birding-aus

the plight of the Orange-bellied Parrot

To: Peter Menkhorst <>
Subject: the plight of the Orange-bellied Parrot
From: Laurie Knight <>
Date: Wed, 5 May 2010 16:57:05 +1000
Peter, given that climate change is already altering the migration patterns of short - medium distance migrants in the northern hemisphere, is it possible that OBPs might be able to consistently overwinter in Tasmania?

Regards, Laurie.

On 05/05/2010, at 1:39 PM, Peter Menkhorst wrote:

folks
as Chair of the OBP Recovery Team I too have been astonished at the lack of response to our press release of a couple of weeks back [issued via the Commonwealth Minister's office] from both the mainstream media and the birding community. I thank Sean Dooley for being something of a lone voice on behalf of the bird. However, I would like to add some further information that could not be included in the press release, but is freely available from the recovery team, and to correct a couple of false statements in Sean's newspaper article.

1. The grim prognosis for the wild population is due to a decline in the number of females that have attempted to breed during the past few summers, although those pairs that have bred have achieved more than adequate success rates for an individual nest - > 4 fledglings per active nest.

2. When combined with the rather short breeding life-span of OBPs [< 6 years, probably only 3-5 years in most cases], a couple of years of low recruitment can have a big impact on a small population. Our population modelling shows the population continuing in a steep decline and hitting zero by 2016. Note that this is only a prediction, but we have a fair bit of faith in the data and the analysis, and therefore must take a precautionary approach and assume that it is accurate.

3. On the other hand, our information about survival rates, derived from sightings of colour-banded birds [reported to us by our volunteer monitors at Melaleuca and other birders who come across OBPs], indicates that there is no problem there. In other words, there is not a critical cause of mortality that is driving the population down, for example wind farms or lights on the squid fishing fleet in Bass Strait, or even starvation as suggested by Sean in the press. Rather, the rate of recruitment to the breeding population is not adequate to overcome the rate at which older birds are leaving the breeding population.

This suggests that there could be a problem with habitat quality that is constraining the ability of birds to achieve adequate condition to successfully produce eggs. This could be a lack of a quality diet on the mainland during winter, or on the breeding grounds in the 4-6 weeks that birds have there before egg-laying in December. Interestingly, in the captive population, where the birds are given a carefully managed diet, the breeding participation rate is high.

4. Sean's hypothesis about the role of drought in reducing habitat quality is quite plausible and the recovery team has considered that possibility for some years. What can the recovery team do about drought/climate change? Perhaps the only action available to us is to provide supplementary food to wintering birds to possibly improve their condition. This we plan to do. Likewise, we will provide a boost diet for the birds when they arrive back at the breeding grounds, in an attempt to get more females into breeding condition.

5. All of this greatly increases the importance of our captive population [currently 167 birds] as insurance against the demise of the wild population. We need to do a bit of work to ensure that the captive population is as good an insurance policy as it can be. This includes improving its genetic base by taking more founder individuals from the wild. This can be achieved with minimal impact on the wild population by removing a single young from a number of nests [yet to be finally determined] over the next couple of years. If we can locate unbanded juveniles on the mainland we may also attempt to catch those because unbanded birds come from a different breeding population to the main Melaleuca group, where all chicks are banded in the nest, and therefore may contain genetic material that is not currently represented in the captive population. We are not proposing to take adults, as stated by Sean in the press. Note also that OBPs rarely if ever successfully rear a second clutch in the wild, so we are not proposing to remove entire clutches to captivity [Sean suggested this as a better option].

6. We do not share Sean's pessimism about the ability of captive- bred and released birds to successfully complete the migration cycle. We already have numerous examples of them doing exactly that, including situations where the released birds did not have the benefit of wild birds to show them the way, if indeed that ever happens. Successful migrations by captive-bred birds include birds released at 2 separate sites in southwest Tasmania in spring and birds released on the mainland during winter.

For these and other reasons, the OBP recovery team sees captive- breeding and release as being a critical component of future programs to conserve this species as a component of Australia's wildlife. That does not mean that we are abandoning the wild population. In fact we will redouble our efforts to improve the quality of habitat, in Tasmania and on the mainland.

sorry for the long rant - but these are not simple matters and I wanted to provide adequate information to allow a better understanding of the situation and the reasons for the plan of action that the Commonwealth and State Governments are now supporting.

Peter Menkhorst

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