A town in the Yarra Ranges, 50kms east of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, named after the Australian native bird found in large numbers in the area. The Yarras lower reaches travel through central Melbourne. ... The City of Melbournes coat of arms The central business district of Melbourne, viewed from the north Alternate meanings: Melbourne (disambiguation) Melbourne is the capital and largest city of the state of Victoria, and the second largest city in Australia, with a population of 52,117 in the Central... Motto: Peace and Prosperity Nickname: Garden State Other Australian states and territories Capital Melbourne Government Governor Premier Const. ... Genera Probosciger Calyptorhynchus Callocephalon Eolophus Cacatua Nymphicus A cockatoo is any of the 21 species of bird belonging to the family Cacatuidae. ...
Its Local Government Area is the Shire of Cardinia. The Shire of Cardinia is a Local Government Area in Victoria, Australia. ...
Preliminary surveys undertaken in south-western Victoria by the Victorian Department of Conservation and Natural Resources revealed that the population comprised less than 1000 birds, and it was restricted to a small isolated geographical range in which both the feeding and breeding habitats were fragmented and threatened.
For nesting, the cockatoos require large hollows in large eucalypts, predominantly river red gums Eucalyptus camaldulensis, which originally were present in woodlands bordering watercourses or on loamy soils adjacent to stringybark forest.
Consequently, it was decided that a local resident should be employed on a part-time basis to liaise with the rural community, both for enlisting the co-operation of farmers in conserving the birds and for obtaining additional information on their habits and status.
The main threat to the survival of the South-eastern Red-tailed Black-Cockatoo is the destruction of its nesting trees and of its food sources – the cockatoo relies totally on the tiny seeds of Brown Stringybark, Desert Stringybark and, in the northern half of its range, seeds of Buloke in late summer and autumn.
Since 1998 the proportion of adult males in autumn flocks has increased from 38% to 44%, suggesting that recruitment is not sufficient to ensure replacement of aging birds.
A halt in the decline of feeding habitat [stringybark and Buloke].