Just home from John Young's presentation on his discovery of Night Parrots.
These points struck home to me.
1. Night Parrots are unbelievably hard to find. You might spend a month
within 10m of a Night Parrot and never see or hear it. John Young regards
them as the hardest bird in the world to see.
2. Night Parrots appear to have extremely specific habitat needs: they live
and breed inside clumps of old spinifex, only in unburned areas. They do
not seem to visit waterholes.
3. The biggest threat to Night Parrots is almost certainly feral cats -
it's not only these parrots at risk, but many species of birds and small
animals. e.g. several cats destroyed nearly all of the 20+ nests in a
Letter-winged Kite colony. Some sort of biological control to remove cats
is urgent - but we have to ensure that it only attacks felids and no other
critters.
4. I'd heard the hype about John Young spending 15 years and hundreds of
thousands of dollars trying to find a Night Parrot. That didn't really sink
in until half way through his presentation. He had shown many photos of the
desolate Queensland outback: some beautiful but inhospitable places. One
photo showed Young leaning on his 4WD - that photo marked 8 years'
searching through the outback, without a single sighting, not even a
discarded Night Parrot feather. EIGHT YEARS! He'd spent months at a time
searching, often alone, methodically working his way through every possible
type of likely habitat - and not a hint of success. Yet - and this marks
him as passionate beyond belief, or mad, or both - HE KEPT LOOKING!
5. Night Parrots redefine the term "shy." They rarely respond to playback,
and go completely quiet if disturbed. Rather than helping searchers locate
the birds, Young believes that using playback - he currently has the only
recording - makes individual birds even more secretive, and possibly even
may cause them to abandon nests.
6. John Young presents a convincing argument for maintaining the secrecy
surrounding his discovery: opening up this area to more groups of searchers
is not necessarily going to find any more birds; it may make those he's
found even harder to relocate, and it is critical to find out as much as
possible about their dietary and habitat requirements so an action plan can
be developed to try to save the species. There is also the risk of poaching.
7. John Young is incredibly passionate about the Night Parrot and is
agitating action against feral cats, as well as pushing for sufficient
funds to protect the leasehold land where he found the Night Parrots.
I really don't know if we've already missed the tiny window of opportunity
to save the Night Parrot. But John Young is determined to try, and he
presents a thoroughly convincing argument:
Address the feral cat problem
Protect the habitat
Learn as much as we can about the Night Parrot - though the bird itself
isn't going to cooperate!
Russell Woodford
Birding-Aus List Owner
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