Noisy scrubbird
The noisy scrubbird (Atrichornis clamosus) is a species of bird in the Atrichornithidae family. It is endemic to South-West Australia. The Noisy Scrubbird features a dark brown colored back, rust-like colored wings and a speckled chestnut colored breast region with a grey-brown or pink bill and brown or silver legs and feet. They vary from 19-23 cm. in length and 25-58 grams.[1] The males are distinguished from the females by exhibiting a black triangle on their throat.[2] They are closely related to the Lyrebird, having only evolutionarily distinguished from them approximately 30-35 million years ago. They prefer feeding upon small invertebrates such as ants, beetles and in the extremely dense understory and vegetative cover that only occurs after environmental damages.[3]
Distribution
The noisy scrubbird is one of Australia's rarest birds. It was presumed extinct until a population was discovered at Two Peoples Bay, east of Albany in Western Australia in the 1960s.[3] Since then a recovery plan has been put into action. Populations of the bird have been translocated to nearby Bald Island, in Waychinicup National Park, as well as the Porongorup Ranges, where a bushfire had destroyed much of the population.
Habitat
A reason the noisy scrubbirds populations are so threatened are due to them being a very endemic species with specific living conditions and niche. They prefer subtropical to temperate rainforests >600 m in elevation with closed forests that are within 5-15 meters in height.[1] They require dense ground cover wetlands with cover that only occurs in their small range after the recovery from a forest fire or other serious natural disaster such as flooding or logging events.[2] In addition, they also require very dense leaf litter to feed upon the leaf degrading invertebrates in which they prefer. They typically inhabit recovering areas after they have been recoving for approximately 10 years, but there has been reported collinizations in as soon as 2 years following the damaging event. The scrubbird has never been recorded to inhabit an area that has not been burnt or damaged in the previous 50 years. There known range is approximately just 45 cubic km combined including the Two Peoples Bay and Bald Island populations.[1]
Reproduction
Noisy Scrubbirds are sexually mature at approximately 5 years of age for males and the first breeding season for females. Unlike many other birds they lay one egg at a time and have a clutch size of only 2 eggs. The nest is a circular shape structure typically build in low lying shrubbery, rushes or sedges and is made from common sticks, leaves and decaying plant matter[1]. Males play no part in the nest, but it is believed they may defend the territory the femals has laid her eggs in.[3] The eggs are incumbated for approximately 36 days prior to hsatching, and then the chicks leave the nest 4-6 weeks after hatching.[2] In a study occurring in 2005 there is considered to be approximately 695 individual scrub birds remaining2005, incuded in that approximation is 278 territorial males.[1]
Conservation
The populations of the Noisy Scrubbird are declining despite 50 years of conservation and management.[2] Major threats include forest fires, predation by introduced species such as foxes, feral cats and black rats, degredation of habitat, soil fungi, introduced mammals, climate change and lack of genetic variation. The management conducted has focuses heavily on predation control and gining data by surveying and radio trackers. While there has been some great successes with the reintroduction and management of the scrubbirds, lightening induced fires have damaged many of the management progress.[1]
The fungi Phytophthora cinnamomi has become more abundant in the scrubbirds range and has the ability to kill and degrade mass amonts of forest, which can heavily effect the diversity of the forest, and could easily and rapidly displace many of the remaining scrubbirds. Forest dieback due to this fungi have been shown to increase the amount of predators in the area, but have not been proven to have any effect on the scrubbirds populations yet[1]
Translocations to native ranges have been attempted severl times with little success due to the Noisy Scrubbird reqiring a very specific habitat. These translocations even required the removal of all potential predators for the scrubbird, but still had little success.[2]
The best conservation method would be to reintroduce the scrubbird to its native ranges by carefully monitoring the populations and contrling forest fores. While natural fire cycles are very helpful to the scrubbird, a fire event in the few major concentrations of its populations could be detrimental to all previous conservation efforts.[2]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Environment, jurisdiction=Commonwealth of Australia; corporateName=Department of the. "Atrichornis clamosus — Noisy Scrub-bird, Tjimiluk". www.environment.gov.au. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "EDGE of Existence". EDGE of Existence. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
- 1 2 3 Roger Underwood, Doomed Planet: On the origin of the specious, Quadrant, August 31, 2012