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Long-toed Stint in Brisbane

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A Long-toed Stint turning up in Brisbane was hard to resist as this species is a very rare visitor to Queensland. A Long-toed Stint was first found by Ged Tranter at Tinchi Tamba Wetland in northern Brisbane on January 17. It appeared to have left the site when Michael Daley found a stint at Kedron Brook Wetland, not too far away, on January 21. Since then two Long-toed Stints have been seen together at the latter site.



I was at Kedron Brook yesterday and Chris Attewell was kind enough to point us in the direction of where the bird had been hanging out. Over the next couple of hours the stint showed nicely as it foraged among Sharp-tailed Sandpipers, Red-necked Stints and Red-kneed Dotterels at the southern end of the wetland.


With that toe showing
The bird occasionally flew short distances from this area when chased by Sharp-tailed Sandpipers but would return soon after. The stint however gave as good as it got, chasing both Red-necked Stints and Sharp-tailed Sandpipers at times. It was easy to steady the lens on the scope and watch the birds across a short stretch of water without disturbing them. 

With Red-kneed Dotterel
I've seen this species in Queensland just once before – a single bird with Chris Corben at what is now Lake Bindegolly in January 1972, which at the time was the second record for Queensland.  

With Red-necked Stint

With Red-necked Stint & Sharp-tailed Sandpiper


South Pacific Cruise Part 2: Lifou Island & Port Vila

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Metallic Pigeon
We had two landings during our recent South Pacific Cruise – Lifou in the Loyalty Islands and Port Vila, the capital of Vanuatu.

Easo, Lifou Island

Pacific Dawn, Lifou Island 
On Lifou, part of New Caledonia, we were ferried to shore in the village of Easo in tender boats from the ship, Pacific Dawn. Here I waved down a driver who took me 6km north to the village of Mukaweng, where I walked further north birding along the road to Joking for about 2km. I had gleaned from trip reports and Google Earth that this might be a good area for the two endemic white-eyes.

Small Lifou White-eye
Lifou Island: Mukaweng-Joking Road
Small Lifou White-eye was common and easy to find, as was the distinctive Lifou Island race of Silvereye.

Large Lifou White-eye
Large Lifou White-eye was harder to track down and is often missed by observers, but after 1.5 hours I finally heard its call and found two birds. Of particular interest also was a single Phylloscopuswarbler seen in two places on the island; as far as I am aware no leaf-warblers are known from the Loyalty Islands. I also saw a New Caledonian Friarbird, which is not supposed to be on the Loyalty Islands.

Dark-brown Honeyeater
Other birds included Dark-brown Honeyeater. Brown Goshawk, South Melanesian Cuckoo-shrike and Cardinal Myzomela. A single Melanesian Whistler was seen. I arranged to meet the driver who dropped me off late in the morning (I was on the road for a total of 2.5 hours) to return to Easo and the ship; I paid the driver $A20 for his troubles. Ebird list for Lifou Island.

Port Vila Harbour

Port Vila - at the Summit Gardens
At Port Vila we hired a taxi for 3 hours for $80 and drove to the Summit Gardens outside the city. From here there is a spectacular view over the scenic harbour, and some nice forest where I was able to find my only two possible lifers in this part of the world – Yellow-fronted (Vanuatu) White-eye and Tanna Fruit-Dove.

Pacific Imperial-Pigeon

Yellow-fronted White-eye
Other birds included Pacific Imperial-Pigeon, Melanesian Whistler (supposedly the same species on the Loyalty Islands) and Red-bellied Fruit-Dove.

Markets at Port Vila
Later in the afternoon I walked through a forest patch along a road behind where the ship is berthed. This was very birdy indeed with the above-mentioned species recorded along with others including Metallic Pigeon and Melanesian Flycatcher. Birders alighting from a cruise in Port Vila need look no further than the scrub behind the port. Elist for the Port Vila port site is here. Seabirds seen on the cruise are covered in a separate post.

Melanesian Flycatcher female

Melanesian Flycatcher male



Grey Ternlet at Mooloolaba

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Grey Noddy found this week at Mooloolaba - Pic by Matt Harvey
A second Grey Ternlet (Noddy) has turned up on the Sunshine Coast. This bird was found on January 23 on rocks at Mooloolaba and taken to Twinnies Pelican and Seabird Rescue at Landsborough,  from where it was transferred to Australia Zoo's veterinary facility.

Unfortunately the ternlet had to be put down. According to Australia Zoo wildlife rescue worker Matt Harvey, the bird showed signs of extensive physical damage including a broken wing, head trauma and bleeding. The ternlet may have been seriously wounded during an attack by another animal, or it may have faltered at sea and sustained injuries when washed up on the rocks.

Grey Noddy seen on January 7 off Mooloolaba
The find was almost two weeks after a Grey Ternlet was seen on the January 7 Mooloolaba pelagic just 20km offshore. The species is a very rare visitor to Queensland waters.

Matt also reports that a juvenile White-tailed Tropicbird was found in an emaciated condition at Sunshine Beach on January 21.

Rainbow Beach & Cooloola February 2018

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Beach Stone-Curlew
We camped for three nights this week at Pt Carlos, outside Rainbow Beach. There was no sign of the Large-tailed Nightjars that were so evident here in September 2016. A family of Bush Stone-Curlews in the camping ground were the first birds we saw.

Bush Stone-Curlew
Shorebirds on the sandflats at low tide included good numbers of Red-necked Stint, Grey-tailed Tattler, Pacific Golden Plover, Lesser Sand-Plover and Bar-tailed Godwits in breeding plumage (elist).

Bar-tailed Godwit

Grey-tailed Tattler

Lesser Sand-Plover

Pacific Golden-Plover
A Squirrel Glider was spotted above our camp and a Common Ringtail emerged from its hiding place in a bunch of mistletoe after being harassed by miners.

Common Ringtail

Squirrel Glider
I visited the spit at Inskip Point several times in the hope of more interesting shorebird fare but exceptionally high tides didn't help. There were very large numbers of Little Tern, with Common Tern in smaller numbers. Three Double-banded Plovers in non-breeding plumage - suggesting they had oversummered - were of interest, as was a trio of Beach Stone-Curlews, including a fledged youngster.

Double-banded Plover

Little Tern
A Frilled Lizard along the road was nice; the Great Sandy World Heritage Area is one of the most southerly known sites for this iconic species. There was no sign at all of Black-breasted Buttonquail at Inskip Point - not even old platelets; clearly they are gone from this site. Nobody is sure why as they had been there for many years and disappeared relatively quickly. It could be that a feral cat learned the art of catching them, in which case the entire population would be doomed. 

Frilled Lizard

Frilled Lizard
At Bullocks Head a female Shining Flycatcher showed nicely in the mangroves, as did a pair of Torresian Kingfishers (elist).

Shining Flycatcher

Torresian Kingfisher
I visited the Noosa Plain of Cooloola in the early morning. I heard three Eastern Ground Parrots calling just before dawn and flushed a male King Quail from the track. Then I saw a Brush Bronzewing on the track, about half-way between the pump station and the area of damp heath. As usual it was extremely skittish and this distant image was all I managed.  A recently fledged Channel-billed Cuckoo flew overhead (elist).

Channel-billed Cuckoo

Brush Bronzewing

I visited the rainforest at Bymien - where plenty of Rose-crowned Fruit-Doves and a few Wompoo Fruit-Doves were calling - and Lake Poona.

Lake Poona
 Some more of the birds seen in the area generally follow.

Little Egret

Scarlet Honeyeater

Striated Heron

Wompoo Fruit-Dove



Captured Night Parrot Disappears in WA

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A Night Parrot at the WA site where a bird was captured: Pic by Bruce Greatwich 
The following news story written by me was published in The Weekend Australian of 24-25 February, 2018.


Rare night parrot vanishes after intervention by recovery team

A critically endangered night parrot disappeared after being caught and fitted with a radio transmitter in Western Australia by the team of experts charged with saving the birds from extinction.

No surveys were undertaken to determine how many parrots survived in the remote East Murchison site before the night parrot recovery team netted the bird.

The news emerged as it was revealed that almost half the nests of the night parrot found in Queensland were deserted after being discovered by scientists. Critics say misdirected, if well-meaning, interference in managing the species may contribute to its demise.

Researcher Neil Hamilton with the captured Night Parrot: Pic from Twitter
The parrot once was widespread across inland Australia, but numbers plummeted from the late-1800s. The first photograph of a night parrot was taken only in 2013, by naturalist John Young.

As few as 20 night parrots survive in a small area on and near Pullen Pullen Reserve where Mr Young took his photographs. Three nests uncovered by scientists working for Bush Heritage Australia, which owns Pullen Pullen, subsequently failed to produce offspring. BHA says one nest failed due to heat stress; a snake is believed to have eaten the eggs in another nest; and it is not known why a single chick in the third nest died. A BHA spokeswoman said five other nests successfully produced birds.

In March last year, the night parrot was discovered at the Each Murchison site in WA by four ornithologists. Details of the site were sent to recovery team head Allan Burbidge, who led an expedition to the area last August.

Dr Burbidge and his team strung fine nets in an area of spinifex where ornithologist Bruce Greatwich has photographed a night parrot. Researchers walked through the spinifex in a line, hoping to drive parrots from their day roosts into the nets.

A parrot was caught and fitted with a GPS and radio tracking antenna.

Researcher Neil Hamilton was photographed handling the bird soon after its capture. No trace of the bird was found subsequently despite extensive land and aerial searches; its fate is unknown.

The antenna was intended to allow researchers to track the movements of night parrots. Two parrots were captured and tagged in Queensland - one in 2015 and one in 2016. Some experts believe no more birds should be caught until comprehensive surveys are undertaken to determine population numbers.

WA site where the Night Parrot was found: Pic by Bruce Greatwich 
Ornithologist Ian May, an authority on arid zone parrots, said the role of recovery teams for endangered species should be restricted to the management of habitat, predators and disease control.

“They should not be handling wild birds except for the purpose of disease control and only then in the most extreme circumstances if an obvious problem exists,” he said. “Handling critically endangered birds in the wild should cease and shouldn't be permitted until all other management options are exhausted and then considered only if numbers... have substantially increased."

Dr Burbidge, principal research scientist with the WA Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, said the radio-tracking antenna was “presumed to have failed”.

Dr Burbidge said monitoring a parrot in WA was necessary because its habitat differed from where the tagged Queensland birds were studied.

“Our understanding of foraging habitat is limited. A sound understanding of feeding habitat preferences is required in order to inform management decisions,” he said.

While government sources confirmed no surveys were undertaken before the capture to determine parrot numbers in the area, Dr Burbidge said “various levels of monitoring” were under way at four WA sites.














Rainforest Bulldozed on Sunshine Coast

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Rainforest bulldozed along Sippy Creek, Sunshine Coast - Pic Ted Fensom
The clearing of rainforest and other native vegetation on the Sunshine Coast is accelerating as the Queensland Government pushes ahead with a massive $1 billion program to expand and upgrade the Bruce Highway. At the same time, landholders on the coast are making the most of the absence of meaningful state land-clearing laws, with the rampant destruction of native forest being documented on at least nine properties.

What is happening on the Sunshine Coast is indicative of what is happening across the state as the recently re-elected Labor government stalls on its pledge to restrict land-clearing.

Forest converted to mulch piles, Steve Irwin Way, Sunshine Coas - Pic  Ted Fensom
Of particular concern on the Sunshine Coast is the fact that the government has sliced into the Palmview Conservation Park, Mooloolah River National Park, Beerwah State Forest and other reserves to make way for its roadworks. National parks are supposed to be sacrosanct and there is little point in protecting land as reserves if they can be carved up at the stroke of a pen.

Environmentalist activist Ted Fensom has documented the extent and nature of the clearing across a large swathe of the southern Sunshine Coast. He says critical habitat for koalas and numerous plant and animal species have been devastated without meaningful environmental assessment studies being conducted, and with little consideration for far-reaching ecological consequences and the loss of biodiversity.

Old growth trees felled at Palmwoods, Sunshine Coast - Pic Ted Fensom
According to Fensom, the highway works are particularly devastating. “The area affected by the huge clearing for works associated with the Bruce Highway is beyond comprehension and stretches many kilometres north to south,” he says. “Koala habitat and precious rainforest has been turned into giant mulch piles. These pockets of biodiversity are disappearing every week around the Sunshine Coast.”

According to the federal Department of Environment and Energy, the roadworks are affecting populations of koala, listed as a threatened species under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act, as well as subtropical lowland rainforest, listed as a threatened ecological community. However, the department approved the development with conditions.

Rainforest logging and clearing at Sippy Creek, Sunshine Coast. Circled sign says: "Environmental Protection Zone"
Fenson says the rate of tree-clearing elsewhere around the Sunshine Coast is “going beserk”. Native vegetation has recently been - or is in the process of being - bulldozed or logged at four sites around Palmwoods; two properties near Woombye; and two areas around Caloundra, including a koala habitat corridor at Little Mountain; and a 60-hectare holding in Yandina. Areas where further clearing is planned include Tanawah North, Coolum West, Nambour Heights, Buderim, Bli Bli, Mooloolah and Beerwah East.
Activist Ted Fensom
The state Liberal National Party Government in 2012 gutted the Beattie Labor Government's 2004 laws controlling land-clearing. In 2016, the minority Palaszczuk Labor Government failed in its bid to again tighten up land-clearing laws when crossbenchers joined the LNP – ever the slave to the old school Bjelke-Petersen Nationals - to defeat the move. An estimated 300,000 hectares of Queensland bushland are being bulldozed annually as a consequence.

Clearing for a Bruce Highway on ramp, Sippy Downs, Sunshine Coast
Labor was returned to government in the November 2017 election, this time with a majority.
Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk pledged to reintroduce the tree-clearing restrictions but no time-frame was set, and the state's new Environment Minister, Leeanne Enoch, has had little to say about the matter. Her office declined to respond to requests for comment. The Queensland Department of Main Roads and Transport also declined to comment.

Land-clearing at Woombye, Sunshine Coast - Pic Ted Fensom
It is a matter of considerable regret that the Greens and some in the environmental movement pay little attention to the land-clearing scandal. Their focus in Queensland has for some time centred on the proposed Adani coal mine at the expense of just about everything else. One leading figure in the birding community dismissed concerns about land-clearing as “spin” designed to divert attention from Adani.

On Twitter: Paul Sullivan is BirdLife Australia CEO
Adani is a very important issue, to be sure, but it is a proposal and one that may well not fly as its proponents struggle to secure finance. Uncontrolled land-clearing is happening right now. Ted Fensom's photographs on this post, all taken recently across the southern Sunshine Coast, speak for themselves. They reflect what is happening across Queensland.

Forest destruction at Tanawah, Sunshine Coast - Pic Ted Fensom

Bulldozer at work at Palmwoods, Sunshine Coast - Pic Ted Fensom

Sunshine Coast Pelagic March 2018

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Flesh-footed Shearwater

We departed Mooloolaba Marina on Sunday March 4, 2018 at 6.35am. A steady 10-12 knot westerly (a far from desirable direction), a swell of 1-1.5m, and partially cloudy skies were the order of the day, with the temperature reaching 30.  About half way out to the shelf we encountered a single Fluttering Shearwater – a species we don't often see - posing nicely.



A few Hutton's Shearwaters and Wedge-tailed Shearwaters were the only other birds we encountered before cutting the engine off the shelf at 9.30am, 33 nautical miles offshore in 300 metres: 26.3865 S, 153.52436 E. We began laying a berley trail and were soon joined by a couple of Flesh-footed Shearwaters; a few of these birds were about the boat the whole time we were on the shelf.

Flesh-footed Shearwater
We'd not been out there long when we saw a distant Buller's Shearwater on the horizon which unfortunately didn't come close. Later in the morning a female Lesser Frigatebird flew over.

Lesser Frigatebird
A couple of Pomarine Jaegers put in appearances, as did a single Tahiti Petrel. However, with that gentle westerly, it was pretty dead out there so we turned around at 12pm after drifting south-west for 5 nautical miles.  We stopped in 160 metres to try our luck with another berley trail and saw a second Lesser Frigatebird and more Pomarine Jaegers. We arrived back at the marina at 3.35pm, seeing a few more Hutton's Shearwaters and Wedge-tailed Shearwaters on the way back.

Hutton's Shearwater
PARTICIPANTS: Greg Roberts (organiser), Toby Imhoff (skipper), Zoe Williams (deckhand),
Eric Anderson, Margie Baker, Tony Baker, Sarah Beavis, Phil Cross, Jo Culican, Alex Ferguson, John Gunning, Nikolas Haass, Bob James, Elliot Leach, Sue Lee, James Martin, Rob Kernot, Andrew Naumann, Karen Rose, Raja Stephenson, Carolyn Stewart. Ebird list.

SPECIES: Total (Maximum number at one time)

Tahiti Petrel 1 (1),
Flesh-footed Shearwater 12 (5),
Wedge-tailed Shearwater 25 (6),
Hutton's Shearwater 8 (2),
Fluttering Shearwater 1 (1),
Buller's Shearwater 1 (1),
Lesser Frigatebird 2 (1),
Pomarine Jaeger 6 (2),
Crested Tern 15 (15),
Silver Gull 3 (3).

Offshore Bottle-nosed Dolphin 15 (6)

Second Night Parrot disappears

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Night Parrot - Pic by John Young
The following is the transcript of my story in The Weekend Australian of 10-11 March, 2018.

A second critically endangered night parrot disappeared after its mate vanished when it was caught and fitted with a radio transmitter by a team of experts charged with saving the birds from extinction.

The revelation prompted calls for the federal government to sack the night parrot recovery team and appoint a senior public servant to oversee the conservation program.

The night parrot is one of the rarest birds in the world. It had scarcely been reported for more than a century before naturalist John Young photographed one in western Queensland in 2013.

A pair of night parrots were discovered in the East Murchison area of Western Australia in March 2017. The Weekend Australian reported two weeks ago that recovery team chief Allan Burbidge led an expedition to the site five months later. The team caught one of the parrots in a net and fitted it with a transmitter, but no trace of the bird was found subsequently.

Recovery team sources said for the next three nights, a second parrot called frequently at the site during the night as it tried to find its missing mate. The second bird then evidently vanished.

Dr Burbidge says the transmitter failed, and there is no evidence the bird fled the area because it was traumatised, or fell victim to a predator because it was injured or encumbered by the device.

But one of Dr Burbidge's team, Tasmanian zoologist Mark Holdsworth, said it was possible the parrot perished. “That couldn't be ruled out,” he said.

Dr Burbidge agreed a second parrot was calling at the site when the bird was caught. “Steps were taken to specifically avoid flushing or catching this bird,” he said. “The signal from the transmitter was lost on the first night but... one bird was roosting at the capture site for at least two nights after the capture. It later appeared to roost elsewhere.”

Zoologists Mark Carter and Chris Watson recorded the calls of what was believed to be a night parrot in the Northern Territory in January 2017. Night parrot recovery team guidelines warn birds should not be flushed from daytime roosts: “Doing so will expose them to diurnal predators and potential heat stress.”

But Mr Carter said the team urged him to flush birds to photograph them. He was told this was standard practice on Pullen Pullen, the Queensland reserve where Mr Young photographed his birds.

Referring to the WA capture, Mr Carter said: “Now we learn... the “experts” undertook extremely risky interventions.” Mr Carter said the team should be replaced by a senior statutory officer.

End of story.

What follows are expanded comments from Mark Carter, a well-regarded Alice Springs birding guide.

Commenting on an approach by the recovery team about the NT bird: "The idea was that I would flush the bird in daylight to get photographs to ‘confirm’ the presence of the species. I was assured that this was a common occurrence at Pullen Pullen and that it did no harm to the birds. They also made this request to the NT Government. I was against taking any such action as I felt the risk of flushed birds being injured or killed by predators or of disturbing any nests was too high just to further confirm what we already knew from sound recordings and observers hearing the birds call at the site."  

Elaborating on the possible fate of the two WA birds: “Now we learn that in one case at least ’the experts’ have been undertaking extremely risky interventions which are not justified by the possible outcomes. Currently we know of very few sites for this species and each individual bird has to be considered to be extremely valuable and precious. We know very little about their capacity to tolerate disturbance but the early indications are not promising- deliberate disturbance to the birds has huge potential to do harm."

One of Burbidge's expedition members, Mark Holdsworth, Tasmanian zoologist of orange-bellied parrot fame, begs to differ. Holdsworth took to Twitter to dismiss my first report as "bullshit". When I asked him to indicate errors in the story, Holdsworth responded by blocking me. I thought this was ironic given it was Holdsworth who had confirmed to me rumours about the capture before the story was published. Moreover, as indicated above, Holdsworth agreed it is not possible to say that the captured night parrot is dead or alive. "We have no way of knowing what happened to that bird,” he said.

It's worth noting that most of the 15 people on the night parrot recovery team were not aware of the plan to capture and tag a bird in WA. Asked if there was any obligation on him to consult the whole team, Burbidge told me: "Tracking of night parrots was identified as an action in the Night Parrot  Research Plan. Since 2014, there have been discussions in the recovery team regarding potential tracking projects." 

Burbidge says the netting and capture was approved by the Animal Ethics Committee of the WA Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions.










Pectoral Sandpiper, Broad-billed Sandpiper & other shorebirds Toorbul-Godwin Beach area

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Pectoral Sandpiper
A Pectoral Sandpiper was present today at Bishops Marsh near Toorbul. The bird was hanging around with about 12 Sharp-tailed Sandpipers, one of which had pretty well-defined breast markings. The Pec however wasn't difficult to find. Full marks to Stewart Melton for spotting this bird yesterday.

Pectoral Sandpiper

Pectoral Sandpiper

Sharp-tailed Sandpiper
Not too many shorebirds were present at the Toorbul high tide roost nearby but the mix of species below was nice. I've noticed this season that the birds at the roost have been extremely skittish and often they are absent when the tide is particularly high, as it was today. Local birders tell me that numbers using the roost have been affected adversely by cannon-netting by bird banders. People and their dogs are a constant problem. Birders are not blameless, often approaching the birds too closely. I was there recently when contractors for the Moreton Bay Regional Council, which is supposed to safeguard the site, ignored my pleas and mowed the grassy bank just as 3000 shorebirds had settled in; the birds immediately left and had not returned an hour later.

Gull-billed Tern, White-headed Stilt, Great Knot, Bar-tailed Godwit, Black-tailed Godwit
Other shorebirds about Toorbul, Bishops Marsh and a wetland along Freeman Road recently include Red-kneed Dotterel, good numbers of Black-tailed Godwit and Marsh Sandpiper. Brolga has been regular at Bishops Marsh.

Brolga

Red-kneed Dotterel

Black-tailed Godwit

Marsh Sandpiper
Good numbers of Eastern Curlew were roosting amid mangroves at high tide some distance from the Toorbul roost.

Eastern Curlew
 Just six kilometres away from Toorbul in a straight line is Godwin Beach. This is a good spot during short windows of time before and after high tide. Last week I found three Broad-billed Sandpipers here on an incoming tide.

Broad-billed Sandpiper
Great Knots are common and this one was banded at Toorbul in 2012, so it has presumably undergone annual migrations amounting to many tens of thousands of kilometres. It would make the regular short journey to feed at Godwin Beach from its high tide roost. This could be Toorbul or on Bribie Island at Kakadu or Red Beach; the birds seem to move between the three main roosting sites quite a bit.

Great Knot
Godwin Beach is a good spot for Terek Sandpiper.

Terek Sandpiper
Bribie Island is close by and what follows is a selection of shorebirds seen over the past couple of weeks at Red Beach, Pacific Harbour and the Kakadu roost.

Greater Sand-Plover 

Bar-tailed Godwit

Lesser Sand-Plover

Pacific Golden Plover
Curlew-Sandpiper

The debacle that is the conservation status of Coxen's Fig-Parrot

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While debate continues over the roll of recovery teams in managing the night parrot, the status of another imperilled parrot, Coxen's Fig-Parrot, has bizarrely been downgraded from critically endangered to endangered. This is another example of an endangered species recovery team going off the rails.

The Queensland Government's threatened species unit, which effectively doubles as the fig-parrot's recovery team, has long claimed the Coxen's Fig-Parrot occurs in four disjunct areas in south-east Queensland and north-east New South Wales, with a total population of between 50 and 250. No evidence has been offered to support these numbers; they amount to a wild guess.

The threatened species unit and the recovery team have long insisted the fig-parrot is regularly reported, but no record has been corroborated for a very long time by follow-up observations, a photograph, specimen, or sound-recording. The last corroborated sightings of the bird may have been as long ago as the late-1970s although a handful of these reports, while not confirmed by evidence or follow-up sightings, may be authentic. It's often said fig-parrots are so tiny and obscure they are easily overlooked, but they are not that difficult to locate when they are about. Plenty of good observers in this bird's range have looked long and hard without success for firm evidence of Coxen's Fig-Parrot.

The threatened species unit says now that because its estimate of the population is unchanged in recent years, the bird can no longer be regarded as critically endangered. So the parrot's status was downgraded to endangered by BirdLife International, the reason being that the bird's population "should not be considered as declining and instead could be considered stable". In the absence of evidence of a population decline, the bird does not qualify for listing under the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's Red List criteria.

Here is a comment from the threatened species unit head, Ian Gynther, to Rob Morris on Facebook: "The fact that this results in a down-listing to Endangered for a bird so seldom encountered and about which we lack so much basic knowledge is regrettable but it is, nevertheless, unavoidable based on the existing population thresholds."

In other words, unsubstantiated reports keep flowing to Gynther's team at such a rate that they have decided their estimated population of 50-250 is not declining and remains stable. Some observers are unkind enough to think this is scientific silliness writ large. This bird may in fact be extinct in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, but its conservation status is downgraded. Go figure.

In May last year I attended a talk given by two women closely associated with the threatened species unit – Rachael O'Flynn and Llana Kelly from Noosa and District Landcare – to the Noosa Parks Association on the Sunshine Coast. I listened as the pair talked about how the fig-parrots were out and about, how lucky we were to have them in our area, and how we need to plant lots of fig trees to boost their numbers. The audience was given the clear impression that Coxen's Fig-Parrot was doing quite well and had a bright future.

During question time, when I suggested to Ms O'Flynn and Ms Kelly that in fact there had been no corroborated records of the bird anywhere for decades, I was told essentially that I didn't know what I was talking about. Ms Kelly added that anyway, other wildlife will benefit from the good work being done for the fig-parrot; this may be true but is hardly relevant to the issue at hand.

Meanwhile, just like the night parrot recovery team, the threatened species unit is big on secrecy. When somebody reports a sighting of Coxen's Fig-Parrot, they are told by the threatened species unit not to share information with the birding community. No alerts are dispatched; the only people sent to check are Queensland Environment Department personnel. So the chances of corroborating the record with further sightings are seriously limited. Again, go figure.
















Yellow-tufted Honeyeater colony under attack on Sunshine Coast

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Palmview Yellow-tufted Honeyeaters

The only colony of the highly localised Yellow-tufted Honeyeater on the Sunshine Coast is under assault from a combination of a massive new real estate development and extensive roadworks. Thanks to Sarah Beavis and Rob Kernot for alerting me to the presence of the honeyeater colony in the Palmview Conservation Park.

Yellow-tufted Honeyeater
The reserve, directly opposite the historic Ettamogah Pub, has been hacked into by the Queensland Department of Main Roads and Transport as part of the $1 billion upgrade of the Bruce Highway. There is no point in creating national parks and other reserves if their boundaries can be altered at the stroke of a pen. Palmview is one of several conservation reserves to be carved up to make way for the highway upgrade.

Palmview Conservation Park - carved up for highway upgrade
At the same time, the huge $3 billion Harmony estate is being developed on an extensive area of low-lying land abutting the northern end of Palmview Conservation Park. The development will eventually deliver 4,800 homes for 12,000 residents on 100ha of land, spectacularly extending the urban sprawl of the southern Sunshine Coast. See here for more on the rampant destruction of rainforest and other native vegetation underway in the region. Activist Ted Fensom has been leading the way in highlighting this environmental onslaught.

Activist Ted Fensom outside Harmony real estate development
Palmview is set to become like most of the region's reserves - an island in a sea of suburbia. That's all the more reason to ensure such places are not chopped up for roadworks and other infrastructure. The colony of Yellow-tufted Honeyeaters (I saw 12-15 birds) favours thicker vegetation in the reserve at its northern end - an area that will be fronted by a sea of houses in the not too distant future. 

Palmview Conservation Park
Other birds in the reserve included this Fantailed Cuckoo (elist).

Fantailed Cuckoo
In other birdy news, I had Stubble Quail, Brown Quail and King Quail together on a cane farm near Bli Bli (ebird); Stubble Quail was a new bird for the Sunshine Coast when it turned up here in January. Good numbers of White-throated Needletail were also present here.

White-throated Needletail
  I saw a Little Bronze-Cuckoo at Finland Road, and Varied Sittella showed nicely at Moy Pocket. 

Little Bronze-Cuckoo
Varied Sittella
Quite a few Arctic Jaegers were harassing the large flocks of Common Terns and Crested Terns present at Noosa North Shore, where a White-bellied Sea-Eagle also found cause to annoy a tern. We had a pleasurable three nights camping at the caravan park there (elist

Arctic Jaeger chasing Crested Tern
White-bellied Sea-Eagle & Common Tern
This Comb-crested Jacana in flight at Wappa Dam was nice.

Comb-crested Jacana

Regent Honeyeater in the spotlight

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Regent Honeyeater - Capertee 
A dazzling combination of vibrant colours explodes from a cluster of pink mugga ironbark flowers. A Regent Honeyeater attacks the flowers with gusto before another honeyeater, then another appears. An estimated 10–12 honeyeaters are present, flitting between ironbarks and yellow box trees on a grassy woodland slope in Capertee National Park, on the western fringe of the Blue Mountains World Heritage Area in NSW.
Regent Honeyeater adult & juvenile - Capertee
I had seen the critically endangered Regent Honeyeater just three times over close to 50 years of birding - once at Storm King Dam near the NSW-Queensland border; once at Stanmore in south-east Queensland; and once at Glenbrook, west of Sydney. To see them again at Capertee was a joy. What was particularly encouraging was that two recently fledged juveniles were among the group, so they had nested successfully in the area. In another part of the Capertee Valley the next day, I found a second group of 3-4 birds, so my life tally of encounters with this species almost doubled in two days.
Extensive clearing of its woodland habitat in south-east Australia for agriculture, combined with an explosion in populations of the aggressive Noisy Miner, has pushed this beautiful bird to the brink, with its population estimated as low as 400-500, down from about 1,500 in the 1990s. BirdLife Australia, in co-operation with other groups, is engaged in a well-targeted and energetic programto rehabilitate the habitat of the Regent Honeyeater and other declining woodland birds, while a captive breeding program is trying to boost honeyeater numbers.
Box-ironbark woodland - Gwydir River, NSW
Hundreds of people are lending a hand with tree-planting in NSW and Victoria as part of the Regent Honeyeater Project. It's one of Australia's biggest volunteer-based conservation programs, with more than 1,800 hectares of core honeyeater habitat being targeted for revegetation in north-east Victoria, Captertee Valley and the Gwydir River area, west of Armidale in NSW.
Now, it is possible the tide is turning. An annual survey organised in NSW last August by BirdLife Australia – not long before I saw the birds in Capertee - resulted in 53 sightings. This was significantly higher than surveys over the preceding five years, when an average of 10-15 birds were counted annually. Fair-sized flocks of Regent Honeyeaters were seen regularly in the Capertee and Lower Hunter valleys of NSW in particular.
Revegatation project - Gwydir River, NSW
In the Chiltern-Mt Pilot National Park of Victoria, a former stronghold for the species, increasing numbers of captive bred birds appear to be surviving in the wild; 101 captive bred birds were released there in 2017, the largest of five such releases. Two birds found in March this year in Gippsland had travelled 200 kilometres since their release at Chiltern in 2017. This follows another bird released in 2015 which crossed the Great Dividing Range to South Gippsland in 2016, before returning to attempt to nest at Chiltern in 2017 – a round trip of 540 kilometres, the longest recorded movement of the species.
Captive breeding programs for endangered species do not always work, and may perversely have adverse consequences. But the Taronga Zoo-based Regent Honeyeater program could be on track following earlier challenges, when released birds evidently failed to survive.
Captive bred birds struggle to nest successfully; during the 2015 season at Chiltern, 64 per cent of nesting attempts failed to reach the egg stage. However, more than 70 per cent of released birds were alive 10 weeks after release, which BirdLife Australia's Regent Honeyeater recovery co-ordinator, Dean Ingwersen, describes as an “excellent figure by translocation/release standards”. Dean adds that the rate at which released captive birds are being seen 12 months post-release almost matches the rate of resightings of banded wild birds: “We think this is demonstrating good long-term survival of released birds.”
Regent Honeyeater, Capertee
Congregating in flocks was a hallmark of the species; the birds I saw at Storm King Dam, back in 1973, were in a flock of 15. Increasingly, however, records of the species over the ensuing decades were of single birds, pairs, or at best, small flocks. This reduction in flocking may reduce the ability of the species to defend itself again hordes of Noisy Miners, which are intolerant of other species. Field researchers have established that controlling Noisy Miner numbers in the box-ironbark woodlands favoured by Regent Honeyeaters boosts the chances of the latter nesting successfully. The flocks just might be making a comeback, with as many as 20 birds seen together in the Lower Hunter.
It is too early, however, to be popping the champaign corks. Recent increases in sightings may be due to unusually good flowering events, and the long-term picture remains uncertain at best. Populations of other woodland birds such as Grey-crowned Babbler, Hooded Robin and Black-chinned Honeyeater continue to decline. Conversely, numbers of Noisy Miners appear to be ever rising, and keeping them in check in the favoured haunts of the Regent Honeyeater is a huge logistical challenge. With the species estimated to have lost greater than 85 per cent of its habitat to the bulldozer, extensive areas of woodland continues to be cleared at unacceptable rates in Queensland and in NSW.
A sign in Capertee Valley
Dean Ingwersen points to new challenges, including the recently discovered problem of nests being predated by sugar gliders and squirrel gliders. Various research programs underway - in conjunction with captive breeding, habitat rehabilitation and other measures - hold the key to future solutions. Funding has been secured to attach satellite transmitters to five wild birds to track their movements. This is aimed at determining where the birds go to over summer, when records of Regent Honeyeater are scant. Funding has also been secured for trial interventions at nests to improve breeding success, with nest failure identified as a major impediment to the recovery of the species.
Says Dean: “The recovery team has worked tirelessly over the past couple of years to produce a robust and holistic recovery plan, and we are incorporating new research findings going forward as they arise... The whole recovery program is still a work in progress, and not surprisingly we’ve had some failures so far, but we’re trying hard to make our work as adaptive as possible.”

Regent Honeyeater - Capertee



















Camping at Yandilla, Conondale Range

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Masked Owl

Good birds at Yandilla Farmstay, the adjoining Conondale National Park and the nearby Kilcoy Abattoir ponds included Masked Owl, Red-browed Treecreeper, Glossy Black Cockatoo, Painted Buttonquail, Plum-headed Finch and Black-tailed Native-hen.

Conondale National Park (southern end)
We camped for 3 nights at Yandilla Farmstay at the northern end of Mt Kilcoy Road. A bit of the history and further information about the place can be found here. It's a pleasant spot with running creeks nestled in the southern foothills of the Conondale Range. A walking trail leads upstream a short way from the property into Conondale National Park. Facilities are basic, with warmish showers available late-afternoon after a tank fire is lit by the property owner (who, it should be warned, is extremely talkative!)

Camping at Yandilla

Kilcoy Creek, Yandilla
Late one afternoon a pair of Glossy Black Cockatoos came down to the camp to drink; they are seen here regularly.

Glossy Black Cockatoo
Other nice birds about the property included Eastern Barn Owl (calling), Dusky Woodswallow and White-breasted Cuckoo-shrike.

White-bellied Cuckoo-shrike
A Wedge-tailed Eagle soared overhead and a pair of Bush Stone-Curlews near the homestead was nice. [Yandilla elist].

Bush Stone-Curlew

Wedge-tailed Eagle
During my wanderings around the property I spotted a group of introduced Red Deer. Red-necked and Swamp wallabies were also about.

Red Deer
From the farmstay (you need to open a couple of gates going in or out) it is 1 km to the end of Mt Kilcoy Road. Then a vehicular track in quite good condition heads steeply up into Conondale National Park. It passes through dry sclerophyll forest, where I located a party of Painted Buttonquail on a level stretch of the track; the male is in these images.

Painted Buttonquail

Painted Buttonquail
I stopped 4km from the park entrance at the first substantial fork in the road. Crimson Rosellas seemed to be fairly common here in the wet sclerophyll forest that dominated at this higher altitude.

Crimson Rosella
Then I heard a Red-browed Treecreeper, a species I had seen just once in the region since moving to the Sunshine Coast in 2009. I tracked the bird down to a grey gum it was feeding in. I've suggested previously that this species and others in the region have declined in recent decades, possible due to climate change. Red-browed Treecreeper in the 1970s was regularly encountered in the Blackall and Conondale ranges but the bird has disappeared from favoured haunts. So to find it here was an unexpected treat.

Red-browed Treecreeper
I ventured back up the range at night with owling on my mind, and was thrilled to find a beautiful female Masked Owl by the track about half-way up. [Elist Conondale NP].

Masked Owl
In the same spot was a Yellow-bellied Glider; always a pleasure to see this endearing marsupial, especially so close.

Yellow-bellied Glider

Yellow-bellied Glider
On the way back from (and on the way to) Yandilla Farmstay, we dropped by the Kilcoy abattoir dams on Winya Road. Yellow-rumped Thornbill is a scarce species in the Sunshine Coast hinterland but is regular here. Royal and Yellow-billed Spoonbills were on the dams.

Royal Spoonbill & Yellow-billed Spoonbill

Yellow-rumped Thornbill
A party of 10 Australasian Shovelers was present. Also of interest were a flock of 15 Plum-headed Finches, and 2 Black-tailed Native-hens which showed briefly.


Australasian Shoveler 
Completely unexpected was a Great Crested Grebe which flew overhead; this bird is not often seen in flight. [Winya Rd elist].

Great Crested Grebe





Powerful Owl, Musk Lorikeet about Sunshine Coast & Bribie Island

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Powerful Owl male (L) female (R)

A pair of Powerful Owls has turned up at Beerwah on the Sunshine Coast. The agitated behaviour of both birds indicates they have begun nesting. The owls are in a reserve of open forest with a dense understory along a stream. Thanks to my Facebook friend Chow Chilla, who discovered the birds and asked that the site remain under wraps, and to Matt Wright for helping me get on top of this pair. The birds were calling frequently in the area in recent days. One was seen to fly over houses after sunset, suggesting they may be feeding in suburbia as well as in the fragmented forest patches about Beerwah.

Powerful Owl male
Powerful Owl is a rare bird in the Sunshine Coast region. I've heard or seen them several times in the Conondale and Jimna ranges – at Charlie Moreland Park, Booloumba Creek and Peach Trees camping ground, among other places – but sparingly over many years. Friends have recorded them several times in their garden at Buderim and there is supposedly a territory near Gympie. Barry Traill last week had one calling in his garden at Maleny. Other locals reported Powerful Owls recently in the Blackall Range foothills between Maleny and Landsborough.

Powerful Owl male
Powerful Owl male
Also of interest locally is an influx of Musk Lorikeets on Bribie Island. Between 50 and 70 were feeding in bloodwoods at Buckleys Hole when I visited and they have been seen regularly at several sites on the island. They've also been about Brisbane so it appears there's a significant movement of the species into South-East Queensland, where it is normally a rare visitor, from the southern states; this may be due to poor flowering seasons further south.

Musk Lorikeets

Musk Lorikeets
A somewhat distant pair of Grey Goshawks at North Arm was nice.



Yandina Creek Wetland - Back from the Brink

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Yandina Creek Wetland this week, with the backdrop of Mt Ninderry
With floodgates being reopened this week so the Yandina Creek Wetland on Queensland's Sunshine Coast can be restored, the future is looking bright for this important site. A campaign spanning six years has finally resulted in an excellent outcome for biodiversity in the heart of Australia's tenth largest city. Supporters of that campaign have suggested that its history be documented; this account is penned in response.

I began campaigning to protect a wetland along River Road, Yandina Creek, back in 2012. At the time I thought the wetland was restricted to a small area of privately owned land adjoining the eastern end of the road. I was struck by how this property was so rich in birdlife - birds included Black-tailed Native-hen and Australian Painted-Snipe, both very rare in south-east Queensland.

I was disturbed by the destruction of similar habitat on a neighbouring River Road property, and proposed to the Sunshine Coast Council (Sunshine Coast Regional Council at the time) that it acquire part of the area and protect it as a nature reserve. The proposal was rejected, largely on the grounds of cost.

The wetland this week from the summit of Mt Ninderry
I stumbled across the main area of wetland - two neighbouring properties totalling 200ha - by accident in 2014. The wetland is hidden by trees from Yandina-Coolum Road to the north and River Road to the south. One day I ventured beyond my usual wanderings and was flabbergasted to find a wonderland of birds. Flocks of migratory shorebirds flew about; a pair of stately Black-necked Storks strutted their stuff; scores of egrets, spoonbills, pelicans and other waterbirds graced the horizon in every direction.

The fallow farmland was owned by fourth generation sugar cane growers until it was acquired by property developers in the mid-2000s following the closure of the Nambour sugar mill. The new owners planned to convert it to cattle pasture initially. They hoped the land would eventually be rezoned from rural to allow residential or commercial development. The wetland was created artificially because farm floodgates collapsed in the late-2000s, allowing tidal water from Yandina Creek and Maroochy River to inundate the site.

A flock of Australasian Shoveler & Grey Teal fly over the wetland this week 
While I was in awe of what I dubbed Yandina Creek Wetland, the original smaller area on River Road was drained when that property's owners blocked the flow of tidal water to their land.
I prepared another submission for the Sunshine Coast Council, this time suggesting the acquisition of the two larger properties for conservation purposes. At the same time, I wrote and spoke to the federal Environment Minister, Greg Hunt, and to the Queensland Government, urging intervention because the cattle pasture plans threatened species protected under federal and state laws. In late-2014, I pulled together a comprehensive case for saving the wetland.

The wetland provided habitat for numerous bird species regarded as rare or difficult to find in Queensland. Good numbers of migratory shorebirds of various species frequented the site that are protected under several international treaties to which Australia is a signatory. The large population of one species, Latham's Snipe, at Yandina Creek indicated the wetland was internationally significant under Australian law.

Latham's Snipe
It was important to stress how preserving the rural landscape of the Maroochy River canelands was essential to maintaining the integrity and attraction of the Sunshine Coast both as a major tourist destination and as a desirable place to live. Protecting low-lying areas as wetland could play a crucial role in controlling floods as the region is notoriously flood-prone. A thriving wetland full of waterbirds and other wildlife could be a major ecotourism destination, boosting the Sunshine Coast economy while at the same time protecting biodiversity.

Wetland looking towards Mt Coolum this week
The battle for the wetland slowly began to gain traction, with publicity in the media and growing numbers of residents and community organisations coming on board in support of both the council acquiring the land, and federal and state intervention. The Sunshine Coast Daily and ABC Radio were especially supportive.

I gave talks to community groups; met with the landholders and the Sunshine Coast Council; organised online petitions; set up a Facebook page and mailing lists of several hundred supporters; and monitored developments at the site on my blog. I took people (among them Australian Formula One driving champion Mark Webber) into the wetland; they were invariably impressed with what they saw. Organisations that lent their support included Birds Queensland, Sunshine Coast Environment Council, Protect the Bushland Alliance and Noosa Parks Association.

Talking to Noosa Parks Association about the wetland, 2014
2015 was a torrid year. The landholders became increasingly hostile, threatening legal and police action as it became evident to them that the campaign risked derailing their development plans. Then the landholders decided to lease the land back to its original cane farmer owners, so the floodgates could be repaired and the site again planted with cane. The intention was to establish a continuing land use legally, thereby circumventing possible government intervention.

In June 2015, the Sunshine Coast Council rejected my submission to acquire the land for conservation purposes under its Environmental Levy. Although the wetland was easily the most diverse and largest of its kind in the region, the council determined it was low priority. No inspection of the site was undertaken; no studies were commissioned; and no reasons were given for the decision. The council ignored the advice of some its own environmental experts in reaching this conclusion.

The wetland was inundated when farm floodgates collapsed in the late-2000s
The following month, in July 2015, the wetland was drained after the floodgates were repaired, preventing further inflows of tidal water. Hundreds of waterbirds were on the site at the time; many were nesting. The site turned from a flourishing wetland to a bare wasteland in a couple of days. As I wrote then: “How did it come to this? The 200-hectare Yandina Creek Wetland ticked all the boxes. This wetland was without equal in terms of biodiversity in the Sunshine Coast region. It was one of the finest wetlands of its kind in the whole of Queensland, embracing a wide range of habitats including mangroves, sedges, grasslands, mudflats and deep-water pools.”

Around the same time, Commonwealth and state officers inspected the site and concluded there was no case for intervention. They argued the wetland was “human modified” and therefore not worthy of conservation. This argument ignored the fact that wetlands around the world are increasingly artificial as natural habitat diminishes; just a tiny fraction remains of the once extensive wetlands on the Sunshine Coast. Moreover, the “artificially created” Yandina Creek Wetland closely resembled what was there naturally before the area was developed for cane farms in the 1920s. Nor does wildlife frequenting these places care whether or not they are artificially created. The failure of both governments to act is further evidence of the uselessness of Commonwealth and state environmental legislation.

Cane farm development in the 1920s
Things were looking grim. But three significant things happened more or less around the same time in mid-2015, and the tide began to turn, so to speak. The Speaker of the Queensland Parliament, Peter Wellington, who held the balance of power and whose support was crucial to the survival of the minority Labor government, became involved. Wellington convinced state Environment Minister Steven Miles to visit the site and meet with some of us engaged in the campaign. This proved to be a pivotal event: the Queensland Government began to have a change of heart.

L-R Greg Roberts, Queensland Environment Minister Steven MIles, Parliamentary Speaker Peter Wellington, SCEC's Narelle McCarthy, BLA's Judith Hoyle - July 2015 
Meanwhile, BirdLife Australia, the country's biggest birding organisation, became seriously active in the campaign, promoting it to a national level and ensuring that hundreds more people lent their support. BLA Southern Queensland convenor Judith Hoyle was the driving force behind this key development.

At the same time, a substantial package I wrote as a journalist about the wetland for The Weekend Australian was splashed across the front and feature pages of the newspaper, further shaping a national profile for the cause. Photographs were a crucial weapon in the campaign. I had taken numerous images of the wetland before it was drained and the scenes of desolation after the floodgates were shut. The contrast sent a powerful message.

Then I filed complaints with Queensland Fisheries alleging the drainage works had destroyed protected marine vegetation. The lessees were required to reopen the floodgates in September 2015 and were served multiple infringement notices. The reprieve was short-lived. The floodgates were closed again three months later and the wetland drained for the second time in 2015. They have not been reopened until now.

Closed floodgates on the site
It emerged during a meeting between Judith Hoyle and Queensland Government officers in November 2015 that for the first time, the landholders were showing an interest in selling the properties, and there was a real prospect of the wetland being salvaged. The landholders had evidently reached the conclusion that the site was nothing but trouble for them and were prepared to negotiate; a commercial-in-confidence process was entered into between them and an unknown third party. BirdLife Australia and Judith beavered away in the background with efforts to persuade the Queensland Labor Government and government agencies to come to the table and ensure that this sensitive process was not derailed.

Wetland map
The identity of the third party soon emerged. Government sources say the office of Environment Minister Steven Miles was in touch with the former Labor Lord Mayor of Brisbane, Jim Soorley, the chairman of Unitywater, a statutory authority responsible for water supply and sewage treatment on the Sunshine Coast. Soorley, who as mayor did much to protect Brisbane's wetlands, tells me he became interested in the site after reading a BirdLife Australia article. He contacted the Unitywater chief executive, George Theo, and requested that Unitywater investigate whether nutrient capture and offsets were feasible on the land. Soorley saysit was only after the positive outcome of scientific studies wasconfirmed with the Queensland Environment Department that negotiations with the land-owners commenced.


Waterbirds at the wetland before it was drained in 2015
The plan was for Unitywater to reopen the floodgates so the wetland would be replenished. Tidal water entering the wetland would carry with it nutrients from the Maroochy River which come from a range of different land uses. The wetland will remove some of the nutrients and Unitywater can use this to offset nutrients released after treating the community’s sewage at a nearby treatment plant.
The landholders sold the properties to Unitywater for $4 million in August 2016. Finally, all those efforts over so long by so many had paid off. The wetland was to be restored and protected.

At Unitywater's request, the news was not made public at the time of the acquisitiion. In January 2017 I put together a pictorial account of of the 150+ bird species recorded from Yandina Creek Wetland. Then in February 2017, I revealed the excellent news of the in an article which featured prominently in The Weekend Australian, and on my blog.

Yandina Creek
Unitywater entered into agreements with BirdLife Australia and the University of the Sunshine Coast to undertake studies of birds and fisheries habitat before and after the floodgates were reopened and the wetland replenished. The Yandina Creek Wetland was offically opened at a ceremony in November 2017 but is not yet open to the public.

It is a matter of regret that this otherwise edifying saga culminated in something of a sour note. The opening ceremony was clearly a significant milestone. Yet I was not invited or told of it until after the event. BirdLife Southern Queensland was there, but BLA Sunshine Coast and the volunteers surveying the wetland were not invited. Neither were the owners of properties adjoining the wetland who backed the conservation campaign. With the exception of the Sunshine Coast Environment Council, community groups that played important roles in the effort were absent. In his address to the function, Jim Soorley effectively claimed full ownership of the outcome, making no reference to the long-running campaign or the efforts of others.

On the plus side, Soorley gave a public assurance that the wetland will be opened eventually to the public. In making this pledge, Soorley debunked claims made publicly by one resident, a vocal opponent of the wetland campaign, that she had been repeatedly assured by Unitywater there would be no public access to the site. Unitywater deserves plaudits also for engaging BirdLife Australia and others to survey the wetland; BLA has successfully completed a series of pre-flooding bird surveys.

BirdLife Australia survey underway at the wetland
Four floodgates along the wetland's northern edge on Yandina Creek were reopened this week. Three floodgates in the south-east corner of the site remain closed. The result is that the northern half of the wetland has been replenished while the southern half remains dry. A Unitywater spokesperson says: “We will assess if additional gates can be opened. Our priority is to ensure none of our actions adversely affect neighbouring properties and the opening of any tidal gates needs to be well considered. Our key purpose for this site is to generate nutrient and vegetation offsets. While the opening of tidal gates is an opportunity to also improve biodiversity on the site, this is not our primary intention.”


Southern half of the wetland this week - still dry as some floodgates remain shut
In September 2016 I found another area of wetland at West Coolum, 1.5 kilometres east of Yandina Creek. This 90-hectare site has similarly been inundated by tidal water following the breakdown of floodgates on former cane farmland. The area does not appear to be as rich in birdlife as Yandina Creek but nonetheless has potential. The land is owned by the Sunshine Coast Council and zoned “open space sport environment”.

Coolum West Wetland
I wrote to the council asking that the site I've dubbed Coolum West Wetland be rezoned and protected as wetland. The council replied that it is assessing the environmental value of the land, which is separated from the Yandina Creek Wetland by the 440-hectare Coolum Creek Reserve. All three sites – Coolum Creek Reserve, Yandina Creek Wetland and West Coolum – may be protected as a contiguous 740-hectare bushland and wetland reserve in the heart of the Sunshine Coast.
Now that would be one for the birds.




Camping at Amamoor

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Platypus

We camped for 3 nights at Cedar Grove, Amamoor State Forest. Amamoor has become something of a favourite, this being our fourth camp there. A Platypus showing closely at Amama picnic area on the way in was a good start.

Amamoor Creek
We had clear, cool weather with plenty of birds about. Paradise Riflebird was calling sporadically and a pair fed regularly close to our camp. Regent Bowerbird and Satin Bowerbird in small numbers occasionally came into the camping ground to feed. Russet-tailed Thrush was calling commonly but didn't show.

Paradise Riflebird

Regent Bowerbird
Red-tailed Black Cockatoos were seen twice, both times flying high overhead: a pair and a flock of 20+. Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo was common about the camping ground.

Red-tailed Black Cockatoo

Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo
Other nice birds about the place that were easy to see included Fairy Gerygone, Wompoo Fruit-Dove, Crested Shrike-tit, New Holland Honeyeater (here at the northern end of its range), Azure Kingfisher and White-eared Monarch. Ebird list for Cedar Grove.

Azure Kingfisher

Crested Shrike-tit

Fairy Gerygone

New Holland Honeyeater

White-eared Monarch

Wompoo Fruit-Dove
Rose Robin was common throughout the area.

Rose Robin

Rose Robin
Heading west along Amamoor Creek Road, Jacky Winter was surprisingly common, with 15-20 seen or heard over 12km. Just west of Windy Ridge Nursery, at a spot where in April last year I had a flock of Red-tailed Black Cockatoos feeding, I found a pair of Black-chinned Honeyeaters - a rare species in south-east Queensland - in tall eucalypts by the road. Plenty of birds were here including Varied Sittella and White-naped Honeyeater. Ebird list for Windy Ridge.

Black-chinned Honeyeater

Black-chinned Honeyeater

Jacky Winter
A couple of kilometres further west, on a dry open forest ridge, a party of 4 Painted Buttonquail scurried off the road. Back at Cedar Grove, on the other side of the creek from the camping ground, a collection of fresh platelets in the vine scrub indicated the presence of Black-breasted Buttonquail. Dingoes were calling from above the camping ground, and one was seen briefly during a hike.

Painted Buttonquail



Twinnies turn the tables for thousands of doomed waterbirds

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Paula & Bridgette Powers with Wedge-tailed Shearwaters
Paula and Bridgette Powers gaze affectionately at a Striated Heron perched statue-like in its aviary. “We got it when it was this big,” the identical twin sisters chorus together, word for word. They simultaneously signal with their fingers that the heron was a tiny ball of puff when brought to them at Twinnies Pelican and Seabird Rescue, a rehabilitation centre for waterbirds they have run for the past 18 years at Landsborough on Queensland's Sunshine Coast. After four months of tender care, the heron is due to be released soon, back into the wilds from which it came.

The so-called twinnies have had their share of the limelight. A YouTube clip of the pair in 2015 went viral, attracting three million views. They've featured regularly in the national media. The siblings dress identically every day and do everything together. The 44-year-olds have always shared a bedroom. The first time they were separated was when Paula had her appendix out as a 16-year-old; Bridgette had her appendix out three weeks later. They've scarcely been apart since. When their parents, Helen and John, organised a meeting with identical twin boys in the hope of sparking twin romances, the sisters weren't interested. They couldn't bear the thought of sleeping in separate bedrooms. “We give our love to the wildlife,” they say.

Twinnies & friends
The capacity of the siblings to speak and act in unison is mesmerising, until you get the hang of it. When they talk, it's impossible to know who says what. They either say the same thing at precisely the same time, even a full sentence, or their thoughts are so in tune that it doesn't matter who says what, because one finishes the other's comment. Paula and Bridgette share 100 per cent of their DNA. If you phone the twins and ask if you're speaking to Paula or Bridgette, you will be told: “Yes.” In a study of more than 420 twins at Sydney's Royal North Shore Hospital, they were considered the most identical pair.

It's the twinnies' passion for native birds that brings me to their Landsborough rescue centre. Countless thousands of waterbirds of many species owe their lives to the tireless devotion of these women and their parents. “We've loved wild animals since we were this high,” they say together, each holding a hand at knee height. “Our doctor says it's in our genes… We would rescue snails from our grandmother when we were little.”

During my visit, hundreds of birds of many species are in residence. The reasons for them being there are many. Chicks fall out of nests, or the parents of nestlings are killed by cars, cats or dogs. Birds are afflicted by botulism when chemicals and other pollutants wash into waterways. Some are tangled in fishing line. Starving seabirds wash up on beaches; several Wedge-tailed Shearwaters and a Flesh-footed Shearwater were brought in over the week before my visit.

Wedge-tailed Shearwater & Flesh-footed Shearwater at the centre
Birds are injured or orphaned by land-clearing operations which are increasingly rampant on the Sunshine Coast. A recently hatched clutch of Pacific Black Ducks is in care after their nesting tree was bulldozed for the Bruce Highway roadworks a short distance away. The twinnies work closely with the RSPCA and others including Australia Zoo, just down the road along Steve Irwin Way. The late Steve Irwin was so impressed with the twins' enthusiasm that he hired them to work at the zoo for a couple of years before they set their rehabilitation centre up in 2000.

Paula and Bridgette keep the birds for as long as necessary to ensure their recovery. “Other places treat a bird with botulism for four days or so then it gets enthanased,” they say. “We keep them for 8 or 10 weeks or however long it takes.” They claim a 99 per cent success rate in treating botulism. The twinnies turn nothing away. They readily admit to becoming emotionally attached to their charges: “We like to give everything a go... We hate it when we lose something.” They think nothing of waking at all hours if their charges need special attention.

Forest destruction is rampant around the Sunshine Coast
As the population of Australia's tenth largest city continues to explode, the number of birds being brought to the Twinnies centre is ever rising, and with them the cost of care and rehabilitation. Fish alone to feed the birds costs $500 a week. The twinnies' mum, Helen, says it costs $70,000 a year to run the centre. It gets $10,000 a year from the Sunshine Coast Council. The rest is paid from the family's pensions and public donations. “If somebody leaves us a $50 note we're thrilled because it means we have that little bit extra to get something,” Helen says.

The 1.8-hectare property includes a lagoon which attracts large numbers of wild birds. Many are so tame they wander around the grounds unperturbed by people. A pair of wild Australian Pelicans nests annually on the dam - a highly unusual event because these birds usually travel hundreds of kilometres to nest during periodic flooding events inland.

A wild Great Egret at the centre
The property costs $500 a week to rent and the lease expires later this year. Although they hope to renew it for five years, the future for the rescue centre is uncertain with the unrelenting pressure on family finances. The twinnies want one of the big Sunshine Coast real estate development companies like Stockland to purchase the property, which has a $500,000 price tag, with the family being allowed to live there while it functions as a wildlife rescue centre. The family would continue to pay rates and other costs with the company retaining title. “Maybe a big company like Stockland can lend a hand by doing something that's really useful for wildlife instead of just being interested in land development,” Helen says. The centre was given a $5,000 community grant last year from Stockland's huge Aura residential development at nearby Caloundra South. 

Stockland declined to respond to the suggestion that the company acquire the property but says the family can apply for further community grants, a spokesperson adding: “The Stockland Aura Community Grants Program is issued every two years and groups can apply for funding for amounts up to $50,000. The next grant is scheduled to be available mid-2019 and we encourage local groups to apply for funding through this program.” Readers might want to express a view to Stockland that more could be done to help the centre by emailing the company: geninfo@stockland.com.au.

Feeding time for a young Australasian Darter
Helen Powers says the work being done at Twinnies can not be duplicated: “Nobody wants to look after waterbirds. If it's cute and furry, it'll get looked after. Or a Wedge-tailed Eagle might get a look in. But not seabirds.”   Twinnies Pelican and Seabird Rescue is open to the public and well worth a look. Donations and voluntary help are welcome.

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Sunshine Coast Pelagic May 2018

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Antarctic Prion

This pelagic trip was touch and go with a strong south-easterly over the preceding days indicating a swell of 2-3m out wide. So it proved on the day, but the large size of - and facilities aboard - Crusader 1 allowed the boat to negotiate the tough conditions with a degree of relative comfort. A brisk south-easterly was blowing as we departed Mooloolaba Marina at 7am, departing a little later than usual so people would not need to find our meeting place in the dark. We battled big waves on the way out, seeing little close in other than a few Silver Gulls, Crested Terns and Australasian Gannets.

As we continued east an immature Brown Booby put in an appearance and then a Red-footed Booby showed briefly if distantly. An adult Brown Booby perched atop a trawler was spotted soon after.

Brown Booby

Red-footed Booby
We saw a Providence Petrel a bit further on so with a few people feeling crook in the unrelenting swell which slowed our progress, we tried our luck with a berley trail short of the shelf at 9.30am in 110m, 23 nautical miles offshore (26.483S; E153.324E). Winds were blowing from the south-east at 15-18 knots with gusts up to 20-22 knots. The swell refused to ease off all day.

A single Grey-faced Petrel came into the slick and approached the boat briefly. The first image below was the only one I managed but others fortunately did better. This is the first Grey-faced Petrel for the Sunshine Coast pelagics. Long expected here, the species is regular on the Southport pelagics so its absence to date is baffling. It seems that a few southern species like this one struggle to extend north beyond the Gold Coast, while tropical species like frigatebirds and boobies are more frequent in Sunshine Coast waters than offshore further south.

Grey-faced Petrel
Grey-faced Petrel - Pic by Louis Backstrom
We decided to head further out after a short while and laid a second berley trail at 10.40am 30 nautical miles offshore in 220m. Providence Petrels were soon about and stayed around the boat for most of the time we were out wide.

Providence Petrel

Providence Petrel
Wilson's Storm-Petrels soon appeared and again were regular visitors to the slick.

Wilson's Storm-Petrel
A single Antarctic Prion put in a brief appearance and an hour later, three more Antarctic Prions flew into the slick, these birds proving more co-operative. This species was unexpected, especially as early as May, and it's interesting that the generally more numerous Fairy Prion (in Queensland waters) was not seen.

Antarctic Prion

Antarctic Prion

We pulled up stumps at 1.20pm having scarcely drifted in the washing-machine conditions. Not much was seen on the way back but an Australasian Gannet coming into adult plumage close to the boat was nice. We arrived back at the marina at 3.45pm. Elist here.

Australasian Gannet
PARTICIPANTS
Greg Roberts (organiser), Toby Imhoff (skipper), Zoe Williams (deckhand), Louis Backstrom, Margie Baker, Tony Baker, Jan England, Richard Fuller, Malcolm Graham, John Gunning, Nikolas Haass, John Houssenloge, Mary Hynes, Sue Lee, Xiatong Ren, Rosemary Sheehan, Raja Stephenson, Carolyn Stewart, Ged Tranter, Jamie Walker, Shen Zhang.

SPECIES – Total (Total at any one time)

Grey-faced Petrel – 1
Providence Petrel – 30 (4)
Antarctic Prion – 4 (3)
Wilson's Storm-Petrel – 20 (3)
Brown Booby 2 (1)
Red-footed Booby 1
Australasian Gannet 15 (3)
Crested Tern 60 (20)
Silver Gull 20 (10)

Sunshine Coast Pelagic June 2018

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Shy Albatross

With fresh memories of a rocky ride on our May 2018 pelagic a week ago, fingers were crossed for a smoother run as we departed Mooloolaba Marina at 6.55am on Sunday June 3 with a brisk 10-knot SW breeze blowing. The wind picked up as we headed out but it was behind us so the trip was relatively comfortable. We encountered a smattering of Crested Terns and Australasian Gannets and two fly-by Hutton's Shearwaters before spotting two Humpback Whales – the first of the season.

Humpback Whales
We were 19 nautical miles offshore in 60 metres when we spotted a Fairy Prion and the first Providence Petrel of the day. Then we picked up a Shy Albatross in 115m 25 nautical miles offshore sitting on the water behind a trawler whose crew were cleaning its catch from the night before. This was the first record of the species for a Sunshine Coast pelagic and the bird was of the race cauta, a scarce visitor to south-east Queensland.

Shy Albatross

Shy Albatross
We began laying a berley trail on the edge of the continental shelf 32 nautical miles offshore in 350 metres (S26.3.1; E 153.43.4) at 9.55am. By this time we had a steady S-SW wind of 15-20 knots and a hefty swell of 2-3 metres which remained the order of the day. We soon had Providence Petrels and Wilson's Storm-Petrels coming to the slick and quite a few of both were about the boat while we out wide.

Providence Petrel

Wilson's Storm-Petrel
It wasn't long before an Antarctic Prion made an appearance and we had this species come and go several times while we were on the shelf.

Antarctic Prion

Antarctic Prion
A Grey-faced Petrel was looking good as it approached the boat – the second sighting of this species for a Sunshine Coast pelagic following last week's first. Satellite tracking of Grey-faced Petrel suggests it does not stray north of Brisbane (it is seen regularly on the Southport pelagics)and today is likely the most northerly Australian record of the species.

Grey-faced Petrel

Grey-faced Petrel
We'd been floating for a couple of hours before a Black-bellied Storm-Petrel showed up, with one or two birds about for the next hour before we turned around to head back at 1.15pm. We had drifted 4.7 nautical miles in a north-westerly direction to 150 metres.

Black-bellied Storm-Petrel

Black-bellied Storm-Petrel
On the way back we had a flock of Hutton's Shearwaters with 2 Fluttering Shearwaters among them; the image here was the best I could manage of the latter. We arrived back at the marina at 4.05pm. Elist.


Fluttering Shearwater
PARTICIPANTS:
Greg Roberts (organiser), Toby Imhoff (skipper), Zoe Williams (deckhand),
Eric Anderson, Margie Baker, Tony Baker, Warren Bennett, Jane Cooksley, Ken Cross, Phil Cross, Rick Franks, Richard Fuller, Malcolm Graham, Geoff Glare, John Gunning, Nikolas Haass, Bob James, James Martin, Paul Marty, Steven Pratt, Allan Pratt, Liam Pratt, Trevor Ross, Esme Ross, Raja Stephenson.

SPECIES: Total (Maximum at one time)
Shy Albatross 1
Grey-faced Petrel 1
Providence Petrel 60 (8)
Fairy Prion 1
Antarctic Prion 6 (2)
Hutton's Shearwater 15 (12)
Fluttering Shearwater 2 (2)
Black-bellied Storm-Petrel 2 (1)
Wilson's Storm-Petrel 30 (5)
Australasian Gannet 30 (6)
Silver Gull 4 (4)
Crested Tern 80 (30)

Humpback Whale 2 (2)


Rainforest at Amamoor threatened by mining

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Subtropical rainforest along Amamoor Creek

Plans are afoot for the development of an extensive network of mines to extract manganese from someof the finest surviving stands of lowland subtropical rainforest in Queensland. The company Eclipse Metals is surveying areas of dry rainforest in Amamoor and Kandanga state forests, south-west of Gympie.

The company has mineral exploration licences over a large areaof state forest managed by timber company HQ Plantation. The habitat is regarded by the Queensland Government as being of state significance for biodiversity but the Minister for Natural Resources, Mines and Energy, Anthony Lynham, is not planning to intervene to protect the rainforest.


Mineral exploration underway in Amamoor State Forest
The destruction of lowland rainforest in south-east Queensland and north-east NSW has likely caused the extinction of the Coxen's Fig-Parrot and imperilled numerous plant and animal species. Among those frequenting the Amamoor scrubs is the range-restricted Black-breasted Buttonquail, listed as Vulnerable in Queensland.


Black-breasted Buttonquail
During a visit to the lease area last week, I saw numerous marker ribbons and pegs and a network of recently traversed trails bulldozed through the rainforest. Eclipse Metals has signalled that mineral extraction could begin in 2020 following further surveyingand drilling for oresampling, for which the company has three exploration permits. The exploration area is just 2.5 kilometres from the popular Amama picnic ground on Amamoor Creek.


Mineral exploration underway in Amamoor State Forest
Eclipse Metalschairman Carl Popal deniesthe area is important rainforest habitat, telling The Gympie Times: “Amamoor State Forest does not constitute as rainforest. The vegetation is primarily made of European lantana bush - considered a pest; African cotton bush (the plant is poisonous and has caused deaths in cattle, sheep and poultry); andhoop pine trees which are planted by HQ plantation for future logging.” Popal adds that the company has “strictly complied with all relevant Queensland environmental authorities and has obtained permits for any and all work on-site”.

Parts of the state forest were mined for manganese between 1920 and 1960 but those mines have long been disbanded and rainforest regrowth has reclaimed much of the mined land.  Popal told the ABC late last year that early exploration led the Perth-based company to anticipate deposits of up to 167,000 tonnes of mangananese at Amamoor and other sites, with more recent surveyssuggesting “multiple millions” of tonnes of high-grade ore. He added: “The actual data still has to be interpreted by geophysicists and summarised but at this stage we can say it is looking good.”

Area of exploration near Amamoor
Contrary to Popal's claims, it is obvious to an observer that the exploration area in fact is prime subtropical rainforest. Lantana and other weeds are mostly restricted to the fringes of the main access road. Numerous rainforest birds were present during my visit including Wompoo Fruit-Dove, Pale-yellow Robin Russet-tailed Thrush and Paradise Riflebird.


Wompoo Fruit-Dove
Environmental scientist and long-time admirer of the Amamoor forests, Chris Nichols, says there is little rainforest remaining in the area planned for mining, which is surrounded by hoop pine plantations. He says the exploration works could pollute the nearby Skyring Creek and Amama cascades, which flow into Amamoor Creek at a site frequented by platypus.  Nichols adds that ore trucks will damage roads and mining will have negative consequences for the area's growing ecotourism industry.


Farmers in the surrounding Mary Valley have expressed fears aboutthe impacts of new manganese mines.“It is another threat that is definitely not welcomed," Elaine Bradley from the Mary Valley Country Harvest Cooperative told the ABC. "We are not just looking at the effect of the mining on properties here, but also the dust raised will cause a lot of problems with our farms, particularly if it is toxic dust, depending on the type of ore they are mining.” The region was the focus of a bitter, long-running environmental dispute that led to the federal Labor government vetoing the proposed Traveston Crossing Dam in 2009.
Platypus in Amamoor Creek
A former Queensland Labor environment minister, Pat Comben, made the protection of dry subtropical rainforests a high priority when the election of the Goss Government in 1989 ended decades of environmental mismanagement by Country-Nationals Party-led governments. At the time, the few areas of habitat remaining were being bulldozed for the expansion of hoop pine plantations.
Queensland Government overlay maps show the Amamoor State Forest area includes essential habitat, threatened wildlife habitat, and vegetation regarded as endangered or of concern.

Queensland Government overlay map of Amamoor State Forest area
The Gympie Times reported in March that another WA company, New Base Metals, had applied for mineral exploration rights over forested public land extending south from Widgee and Upper Glastonbury to Yabba Creek, between Imbil and Borumba Dam.










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