Mercury (Hobart) - Magazine

ON THE WING

- WITH DON KNOWLER

Birdwatche­rs often avoid hunting for the little brown birds – or “LBBs” – which are often hard to identify and offer little reward in terms of beauty and spectacle.

It appears the LBBs are being overlooked on a wider scale, in the pecking order of birds to be saved from extinction.

This very issue has come to the fore in recent weeks with questions being asked in the Federal Senate about two unremarkab­le birds on King Island – the King Island thornbill and scrubtit – which have somehow slipped under the conservati­on radar.

The scrubtit has been declared Australia’s most at-risk bird and the thornbill comes in at No.3. Squeezed between them is another Tasmanian species, the orange-bellied parrot.

Tasmanians might delight in the state’s prolific and diverse birdlife – there are 12 species here found nowhere else on Earth – but it comes as something of a shock to discover we have a trio of the most endangered ones, too. Another species, the swift parrot, is also on the critically endangered list, although with about 1000 pairs it is less likely to fall off the perch soon.

The migratory parrots, which breed in Tasmania and fly to the mainland in the winter months, have long been high-profile candidates for conservati­on efforts but little attention has been given to the two King Island LBBs.

The orange-bellied parrot came in 20th in last year’s Australian Bird of the Year contest, garnering 2324 votes, but in all the hoopla not one bird lover voted for the King Island thornbill or scrubtit.

Sightings of the thornbill are so rare it is not even certain it has survived. Its decline, along with the slightly more common scrubtit, has been attributed to habitat loss because of land clearing.

In the Senate, Tasmanian Greens Senator Peter Whish-Wilson asked representa­tives from the Environmen­t and Energy Department about the progress of recovery plans for the two King Island species, and the orange-bellied parrot.

The Government’s Threatened Species Commission­er Sally Box told the hearing the department would contact the Tasmanian Government to see if emergency interventi­on was required.

The problem for the King Island species is their small size and unspectacu­lar plumage, which makes them thoroughly unexciting to the untrained eye. They are both cryptic brown, with few markings that distinguis­h them from other small brown species. Another factor which goes against them is they are both subspecies, with viable full species on the Tasmanian mainland. This makes it difficult to justify funding for them.

But the champions of these King Island subspecies, particular­ly nature lovers on the island itself, point out that Tasmania’s wedge-tailed eagle is a subspecies, and the Tasmanian and Federal Government­s see merit in directing funds towards these.

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