message:
unsubscribe
(in the body of the message, with no Subject line)
to: 

http://birding-aus.org
===============================


===============================

To unsubscribe from this mailing list,
send the message:
unsubscribe
(in the body of the message, with no Subject line)
to: 

http://birding-aus.org
===============================

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Admin

The University of NSW School of Computer and Engineering takes no responsibility for the contents of this archive. It is purely a compilation of material sent by many people to the birding-aus mailing list. It has not been checked for accuracy nor its content verified in any way. If you wish to get material removed from the archive or have other queries about the archive e-mail Andrew Taylor at this address: andrewt@cse.unsw.EDU.AU