Saturday, October 28, 2017

Wildlife Officials Find Evidence of Rare Australian Bird

  Indigenous wildlife officials in Australia have found new evidence of one of the country’s rarest and most mysterious birds. It is called the night parrot. The bird was thought to be extinct until a sighting in 2013. There have been very few sightings since. But wildlife workers say they have photographed one of the birds in the Kimberley area of Western Australia. The photograph is unclear: an object colored light green and yellow. But officials believe it suggests evidence of a new population of night parrots. They captured the image using a motion sensor camera in Western Australia’s Great Sandy Desert. Before 2013, scientists did not know what the birds sounded like. But then a night parrot was found in the state of Queensland. Until recently, the colorful bird had not been seen in Western Australia for more than 100 years. The night parrot lives near the ground and is only active at night. The bird was thought to have died as a result of loss of habitat, fires and attacks by wild cats. The cats threaten the survival of more than 100 species native to Australia. They are thought to have killed off many other birds and smaller mammals. Alexander Watson is a biologist at the animal conservation group WWF Australia. He has worked with Aboriginal wildlife workers in the Great Sandy Desert of Western Australia. He says it is an extraordinary discovery. “We’ve bought equipment like sensor cameras and bioacoustic devices that listen for the night parrots and extraordinarily, we’ve got a photo of a night parrot flying across one of the sensor cameras. It’s a small, green parrot with a yellow belly and large head. It could only be a night parrot. We’ve surveyed in areas that the traditional owners knew there were night parrots there.” The night parrot is sacred to Australia’s native population. Experts say Australia now has a second chance to save a bird that was once thought extinct. Officials are not telling the public exactly where the recent sightings happened to help protect the birds. Researchers hope that more night parrots will soon be found in other parts of Australia. I’m Jonathan Evans.   Phil Mercer reported this story for VOA News from Sydney. Jonathan Evans adapted it for VOA Learning English. Caty Weaver edited it. _____________________________________________________________ Words in this Story   extinct – n. no longer existing habitat - n. the place or type of place where a plant or animal naturally or normally lives or grows indigenous – adj. produced, living, or existing naturally in a particular region or environment sacred – adj. highly valued and important; deserving great respect survey - v. to look at and examine all parts of something

from Voice of America http://ift.tt/2icFmfm
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