birding-aus

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To: Birding Aus <>
Subject: (no subject)
From: Bruce Greatwich <>
Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2013 17:54:07 +0800
Hi all

Unfortunately living on the other side of the country, i was not able
to attend the presentation. I listened to the Interview from John this
morning, and was absolutely caught up in the moment, it was fantastic.
The enthusiasm and joy from John was fantastic to hear! Im sure i
would feel the same.


I am a bit bemused by the knee-jerk reaction that we must now not
look/disturb Night Parrots ever again. Thanks to John, we finally have
a semi reliable method of surveying for this species, the call, as
with many cryptic species, has always been the key to unravel this
puzzle. I dont think anyone is suggesting this location should be made
public so anyone can stumble in and try their luck in finding these
birds. The fact of the matter is that John has discovered at least two
individuals at possibly two locations?! This is hardly going to bring
the species back from extinction, if they are indeed that threatened.


By all means, lock up this site, protect it from everyone. But
describe the ecology/biology/habits/call of the Night Parrot, so we
can find more populations! Conservation through knowledge. Surveying
for Night Parrots does not have to be invasive. Recording devices can
be set up, left for months at a time, and then analysed at a later
date (as currently implemented for Western Ground Parrot).
Unfortunately there has never been a reference call to screen against,
until now! This is completely passive, and has a very real chance of
uncovering further populations.


Consider this scenario which is being played out virtually every day
in the Pilbara (Where Night Parrots also occur, the 2005 Minga Well
sighting by Rob Davis and Brendan Metcalf seems to have been forgotten
by the media outlets). Lets assume a Night Parrot population exists in
an area where a biological survey is being carried out as part of EIA
for a mining/infrastructure project. Scenario 1) Surveyors have had
the call made available to them and consequently they record a Night
Parrot through listening surveys/audio equipment or illicit a response
from call play back. Being an EPBC listed species as Critically
Endangered, the population is protected and saved from any development
activity. Scenario 2) Surveyors continue the tried and failed
techniques of waterhole observations and listening surveys of which
they do not know what exactly they are listening for. The Night Parrot
population goes undetected. Approval is given for the development, the
Night Parrot population is severely disturbed/effected or destroyed
completely.


In this very real example, it seems an absolute no brainer what the
best conservation outcome is for the Night Parrot. I know this is just
one example, but i cant understand why having finally cracked the
puzzle to detecting this species, you would then lock that key up. Im
probably being very impatient i know, but the above scenario is one
that concerns me, and outweighs the concerns of potential disturbance
from birders.


Just my opinion

Cheers

Bruce


Hi David
Having listened to John and seen his presentation - I am just beginning to get
a sense of how sensitive this species is and how sensitive the habitat is, and
the pressures the area is under.
I am a bird watcher, ecologist and nature conservationist.  I would love to
see, watch and study night parrots. However, in this situation, and probably
for the foreseeable future, I think that birdwatchers should not be allowed to
go near the site - they should forget about getting another tick and if they
really care about the parrots, they should donate towards their conservation
without expecting to go and see them.
With regards to publicity - I think that John and his team should be able to
raise awareness without opening this precious population up to possible
disturbance.
I'm not sure how keeping the site safe and undisturbed while the species is
studied will be counter-productive. Perhaps in the future, your dream might be
realised, but that might be 5 or 10 years away!

Rob Morris



Brisbane, Australia


>* From: 
>* To: 
>* Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2013 16:04:11 +1000*
>* Subject: Re: [Birding-Aus] Night Parrot Interview this morning*
>* *
>* Naturally I was excited as anyone to hear of the first photos of Night *
>* Parrot; I congratulate John Young and look forward to seeing the video *
>* footage. And naturally I have a few comments: *
>*  *
>* Any notion that the public (read: birdwatchers) should be prevented from *
>* seeing NPs is bound to be counter-productive. It should be obvious that only 
>*
>* a limited number of people would be prepared to travel to SW Qld to look for 
>*
>* Night Parrots (which may continue to be elusive), not ‘slavering hordes of *
>* twitchers’, to paraphrase someone else on this forum. (I am always amused by 
>*
>* the notion that any rare bird sighting in Australia will automatically *
>* trigger an invasion of  ‘twitchers’. This is not the UK – birdwatchers 
>simply *
>* do not exist in the same numbers here. The most so-called twitchers (all of *
>* them scientists or bona fide researchers, as well as birdwatchers) I have *
>* ever seen in one place was on the Strzelecki Track, shortly after the *
>* whereabouts of Chestnut-breasted Whitefaces became generally known (again, *
>* thanks to the efforts of a largely solo, dedicated birder), where a ‘horde’ *
>* of 14 people descended to look at the birds for a few minutes.)*
>* Which brings me to a fact that is still true today as it was then (more than 
>*
>* 20 years ago) when I first started birding – public interest in birds, while 
>*
>* increasing, is still minimal in Australia. The vast majority of the country *
>* hasn’t heard of, and probably doesn’t give two hoots about, the Night 
>Parrot. *
>* The unfortunate corollary of this is that birders, ornithologists and bird *
>* conservations are too few to put any real pressure on politicians to 
>allocate *
>* funding and resources for Night Parrot research or conservation.*
>* In my view, if these birds prove to be resident then the area should be *
>* managed by an organisation such as Australian Wildlife Conservancy (AWC), *
>* which fences some of its reserves and intensively controls feral animals. *
>* Night Parrots are already protected under state and federal legislation; *
>* government decision-making is slow and subject to available funds and *
>* political whims; and governments have already demonstrated a lack of *
>* resources and will in matters such as the extinction of the Christmas Island 
>*
>* Pipistrelle and the recent decimation of Bilbies at Currawinya. *
>* Justifiably, birdwatchers (me included) will want to see this amazing bird *
>* for themselves. And of course Mr Young is entitled to profit by his find: 
>the *
>* practice of paying to be shown exciting birds and other wildlife by local *
>* experts is well established around the world; I’m sure many people would be *
>* happy to pay to watch Night Parrots. Disturbance to Night Parrots has been *
>* self-regulating for decades and a few – even a few dozen – ‘twitchers’ are *
>* unlikely to cause any lasting harm if managed sensibly. But if birders are *
>* prevented from seeing the bird (and what would be the point of that?) the *
>* recent sightings will probably only cause intensified searching  elsewhere, *
>* possibly with undesirable or unforeseen consequences. *
>* In further defence of the comparatively benign practice of birding, in my *
>* experience photographers have recently become a more intrusive presence at *
>* some sites than birders armed only with binoculars. With the advent of cheap 
>*
>* digital SLRs it is easier than ever to photograph birds. However, it is just 
>*
>* as hard as ever to obtain a good bird photo, a fact which doesn’t seem to *
>* stop both amateurs and professionals from trying. Recently, I have *
>* encountered photographers (comically attired in heavy camouflage gear) *
>* playing Gurney’s Pitta calls loudly and incessantly in Thailand (no sign of *
>* the pittas, unsurprisingly); a kindly and concerned lodge operator in India *
>* who refused to take anyone to see a den of Desert Cats because photographers 
>*
>* constantly and blatantly ignored requests to keep their distance; and a *
>* female Snow Leopard forced to stare down the barrels of literally dozens of *
>* telephoto lenses or risk abandoning her kill at a remote valley in the *
>* Himalaya. In my experience, birdwatchers tend to look and move on; *
>* photographers continually strive for the best possible shot (even when *
>* hopelessly under-equipped and often to the detriment of the subject) and may 
>*
>* spend hours or days in its pursuit. (Naturally there are exceptions to these 
>*
>* generalisations but please don’t write in.) *
>* Even if there is a flurry of ‘twitchers’ wanting to see Night Parrots, *
>* interest will soon die down and the alleged ‘flood’ will quickly slow to a *
>* trickle. The birds themselves will continue to stymie the efforts of casual *
>* birders, even if the call becomes well-known (I’m betting it won’t). *
>* *
>* Ideally John would allow other responsible people also to see the parrots, *
>* but even that won’t stop people looking anyway; it won’t prevent accidental *
>* or serendipitous discoveries of this or other populations; and the nature of 
>*
>* the bird’s ecology will probably keep it safe for some time yet, slavering *
>* twitchers notwithstanding.*
>* *
>* Happy trails,*
>* *
>* David Andrew*
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