Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Letter to the editor


The letter below was helpful in raising awareness of the issue and it had some positive feedback.




Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Politicians expressed interest

Members of the newly elected State Government were prepared to investigate and to offer helpful advice. It was Minister for Works, Lands and Surveys who, a few weeks later, hours before the allocation of land, ordered a moratorium on the release of the land of the North Fitzgerald.






Tuesday, April 14, 2015

First successful listening session

The first successful listening session was described in the posting dated January 25, 2014, (search word 'chocolate')

This entry is a copy of the notebook entry for that session. It looks rather amateurish which indeed it was, but some key information is recorded. Richard Jordan had said they would call between sunset and 30 minutes after. It was at this session that it was found that the ground parrots call later in the evening here. The need for a compass is foreshadowed.

Brenda Newbey travelled out to the site in the North Fitzgerald in her and Ken's Subaru planning to stay overnight so as to listen both evening and morning.

Additions to original notes are in itallics. 

Ground Parrot trip - solo

12-5-83

Drummond Track 13km from Old Ongerup Road

      Large patch of Dieback ca. 2km
      1 Emu, 1 brush (wallaby), 2 grey (kangaroos)

1.4 km S of first firebreak (right across - from a sign of ground parrot feeding on Daviesia pachyphylla)

Heard one at 5.50 pm.

Almost dark. 2 or 3 stars. (Venus +)

ca. 40 minutes after sunset. Cold strong wind.

13-5-83
      6.05 am
      6.10 am
      6.13 am
3 calls from similar direction (2 notated as rising calls of 14 notes)

Sunrise ca. 6.45 - too cloudy to see exactly. Intermittant showers. 

Others (birds) heard before sunrise

TCHE, NHHE, Calamanthus, Grey Butcherbird, RWB, Grey Currawong.






Thursday, March 26, 2015

A Glimmer of Hope

The letter below is a step towards co-operation between the State Government Department responsible for the State's wildlife, and the Royal Australasian Ornithologists' Union with regard to finding out more (than almost no knowledge) of where ground parrots are in Western Australia and what the population level might be. 


Monday, March 23, 2015

Learning about ground parrot census by listening

The letter below shows that we here in Western Australia were trying to find out how to census by listening rather than relying on casual observations of birds. Richard Jordan, manager of Barren Grounds Bird Observatory where Eastern Ground Parrots occur, was very helpful.

At about this time Richard Jordan sent the tape recording referred to in the posting of February 1 2014 so that we would know what to listen for.




Thursday, March 12, 2015

First feeding record, February 1983

The following piece was published in the Western Australian Naturalist Volume 15, pages 145-6.

The bird is referred to as the Swamp Parrot, an accepted common name at that time. 



A Daviesia pachyphylla showing scars where Ground Parrots has chewed through the leaf. The lower photo shows (not very clearly) discarded spines. Photos: B. Newbey



Monday, March 9, 2015

Farms or Conservation?

By the end of March 1983, the State Government had changed from Liberal to Labour and there was to be an enquiry into Land release for agriculture. However the North Fitzgerald was so close to release that that program was to continue to the dismay of those anxious about the Western Ground Parrot.

Surveying for Ground Parrots by call had begun, thanks to information received from the Jordans at Barren Grounds in New south Wales, including a tape recording (Blog entry February 1, 2014). The time that Richard Jordan suggested to listen in the evening, based on experience of the Eastern Ground Parrots was sunset to 30 minutes after. We did not yet realise that that timing was incorrect for the Western Ground Parrots.