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General Information There are five different species of the red-tailed black cockatoo mainly distinguished by their beak size. The south-eastern red-tailed.

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Presentation on theme: "General Information There are five different species of the red-tailed black cockatoo mainly distinguished by their beak size. The south-eastern red-tailed."— Presentation transcript:

1 General Information There are five different species of the red-tailed black cockatoo mainly distinguished by their beak size. The south-eastern red-tailed black cockatoo is found mainly in the south-east of South Australia and the south-west of Victoria. It is endangered as its overall population is 1400 but its status is not critical. The biggest threat for this species of cockatoo is the destruction of their nests and their food. The cockatoo only eats tiny seeds found in Brown Stringybark,Desert Stringybark and Buloke. There has been significant clearing of Buloke trees by humans. Because the cockatoo prefers to eat the seeds of plants that are roughly 100 years old, planting crops now will not immediately help in the conservation of this species. The South Eastern Red Tailed Black Cockatoo The South Eastern Red Tailed Black Cockatoo Home NOTE: This PowerPoint only refers to the south-eastern red-tailed black cockatoo, not any other type of red-tailed black cockatoo. Video edited by author of this PowerPoint Original video from: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RLA_t60VqgM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RLA_t60VqgM

2 1.The south-eastern red-tailed black cockatoo is about 55cm in height. 2.They are about 570-800g. 3.Males have sooty black feathers and red panels on their tail feathers while females have glossy black feathers with golden specks and have a yellow or orange-red tail with black barring. 4.They can live over a 100 years! 5.They make a noise that sounds like this: 6.They only raise one chick at one time. 7.It takes the chicks 90 days to fly. south-eastern 8.Their scientific name is Calyptorhynchus banksii graptogyne. It means ‘Bank’s covered bill’. There are subspecies but only the south-eastern red-tailed black cockatoo is endangered. 9.Their diet is Desert Stringybark, Brown Stringybark and, when its available, Bulokes. 10.They are distributed in south-west Victoria and south-east South Australia. However, there are other subspecies located all over the country. The South Eastern Red Tailed Black Cockatoo Interesting Facts http://redtail.com.au/audio.htmlhttp://redtail.com.au/audio.html (Audio source: http://redtail.com.au/audio.html ) http://redtail.com.au/audio.html

3 Dear Mr Environment Minister I am writing to you about the endangered south-eastern red-tailed black cockatoo. This species is endangered mainly because of reduction in their food. They feed nearly entirely on three types of trees: Brown Stringybark, Desert Stringybark and Buloke seeds. Roughly 97% of Bulokes have been cut down. Fires that burn in Stringybark forests reduce the availability of the seeds which is bad because the cockatoo feeds on the seeds. In addition to their food there aren’t enough eucalyptus trees that have hollows for the cockatoo to make nests. Another threat is their natural predator: the common brushtail possum. Helping to conserve this animal is hard mainly because it is so fussy; it only eats three types of plants and the Bulokes have to be roughly 100 years old. The best method is to plant all the Bulokes now. Then while the Bulokes are aging, all the cockatoos can be kept in enclosures that are free from any fires and from common brushtail possums. In the enclosures there should be water, a lot of Stringybark trees and eucalyptus trees with hollows that should allow them to make their nests. During the summer the trees should be heavily watered to stop them catching fires. In 100 years the Bulokes will be ready so then all the cockatoos can be released. Thankyou. The South Eastern Red Tailed Black Cockatoo The South Eastern Red Tailed Black Cockatoo The Letter

4 The South Eastern Red Tailed Black Cockatoo The South Eastern Red Tailed Black Cockatoo Pictures Picture source: http://www.quantum-conservation.org/ESB/BLACK%20COCKATOOS.html

5 Perryman, B 2010, ‘Red-Tailed Black-Cockatoo’, viewed 8 July 2010, Perryman, B 2010, ‘Red-Tailed Black-Cockatoo’, viewed 8 July 2010, http://redtail.com.au/ Department of Sustainability and Environment, 2007, ‘Karak! – Protecting the Red- tailed Black Cockatoo’, viewed 8 July 2010 ‘Red-tailed black cockatoo’ 2008, BBC, viewed 9 July 2010, http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/wildfacts/factfiles/3039.shtml Department of Sustainability and Environment, 2005, ‘Red-tailed Black-Cockatoo – about the species ’, viewed 8 July 2010, Perryman, B 2010, ‘Audio’, viewed 26 July 2010 http://redtail.com.au/audio.html Müller, M 2005, ‘BLACK COCKATOOS CALYPTORHYNCHUS SSP.’, viewed 24 July 2010, Nannaroo 17, 2008, ‘Red-tailed Black Cockatoo 2’, viewed 29 July 2010, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RLA_t60VqgM The South Eastern Red Tailed Black Cockatoo Bibliography http://www.dse.vic.gov.au/DSE/nrenpa.nsf/LinkView/B447CDA400A6A7DFCA257067008172DEDD4174D5B 4E9A71BCA256E5A0010E8D0http://www.dse.vic.gov.au/DSE/nrenpa.nsf/LinkView/B447CDA400A6A7DFCA257067008172DEDD4174D5B 4E9A71BCA256E5A0010E8D0 http://www.dse.vic.gov.au/CA256F310024B628/0/14788AFAC7C3A19CCA257075000AA940/$File/RTBC_ About_FS.pdfhttp://www.dse.vic.gov.au/CA256F310024B628/0/14788AFAC7C3A19CCA257075000AA940/$File/RTBC_ About_FS.pdf http://www.quantum-conservation.org/ESB/BLACK%20COCKATOOS.html

6 THANKYOU


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