World's only migratory parrots in peril

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Two Australian parrots migrate annually over Bass Strait — a voyage that threatens their survival.

WHEN WE THINK OF animal migration, images come to mind of great herds of caribou moving across the tundra or of the dust rising on Africa's Serengeti under the hooves of thousands of wildebeest. But the true champions of migration are the birds.

Every year hundreds of millions of birds from massive storks and geese down to the tiniest hummingbird take to the wing on a journey into the unknown. The Arctic tern makes an annual pilgrimage from the Arctic Circle to the edge of the Antarctic pack ice and back again. And last year a ruddy turnstone (a dumpy shorebird about half the size of a chicken) was tracked on a 27,000 km round trip from Australia to Siberia and Alaska, at times flying for six days non-stop across the oceans.
 
This last weekend on World Migratory Bird Day (9 May), people gathered around the globe to celebrate the wonder of bird migration. Few would have had parrots in their thoughts, but here in Australia we have the world's only two long-distance migratory parrots.


BOTH THE SWIFT PARROT and the orange-bellied parrot breed in Tasmania in the summer and then make their way across the treacherous waters of Bass Strait to spend winter on the mainland. Avoiding a chilly Tasmanian winter might seem like a good survival strategy, but it is fraught with danger. Along the way the birds must face the potential of bad weather blowing them off course, or, after arriving at their destination exhausted and starving, finding poor conditions and little food.

Swift Parrot (Photo: Chris Tzaros, Birds Australia)

Swift Parrot (Photo: Chris Tzaros) Gallery: Aussie birds

Sadly, both species of parrot are counted amongst our most threatened birds. There are multiple challenges when trying to conserve migratory species as the habitats they rely on aren’t confined to any one location. Migratory birds like these two parrots need good conditions not just in their places of origin and destination, but in all their stops along the way.

In Tasmania, the swift parrot nests in mature, hollow-bearing trees that are in close proximity to their preferred food source — the blossom of eucalypts such as the Tasmanian blue gum. The trouble is, the flowering of the trees on which parrots rely is patchy — areas that produce profuse nectar in year may not do so for another five, forcing the parrots to move around even within their breeding range. On the mainland the swift parrot usually heads for the woodlands of the interior of Victoria and the southern half of New South Wales but, in years of drought when the trees don’t flower, they are forced to keep on moving, sometimes so far north they cross the border into Queensland.


FOR THE ORANGE-BELLIED
parrot, available habitat is even more restricted. Now confined to one tiny patch of heathy woodland in the remote south west of Tasmania, the scraps of suitable coastal saltmarsh that they rely on to get them through the winter are stretched between Wilson’s Promontory and the Coorong in South Australia. Such is the struggle for the orange-bellied parrot that there are now less than 50 birds surviving in the wild, and it is predicted to be extinct within the next five years.

When one considers that neither of these beautiful green parrots is much longer than a willie wagtail, the feat of their annual pilgrimage is simply amazing. But if they are to be able to make their journey in the future, they, like the millions of other migratory birds, need our help to protect their various habitats.

We often hear about how we are all connected in this world; more than anything else in nature, the flights of migratory birds makes this connection real. Their journeys teach us that what we do in our patch can directly affect what happens in somebody else’s.

Sean Dooley is editor of Wingspan, the magazine of conservation organisation Birds Australia.

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Gallery: Birds of Australia
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Comments 18

  • Orange-bellied parrots preferred winter habitat is salt marshes. The salt marshes around the Lower Lakes of South Australia would have disappeared as a result of the 7 km stretch of barrages built in the 1930's that changed the Lower Lakes from an estuary into fresh water lakes for irrigation and cattle grazing. The estuarine habitat that remains in the Coorong represents just 10% of the size of the original estuary. Report

     
  • Actually, there are many parrots that migrate, particularly species in the Neotropics. Thick-billed Parrots and their close relatives the Maroon-fronted parrots are both migratory, plus lots more have regional migrations, including Mealy Amazons and Patagonian Conures. As we study more parrot species and as telemetry and GPS technology become smaller, lighter, and cheaper, we're likely to find that many parrots show seasonal, predictable movement patterns, and may therefore be deemed "migratory." Report

     
  • Actually, there are many parrots that migrate, particularly species in the Neotropics. Thick-billed Parrots and their close relatives the Maroon-fronted parrots are both migratory, plus lots more have regional migrations, including Mealy Amazons and Patagonian Conures. As we study more parrot species and as telemetry and GPS technology become smaller, lighter, and cheaper, we're likely to find that many parrots show seasonal, predictable movement patterns, and may therefore be deemed "migratory." Report

     
  • When I lived in Howrah, Tasmania in 1980's, a grey bird, stork-like bird, with pintail head feathers visited each summer, the garden of my house and that of my neighbour who assured me there used to be a pair.
    i recall that I identified that they migrated from Japan each year. Report

     
  • What is being done to try and save these birds from extintion? Does anyone know or is it something that has been raised and will just happen? Report

     
  • What is being done to try and save these birds from extintion? Does anyone know or is it something that has been raised and will just happen? Report

     
  • The magnificent Paradise Parrot became extinct in the 1920s through human stupidity and greed, but some people still haven't come to terms with it and are out there searching for signs of its existence. So let's learn from past mistakes and save these currently threatened species at all costs. Politicians think nothing of spending millions of dollars on an olympic goldmedal, but seem reluctant on spending a bit of capital to save our unique and beautiful native wildlife. History will not be kind to them.
    Report

     
  • this is mislead info ..150 at least survive and a lot is being done.. especially healsville sanctuary Report

     
  • Mal - there are recovery programs for both in place for both species. To view for orange bellied parrots go to: http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/threat...
    For swifts go to:http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/threat...
    Much more money needs to be spent on restoring habitat for both species as despite these efforts each species is in decline Report

     
  • Six days of non-stop flying, reaching 27000 km it´s a very impressive mark for a so little bird, they should have a super strong resistance compared to human standards.

    Nathan Rodriguez
    http://duo.nanoverso.com/2010/04/perfume-cuba.html Report

     
  • heyyyyyy 8B :):):):) :D cause im kool like that :O Report

     
  • why report is :( .... i care bout the parrots story...now i just have to read it Report

     
  • in short paragraph can you guys tell me whats this about? pleaseeee :) need it for a work thingy Report

     
  • paige where are you?? Report

     
  • paige where are you?? Report

     
  • paige where are you?? Report

     
  • paige where are you?? Report

     
  • Politicians think nothing of spending millions of dollars on an olympic goldmedal, but seem reluctant on spending a bit of capital to save our unique and beautiful native wildlife.
    http://www.celexadosage.com Report

     

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