birding-aus

Why so many dead birds on Michaelmas Cay?

To: Michelle Plant <>
Subject: Why so many dead birds on Michaelmas Cay?
From: Chris Sanderson <>
Date: Tue, 8 Jun 2010 10:57:43 +1000
Hi Tony and Michelle,

I think it is good to investigate and take these things seriously, however
if it is seabirds then mass death events are not unheard of.  I believe it
reflects a crash in local fisheries leading to no food for adults or
babies.  Having said that, if no one investigates and it turns out to be
some horrible toxin from a ship or something that we could have done
something about...

Regards,
Chris

On Tue, Jun 8, 2010 at 10:02 AM, Michelle Plant
<>wrote:

> http://www.wildlifehealth.org.au/AWHN/ProgramsProjects/Programs.aspx
>
> Tony - I think after the experience in Western Australia at Esperance a
> couple of years back, the Australian Wildlife Health co-ordinators and
> registry take these matters quite seriously.
>
> This is the hyperlink to be able to make a report and then the authorities
> can determine if there is a problem.  Which there may be - certainly
> something for wildlife management officers to be aware of - if they aren't
> already.  It seems appauling that a tourism operator would go in to clean
> up
> the carcasses to protect their business.  If there is a disease issue they
> could be placing themselves and their clients at risk.
>
> I have cc'd to Tiggy with the Australian Wildlife Health Network as she
> might offer some further advice.
>
> Please let me know if I can help in anyway.
>
> Michelle Plant
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: 
>  On Behalf Of Tony Palliser
> Sent: Tuesday, 8 June 2010 12:10 AM
> To: 
> Subject: [Birding-Aus] Why so many dead birds on Michaelmas Cay?
>
> A couple of South Africa enthusiasts asked me recently "why were there so
> many dead birds on Michaelmas Cay"?  In fact they reported that the beaches
> around this small cay were covered in them to such a degree that at least
> one tourist operator was going ashore before the visitors to clear up the
> carcasses each  day to avoid embarrassment.   Anyone have any ideas? is
> this
> normal at such nesting sites?  Or could this popular destination be over
> exploited?
>
> Regards,
> Tony
>
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