Threatened Species - South Australian Glossy Black-Cockatoo - A Gradual Recovery
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Glossy Black-Cockatoo
(Photo: L Pedler) |
The South Australian subspecies of Glossy Black-Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus
lathami halmaturinus is currently listed as endangered under
the Commonwealth
Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999
and also in South Australia
(National Parks and Wildlife Act, 1972). At present it
is restricted to Kangaroo Island and prior to the implementation
of the recovery project the population was estimated to be 200 individuals
and declining. In 1995 a recovery plan was implemented and since
then this downward trend has been reversed.
The SA Glossy Black-Cockatoo requires high quality Drooping
Sheoak Allocasuarina verticillata woodland for foraging
and large hollow-bearing eucalyptus for roosting and nesting
habitat. The chief cause of the Glossy Black-Cockatoo's decline
in the 1900s was the large-scale clearance for farming of large
old gum trees and important sheoak feeding habitat.
The long term objectives of the current Recovery
Plan (700Kb PDF) are:
(1) To ensure that a viable breeding population of the Glossy
Black-Cockatoo persists in South Australia;
(2) To shift the status of the Glossy Black-Cockatoo from Endangered
to Vulnerable within 25 years (ie by 2028);
(3) To expand the current distribution of the Glossy Black-Cockatoo
to include its former range on Fleurieu Peninsula.
Recovery Plan actions are:
- Action 1: Survey and monitor the population
- Action 2: Monitor nesting and find new nests
- Action 3: Protect and maintain natural and artificial nest hollows
- Action 4: Minimise the impacts of other bird species
- Action 5: Protect and re-establish GBC habitat on Kangaroo Island
- Action 6: Protect and re-establish GBC habitat on Fleurieu Peninsula
- Action 7: Promote and facilitate community participation
Current Status - Endangered
With the benefit of several years of observations, biologist
Lynn Pedler has shown that the number of Glossy Black-Cockatoo
young produced has increased over the past eight years. (See
census results 50Kb PDF) .
The increase in population size has most likely resulted from
increased nesting success due to protection of nest trees from
possums and to the provision of around 80 artificial hollows.
Analysis of flock sizes during the annual population census
indicates that the population has increased gradually, from
less than 200 birds in 1996 to a minimum of 300 birds in 2005.
Plumage observations made during the 2005 census indicate that
the population has a strong component of juvenile/immature birds,
with at least one fifth of the population less than three years
old. Most of these birds have been banded as nestlings.
Observations of banded individuals indicate that about half
of fledged young survive their first year. After the first year,
mortality rate is thought to be low. The birds' lifespan is unknown.
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Juvenile Glossy Black-Cockatoo
(Photo: L Pedler) |
Earlier research indicated that predation of eggs and young chicks
by the Common Brushtail Possum was a major cause of nest failure.
Exclusion of possums from nest trees with iron collars has increased
nest success from 23% in nests that were unprotected in 1996 (Garnett
et al. 1999), to an average of 49% in 19972003, when all nests
were protected. (See
nesting results [50Kb PDF])
Infrequent monitoring of active nests means that it is often
hard to determine the causes of nest failure. During the last
six seasons, failure of the egg to hatch was responsible for
around 20% of nest failures. Other known causes of failure included:
flooding of the nest hollow; predation by Common Brushtail Possums;
predation/competition for hollows with nesting Galahs (first
recorded on Kangaroo Island in 1913); Little Corellas (first
recorded in 1969) and Sulphur-crested Cockatoos.
Ref: Garnett, S.T., Pedler, L.P., and Crowley, G.M. 1999. The
breeding biology of the Glossy Black-Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus
lathami on Kangaroo Island, South Australia. Emu 99: 262-279.
During the 2005 nesting season, around 40 volunteers spent
in excess of 300 hours assisting with location and monitoring
of active nests. Up to 50 volunteers play a vital role in the
annual population census.
Landholders are encouraged, through financial assistance, to
fence off feeding and nesting habitat and to revegetate priority
areas. Greening Australia assists with large-scale revegetation projects.
"Chewings" is a newsletter produced bi-annually for
anyone interested in the South Australian Glossy Black-Cockatoo
Recovery Program. The newsletter provides interesting facts
about the Kangaroo Island population and news regarding volunteer
and revegetation activites associated with the Program.
See
newsletter
Eleanor Sobey,
Department for Environment and Heritage
Regional Conservation, Kangaroo Island
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