Orange-bellied Parrots

nrg800

Well-Known Member
The Orange-bellied Parrot is one of (I think it's more endangered than the Kakapo, but childonias will correct me here) rarest parrots in the world, with less than 50 birds being left in the wild, all breeding in one small location, and spreading all along the South Eastern Coast of Australia.

Here is the latest release on them

An update prepared by Rachel Pritchard, Coordinator for the Implementation of the Orange-bellied Parrot Action Plan (2010).

19 April 2011

The Orange-bellied Parrot Recovery Team held its annual meeting in Hobart in early April 2011. The meeting was an opportunity to discuss how the wild population fared through the breeding season, review progress of work on the Action Plan priorities, and to decide what the priority activities will be for winter 2011.

The Recovery Team is heartened by the observed stability in the population between December 2009 and December 2010, a productive breeding season in summer 2010/11, and a successful program to collect much-needed founders for the captive breeding program.

Breeding in the wild population

The 2010/11 breeding season was productive for the only known wild breeding population at Melaleuca. At least 21 adults arrived in spring, which compares favourably with a minimum of 23 adults arriving the previous spring.
Encouragingly, it appears that 100% of females at Melalueca participated in breeding, an important improvement from recent years of low breeding participation.

Four nests were found in nest boxes, and intensive nest searches in November identified four other potential nesting areas in natural nesting habitat. Eleven nestlings were banded from the four broods in nest boxes.

One brood had partially fledged before the visit to band nestlings so only the one remaining chick could be banded in the nest. At least 16 unbanded juveniles appeared at the feed table.

The minimum number of juveniles produced at Melaleuca in 2011 is therefore 27. This is an improvement over
the previous breeding season when only 13 juveniles are known to have fledged.

The table below outlines the number of birds known to be alive at the start of the 2010/11 breeding season, the number of young produced, and the known or presumed fate of these birds. Three adult females were banded during the summer.

Spring arrivals: Adult Males......9 banded, 5+ unbanded
Adult Females...3 banded, 4+ unbanded

Known to breed: Adult Males......8
Adult Females...8

Young produced: 11 banded, 16+ unbanded

Juveniles captured: 7 banded, 14 unbanded

Juveniles presumed lost to predators: 2 banded

Presumed to have migrated: Adult Males.....9 banded, 5+ unbanded
Adult Females.. 6 banded, 1+ unbanded
Juveniles........2 banded, 2 unbanded

Founder collection for the captive breeding program

Collection of new birds, or ‘founders’ for the captive population was a priority this summer. The new birds will add much-needed genetic variation to the existing captive breeding program.

The Recovery Team determined that this summer was the best opportunity to collect the new founders. Twenty-one juveniles were collected at the feed table between late January and late March. The new founders include seven
banded juveniles from nest boxes and 14 unbanded juveniles.

One unbanded juvenile died in captivity in the first weeks after capture. The post mortem indicated that the bird had a lung infection and had suffered head trauma. The remaining founders are doing well. Genetic analyses in the coming months will establish the relatedness of the birds, and inform future founder collection decisions.

As we were unable to band all birds at Melaleuca, we will be unable to determine whether unbanded birds observed on the mainland are related to those already captured. The unknown genetic value of these unbanded birds, combined with the low likelihood of successful capture, has led to a decision to abandon attempts to capture founders on the mainland this winter.

Habitat management in Tasmania

Recovery Team members who visited Melaleuca after the meeting were excited to see an important planned burn in potential Orange-bellied Parrot feeding habitat in southwest Tasmania. The Tasmanian Parks and Wildlife Service has since completed planned burns at Towterer Creek, Elliot Hill, Rowita Plains, Birchs Inlet, and Melaleuca Lagoon.

The burns will reduce the risk of large wildfires adversely affecting natural values in the southwest, and improve Orange-bellied Parrot feeding habitat. Planned burns to maintain suitable feeding habitat have been a high priority for the recovery program for many years, and are a very high priority under the Action Plan.

The Recovery Team is interested to see how the birds respond to this habitat management in the breeding seasons to come.

Priorities for winter 2011

The winter monitoring program remains an important measure of how the wild population of OBPs is faring. Regional Coordinators and volunteers will be continuing to search habitat in South Australia and Victoria to locate overwintering
birds.

When OBPs are located, Regional Coordinators will make arrangements to supply supplementary food to the birds, with the aim of improving their food uptake over the winter period. Supplementary feeding of birds with specially selected seed aims to improve the condition of birds to enhance over-winter survival and encourage high rates of breeding participation next summer.

Continuing high breeding participation is required for the wild OBP population to increase.

In summary, the total population migrating from Tasmania was 25 birds, with another 25 surviving from this year! Amazing!
 
And there's at least 150 Orange-bellys in captivity.
 
anyone knows what are the captive breeding results of this year and how many will be released?
 
There's 131 kakapo total at this point in time.

Theoretically orange bellied parrots numbers could be built up rapidly in captivity because Neophema species in general are very prolific, but I *think* the population might be quite inbred which is causing reproductive problems. I saw this species on their breeding grounds at Melaleuca in Tasmania in 2007 and it's very sad to think it could be extinct so soon, even before the kakapo
 
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But did the breeding results in captivity drop? Because the video on the website of Zoos Victoria (which Healesville Sanctuary is part of) says that they breed about 40+ young a year (from 18 couples which is an ok result) and that the total programme has 75 young a year. Which should help to bring up the numbers fast.
 
I don't really know much about the captive population to be honest, but when I was in Tasmania there were a lot of problems with the released young birds having no survival skills and the local falcons treating them as their personal buffet. I think there were some other problems with them surviving as well but I can't recall what.
 
they release captive-bred birds on the breeding grounds in Tasmania and they follow the wild birds when they migrate. But realistically there's probably no good reason why captive-bred birds couldn't be used to create a sedentary wild population in Tasmania.
 
Orange-bellied Parrots are migratory, so that's abit of a problem for re-introducing...

Yes it makes re-introduction more complicated and more challenging, but if the bird's habitat's on both side of the Bass Strait are protected this should not be preventing releases. We are dealing with a Neophema species and there have been quite high breeding results in the past (70+ birds born in a year is very good for such a species) so these numbers (if they are still reached) should be able to cover the losses of the first migration.
 
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