canberrabirds

FW: [canberrabirds] From Elizabeth C, WA

To: <>
Subject: FW: [canberrabirds] From Elizabeth C, WA
From: "Geoffrey Dabb" <>
Date: Fri, 6 Feb 2015 17:54:00 +1100

Forwarded as requested

 

From: Elizabeth Compston [
Sent: Monday, 2 February 2015 3:10 PM
To: Geoffrey Dabb
Subject: Re: [canberrabirds] Chinese pistachio feeding frenzy

 

Dear Geoffrey,

 

I am in WA Cottesloe to be precise.  I have unsubscribed to the chat line.  Could you please forward this to the chatline

 

Fairy terns

 

On the  North Mole at Fremantle there is a colony of fairy terns, nesting at present, parents, tiny chicks and bigger chicks.  My son told me that there have been 70 pairs.  I thought that this was very exciting.  David and I went to see them yesterday.  The Fremantle Port Authority has created the nesting site, after it was recently destroyed in a disastrous storm.  They have put a cyclone fence around it to protect it.  I would say that we saw 8 or10 pairs with chicks.  It was very exciting.  The colony is beside a busy road, and opposite a Caltex station.  Anyone going to Perth in the next couple of weeks should go to see them. Message especially for Jack and Margaret Leggoe, who often come to Perth, also Bob Rusk,and perhaps others at the coast

 

We also saw an osprey at the same place, with a fish in claws, settle on a perch on a barge, and proceed to eat the fish

 

At Cottesloe, the previous evening, for an hour before sunset, we watched 100s, 1000s of rainbow lorikeets flying to their overnight roost in the Norfolk Island pines in Forrest St.  They have Ben roosting there for years, passing many other pines on the way

 Also saw, flying a bove the beach a juvenile sea eagle, later we saw a hobby.

 

 

Wonderful place, this coast

 

 

Elizabeth
Sent from my iPad


On 30/01/2015, at 4:54, "Geoffrey Dabb" <> wrote:

Exactly Michael.  Bowerbirds eat C Pistachio fruits in my street and as they are increasing and feed on a wide range of garden plants (eg viburnum) we could see some interesting feral plant species in the future.  The below was in March last year.  Can’t remember whether or not I inflicted it on the list at the time

 

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From: michael mulvaney [m("netspeed.com.au","mulvaney");">]
Sent: Friday, 30 January 2015 7:38 AM
To: Baird, Ian
Cc: Rosemary Blemings; m("canberrabirds.org.au","canberrabirds");">
Subject: Re: [canberrabirds] Chinese pistachio feeding frenzy

 

For my Honours thesis 35 years ago, I studied the weed potential of firethorn and cotoneaster. As part of this work, I fed a road injured king parrot and two crimson rosellas thousands of cotoneaster and firethorn berries. They didn’t pass one viable seed. I concluded that parrots are very efficient seed predators. While whole uneaten fruits may occasionally be transported by parrots, I actually think that they are a great help in reducing the spread of invasive berry producers by destroyingt seed at the source - the villains of the piece are Pied Currawongs, Silvereyes, blackbirds and Starlings and other fruit eaters. Hi

 

Cheers Michael Mulvaney

On 29 Jan 2015, at 9:50 am, Baird, Ian <m("act.gov.au","Ian.Baird");">> wrote:




Rosemary

A Google search shows NSW DPI believes Chinese pistachio is spread by birds. Also ACT Govt recognises it as a ‘garden escape species which has the potential to escape if not unchecked’. It is listed in the ACT’s ‘Are your plants going bush?’ brochure as ‘a plant which is not a major problem ..at the moment....but it is recommended these plants are treated with caution’. Hence  that explains its WEED SWAP status. I also note that reference to ‘Trees and Shrubs in Canberra’ (Pryor and Banks) reveals that historically speaking, Pistachio chinensis  has been extensively planted as a street tree throughout Canberra.

Rgds,

Ian Baird  | Senior Policy  Officer

Phone: +61 2 6207 2336

Nature Conservation Policy | Environment and Planning Directorate | ACT Government

Level 1 North, Dame Pattie Menzies House, 16 Challis Street DICKSON | GPO Box 158 CANBERRA ACT 2601 | www.environment.gov.au

 

 

From: Rosemary Blemings [m("blemings.org","rosemary");">] 
Sent: Wednesday, 28 January 2015 5:36 PM
To: Baird, Ian
Subject: Re: [canberrabirds] Chinese pistachio feeding frenzy

 

Ian,

Is it known whether these fruits are actually destroyed when eaten by these species? 

To us it would seem they're unripe and unpalatable. It would be good to think the fruits were too immature to be a threat to the 'bush' but I suspect that's a naive hope.

The Chinese pistachio qualifies as a WEED SWAP target species but there are thousands of them around. Alas by autumn they will be too "pretty" for owners to contemplate removing even the female trees. 

 

Best wishes,

Rosemary

 

On 28/01/2015, at 2:22 PM, Baird, Ian wrote:





Next doors’ tree now has fruit ripe enough to attract parrots and a cockatoos. Yesterday evening, in the space of 45 minutes or so, 4 spp. were observed feeding in the one tree: Gang-gangs (3), King-parrots (4); Crimson Rosellas (5+) and Sulphur-crested Cockatoos (2) – although the latter did not start feeding until the Gang-gangs had left. There were at least 5 Gang-gangs in total, including 2 immatures. The immatures were apparently roosting nearby in eucalypt trees waiting to be fed by the adults. One of the pair was seen ‘begging for food from an adult female perched alongside- although I can’t be sure that actual food was transferred!

Ian Baird

Fairfax Street O’Connor

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