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Night parrot

The night parrot (Pezoporus occidentalis) is a small parrot endemic to the continent of Australia. It has also been known as porcupine parrot, nocturnal ground parakeet, midnight cockatoo, solitaire, spinifex parrot and night parakeet. It is one of the most elusive and mysterious birds in the world, with no confirmed sightings of the bird between 1912 and 1979, leading to speculation that it was extinct. Sightings since 1979 have been extremely rare and the bird's population size is unknown, though based on the paucity of records it is thought to number between 50 and 249 mature individuals, and it is classified by the IUCN as an endangered species.

Night parrot
Illustration from 1890 by Elizabeth Gould
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Psittaciformes
Family: Psittaculidae
Genus: Pezoporus
Species:
P. occidentalis
Binomial name
Pezoporus occidentalis
(Gould, 1861)
Historical (light red) and recent sightings with year (red dots)
Synonyms

Geopsittacus occidentalis

A few sightings or recordings of its presence, with varying degrees of certainty, have occurred in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, south-western Queensland, the Lake Eyre basin in South Australia and the Northern Territory. However, some of the evidence produced by wildlife photographer John Young has been called into question, and in March 2019 the Australian Wildlife Conservancy (AWC) retracted some of the records created by Young and published by the AWC.

Taxonomy Edit

Ornithologist John Gould described the night parrot in 1861,[3] from a specimen—the holotype—that was collected 13 km southeast of Mt Farmer, west of Lake Austin in Western Australia. Its specific epithet is Latin occidentalis "western". The species was originally placed within its own genus (Geopsittacus) by Gould,[4][5] though consensus soon swung in favour of placing it in Pezoporus; James Murie dissected a specimen, observing that it was very similar in anatomy and plumage to the ground parrot.[6] Gould had posited a relationship to the kākāpō based on similarity of the plumage,[3] however Murie concluded they were markedly different anatomically.[6] Despite its close relationship with the ground parrot, its placement in the genus Pezoporus was uncertain, with some authorities leaving it in its own genus, as data on the night parrot was so limited. A 1994 molecular study using the cytochrome b of several parrot species confirmed the close relationship of the taxa and consensus for its placement in Pezoporus. It also revealed that the kākāpō was not closely related to Pezoporus.[7] Analysis of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences in a 2011 study showed that the night parrot most likely diverged from the ancestor of the eastern and western ground parrots around 3.3 million years ago.[8]

Alternative common names include porcupine parrot, nocturnal ground parakeet, midnight cockatoo, solitaire,[9] spinifex parrot and night parakeet.[10]

Description Edit

A relatively small and short-tailed parrot, the species' colour is predominantly a yellowish green, mottled with dark brown, blacks and yellows. Both sexes have this coloration. It is distinguished from the two superficially similar ground parrot species by its shorter tail and different range and habitat. Predominantly terrestrial, taking to the air only when panicked or in search of water, the night parrot has furtive, nocturnal habits and—even when it was abundant—was apparently a highly secretive species. Its natural habitat appears to be the spinifex grass which still dominates much of the dry, dusty Australian interior; other early reports also indicate that it never strayed far from water. It may also inhabit chenopod shrublands, eucalyptus woodlands, and mallee shrublands. One of the vocalisations of the night parrot has been described as a croak and identified as a contact call.[11] Other calls, mostly short "ding-ding" whistles, and a more drawn out whistle, have been recorded from Queensland and Western Australia.[12]

Diet Edit

 
Triodia Grass

Historic sources indicate that the night parrot eats seeds of grasses (especially Triodia) and herbs.

Conservation status Edit

The population size of this species is not known, but assumed to be continuing to decline. As of July 2022, it is listed on the IUCN Red List as Critically endangered. According to the IUCN Red List the night parrot has a population of 40–500, or possibly larger.[1] It is listed as Endangered under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 by the Australian government.[13]

Important Bird Areas Edit

Sites identified by BirdLife International as being important for night parrot conservation are the Diamantina and Astrebla Grasslands of western Queensland, and the Fortescue Marshes of the Pilbara.[14]

Sightings Edit

The night parrot remains one of the world's most elusive and mysterious birds. Reliable records of the bird have been few and far between, with efforts to locate the species proving fruitless after an authenticated report from 1912.[7]

In 1979, ornithologist Shane Parker from the South Australian Museum spotted an apparent flock of the birds in the far north of South Australia.[15] A roadkill specimen was discovered in 1990 by scientists returning from an expedition in a remote part of Queensland.[16][17]

21st-century sightings Edit

April 2005: Minga Well sighting Edit

Three individuals seen near Minga Well, Pilbara region of Western Australia and near the Fortescue Marshes.[16][18]

The approval of the A$2 billion Cloud Break mine project through the then-Minister for the Environment, Ian Campbell, was criticised because of a number of endangered species in the area of the future mine, among them the night parrot.[19] In order to gain EPA approval, the mine had to implement a management plan to ensure that mining activities would not have a negative effect on the species survival in the area. The occurrence of the night parrot in the future mining area, at Minga Well on 12 April 2005, was discovered during a 2005 survey commissioned by FMG, which was carried out by two contract biologists, Robert Davis and Brendan Metcalf, who sighted a small group of the birds. Unconfirmed sightings of the bird had been made previously in a nearby area in 2004.[20][21]

The sighting was at dusk, and Davis and Metcalf were not able to obtain a photograph of the three birds they saw, but are confident that they spotted three night parrots. The detailed descriptions of their sighting were accepted by the Birds Australia Rarities Committee (BARC), making it the first accepted night parrot sighting in modern times. Based on this acceptance by scientific peers, a paper describing the sighting was published in the Australian ornithological journal, Emu, in 2008. The two biologists carried out further searches at Minga Well and Moojari Well the following five nights after the sighting, but were unable to see the birds again.[20] A follow-up survey of the Fortescue Marsh area in May 2005 was unsuccessful in finding any conclusive evidence of the species.[22]

September 2006: Dead individual Edit

Dead female, flown into a barbed wire fence in Diamantina National Park in south western Queensland.[23][16][24][25]

April 2015: Live individual capture Edit

 
Live night parrot held by ornithologist Steve Murphy

On 4 April 2015, ornithologist Steve Murphy and partner Rachel Barr captured and radio tagged a live individual, whom they nicknamed "Pedro", in southwestern Queensland. Photographs of the bird in Murphy's hand were released to Australian media on 10 August 2015, while keeping the precise location secret.[26][27] A conservation reserve covering some 56,000 hectares has been created in the area to protect the species.[28]

Sean Dooley of Birdlife: The Magazine described the find as, "The bird watching equivalent of finding Elvis flipping burgers in an outback roadhouse".[29] South Australian Museum collection manager Philippa Horton called the find, "One of the holy grails, one of the world's rarest species probably".[28]

2016 – 2021 Edit

2013, 2016, 2017: Retracted records Edit

  • In May 2013 naturalist and wildlife cinematographer John Young, who made headlines in 2006 with an allegedly fake photo series of the blue-fronted fig parrot, claimed to have made the first ever photographs and video footage of a living specimen.[29][39][40] Young said that he had captured the images and 17-second video after seventeen thousand hours in the field over 15 years of searching.[41] He revealed his results during an invitation-only press conference on 3 July 2013,[42][43] but kept the exact range in Queensland where he had observed this individual secret to protect this species from poaching. Young provided five feathers from a roost site in the Lake Eyre basin to the Western Australian Museum's Molecular Systematics Unit, where DNA analysis conclusively matched the feathers to DNA samples of dead Pezoporus occidentalis birds.[44][45]
  • 2016: Young announces he has found night parrots in Diamantina National Park, adjacent to the Pullen Pullen nature reserve. Seven sightings are recorded, including a pair and three active nests with eggs.[46][47]
  • September 2016: Camera trap records what appears to be a night parrot on property owned by the AWC, Kalamurina Station in the northern Lake Eyre region, SA, but the photo is not clear.[48]
  • July 2017: Single night parrot feather found in a finch nest on the Kalamurina property, by John Young and Keith Bellchambers from the Australian Wildlife Conservancy.[48]
  • September 2018: Recording of a night parrot call, downloaded from an acoustic monitor at Kalamurina.[49]

In October 2018, Australian Wildlife Conservancy (AWC) commenced an investigation into claims that some of John Young's first photographs of the night parrot may have been staged, after Australian National University ornithologist Penelope Olsen, author of Night Parrot: Australia's Most Elusive Bird raised concerns. Young resigned from the AWC in September 2018,[50] and the AWC removed all information about the night parrot from its website.[51]

In March 2019, Young's reports were found to have issues relating to robustness of much of his work done in Queensland and South Australia, labelled as unscientific, deceptive and damaging to the AWC. In 2019, the AWC retracted its reports based on work done by Young.[41] A panel of experts had looked at the nest and eggs found at Diamantina (2016); the feather found at Kalamurina (2017); and the recording of the call (2018). They found that each one had separate issues and none could be said to provide robust evidence of the parrot's presence.[49]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b BirdLife International (2022). "Pezoporus occidentalis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2022: e.T22685237A211825128. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2022-3.RLTS.T22685237A211825128.en. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  2. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  3. ^ a b Gould, John (1861). "On a new genus and species of parakeet from Western Australia". Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London: 100–01.
  4. ^ Forshaw, Joseph M. & Cooper, William T. (1981). Parrots of the World (3rd ed.). Willoughby, Australia: Press.
  5. ^ Gould J. (1972) [1865]. Handbook to the Birds of Australia. London: Lansdowne Press.
  6. ^ a b Murie, James (1868). "On the nocturnal Ground Parakeet (Geopsittacus occidentalis Gould)". Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London: 158–65.
  7. ^ a b Leeton, Peter R. J.; Christidis, Leslie; Westerman, Michael & Boles, Walter E. (1994). "Molecular phylogenetic relationships of the Night Parrot (Geopsittacus occidentalis) and the Ground Parrot (Pezoporus wallicus)" (PDF). Auk. 111 (4): 833–43. doi:10.2307/4088815. JSTOR 4088815.
  8. ^ Leo Joseph; Alicia Toon; Erin E. Schirtzinger; Timothy F. Wright (2011). "Molecular systematics of two enigmatic genera Psittacella and Pezoporus illuminate the ecological radiation of Australo-Papuan parrots (Aves: Psittaciformes)". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 59 (3): 675–684. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2011.03.017. PMID 21453777.
  9. ^ Olsen, Penny (2018). Night Parrot: Australia's Most Elusive Bird. CSIRO Publishing. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-4863-0299-4.
  10. ^ Morcombe, Michael (1986). The great Australian birdfinder. Sydney: Lansdowne Press. p. 316. ISBN 978-0701819620.
  11. ^ Murphy, S. A.; Austin, J. J.; Murphy, R. K.; Silcock, J.; Joseph, L.; Garnett, S. T.; Leseberg, N. P.; Watson, J. E. M.; Burbidge, A. H. (28 February 2017). "Observations on breeding Night Parrots (Pezoporus occidentalis) in western Queensland". Emu. 117 (2): 107–113. doi:10.1080/01584197.2017.1292404. S2CID 89725902.
  12. ^ "Leading Night Parrot Conservation". nightparrot.com.au.
  13. ^ Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts (2008). "Pezoporus occidentalis — Night Parrot". Biodiversity: Species Profile and Threats Database. Australian Government. Retrieved 10 August 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ . Important Bird Areas. BirdLife International. 2012. Archived from the original on 30 June 2007. Retrieved 31 October 2012.
  15. ^ John Blyth: Night Parrot (Pezoporus occidentalis) Interim Recovery Plan for Western Australia. 1996 to 1998 2008-07-31 at the Wayback Machine. dec.wa.gov.au
  16. ^ a b c Roberts, Greg: Bad news for one night parrot, good for species 2007-02-17 at the Wayback Machine, The Australian, 16 February 2007. Retrieved 16 February 2007
  17. ^ Boles, Walter E.; Longmore, N. W. & Thompson, M. C. (1994). "A Recent Specimen of the Night Parrot Geopsittacus occidentalis". Emu. 94 (1): 37–40. doi:10.1071/MU9940037.
  18. ^ Davis, Robert A.; Brenden M. Metcalf (2008). "The Night Parrot (Pezoporus occidentalis) in northern Western Australia: a recent sighting from the Pilbara region". Emu. 108 (3): 233–236. doi:10.1071/MU07058. S2CID 85412524.
  19. ^ Campbell stands by Cloud Break mine approval ABC News, published: 24 July 2006, accessed: 9 November 2010
  20. ^ a b Management Plan 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine EPA website, published: April 2005, accessed: 9 November 2010
  21. ^ Pezoporus occidentalis — Night Parrot Department for Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities website, accessed: 9 November 2010
  22. ^ Fortescue Wetlands Area, Presence of Endangered Species Parliamentary Question, Parliament of Western Australia, published: 8 November 2005, accessed: 9 November 2010
  23. ^ Andrew McDougall; Gary Porter; Maree Mostert; Robert Cupitt; Sue Cupitt; Leo Joseph; Stephen Murphy; Heather Janetzki; Adrian Gallagher; Allan Burbidge (2009). "Another piece in an Australian ornithological puzzle – a second Night Parrot is found dead in Queensland". Emu. 109 (3): 198–203. doi:10.1071/MU08018. S2CID 84859858.
  24. ^ "Twitchers cry foul in case of the deceased parrot". Brisbane Times. 23 June 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2008.
  25. ^ Ex-parrot sighting in Qld sparks interest, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 19 February 2007. Retrieved 19 February 2007
  26. ^ Milman, Oliver (10 August 2015). "Night parrot capture and tagging hailed as 'holy grail' moment for bird lovers". The Guardian. Guardian News and Media Limited. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  27. ^ Grewal, Jessica (10 August 2015). "Looking for a night parrot in a haystack? Found one". The Australian. News Ltd. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  28. ^ a b McLeish, Kathy (10 August 2015). "Night parrot conservation reserve created in Queensland for endangered and elusive bird". ABC News. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  29. ^ a b "BBC World Service - Discovery, The Chase, Back from the Dead". BBC. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  30. ^ a b "Critically endangered night parrot fledgling photographed on Queensland reserve". Australian Geographic. 8 February 2018.
  31. ^ Beavan, Katrina (24 May 2017). "'Probable' night parrot found in Central Australia thanks to audio recordings". ABC News. Retrieved 27 February 2019.
  32. ^ Jones, Ann (23 March 2017). "Night parrot sighting in Western Australia shocks birdwatching world". ABC News (ABC Radio National). Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  33. ^ "Night Parrot rediscovered in Western Australia". Bird Guides. 23 March 2017.
  34. ^ Harewood, Greg (July 2018). "Night Parrot Survey Report Lake Disappointment: Potash Project" (PDF) (Version 3 ed.). Reward Minerals Ltd.
  35. ^ Borrello, Eliza (10 October 2003). "Second known photo of rare night parrot taken in the Kimberley" (audio). ABC Radio. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  36. ^ Michelmore, Karen; Birch, Laura (21 August 2020). "Night parrot located by KJ rangers on Martu country in the Pilbara". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  37. ^ Barry, Derek (21 August 2020). "Night parrot pops up in Western Australia". The North West Star. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  38. ^ Hannam, Peter (27 August 2021). "Rare night parrot photograph 'gives us hope there are more out there'". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  39. ^ Tony, Koch (29 June 2013). "Is this a sighting of Australia's most elusive bird, the night parrot?". The Australian.
  40. ^ Worthington, Elise (4 July 2013). "Queensland bird enthusiast presents museum with photos of elusive night parrot". ABC news. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  41. ^ a b Jones, Ann; Sveen, Benjamin; Lewis, David (22 March 2019). "Night parrot research labelled 'fake news' by experts after release of damning report". ABC News (Background Briefing). Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  42. ^ Pickrell, John (3 July 2013). . Australian Geographic. Archived from the original on 7 July 2013. Retrieved 4 July 2013.
  43. ^ Leo Joseph (29 December 2013). "Found: world's most mysterious bird, but why all the secrecy?". The Conversation.
  44. ^ "DNA confirms elusive Night Parrot found – Western Australian Museum". Western Australian Museum.
  45. ^ Fraser, Andrew. . The Australian. Archived from the original on 10 August 2013. Retrieved 9 August 2013.
  46. ^ O'Donnell, Jenna (1 November 2016). "Yes! More Australian Night Parrots Have Been Discovered". National Audubon Society. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  47. ^ Wahlquist, Calla (25 October 2016). "Night parrot population discovered in Queensland national park". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  48. ^ a b McCarthy, Marty (13 September 2017). "Night parrot feather discovery proves Australia's most elusive bird is alive in South Australia". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Commission. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  49. ^ a b "AWC receives findings from independent Night Parrot review panel". Australian Wildlife Conservancy. 29 March 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  50. ^ Henriques-Gomes, Luke (12 October 2018). "Wildlife group investigates claim night parrot photos were staged". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 October 2018.
  51. ^ Taylor, Tegan (12 October 2018). "Night parrot: 'questions about the veracity' of evidence for back-from-the-dead bird appearing in SA". ABC News. Retrieved 13 October 2018.

Further reading Edit

  • Leseberg, Nick (25 March 2019). "Nick Leseberg on Night Parrot research" (audio). Bush Heritage Australia.
  • Weidensaul, S. (2002). The Ghost with Trembling Wings: Science, Wishful Thinking, and the Search for Lost Species, North Point Press (New York), ISBN 0-86547-668-3, pp. 75–81.

External links Edit

  • Night Parrot Recovery Team - Night Parrot Recovery Team
  • Night Parrot – Australian Museum
  • Night Parrot Internet Bird Collection
  • Night Parrot. Parrot Encyclopedia, World Parrot Trust
  • Night Parrot Pezoporus occidentalis. BirdLife Species Factsheet, BirdLife International

night, parrot, night, parrot, pezoporus, occidentalis, small, parrot, endemic, continent, australia, also, been, known, porcupine, parrot, nocturnal, ground, parakeet, midnight, cockatoo, solitaire, spinifex, parrot, night, parakeet, most, elusive, mysterious,. The night parrot Pezoporus occidentalis is a small parrot endemic to the continent of Australia It has also been known as porcupine parrot nocturnal ground parakeet midnight cockatoo solitaire spinifex parrot and night parakeet It is one of the most elusive and mysterious birds in the world with no confirmed sightings of the bird between 1912 and 1979 leading to speculation that it was extinct Sightings since 1979 have been extremely rare and the bird s population size is unknown though based on the paucity of records it is thought to number between 50 and 249 mature individuals and it is classified by the IUCN as an endangered species Night parrotIllustration from 1890 by Elizabeth GouldConservation statusCritically Endangered IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix I CITES 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PsittaciformesFamily PsittaculidaeGenus PezoporusSpecies P occidentalisBinomial namePezoporus occidentalis Gould 1861 Historical light red and recent sightings with year red dots SynonymsGeopsittacus occidentalisA few sightings or recordings of its presence with varying degrees of certainty have occurred in the Pilbara region of Western Australia south western Queensland the Lake Eyre basin in South Australia and the Northern Territory However some of the evidence produced by wildlife photographer John Young has been called into question and in March 2019 the Australian Wildlife Conservancy AWC retracted some of the records created by Young and published by the AWC Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Diet 4 Conservation status 4 1 Important Bird Areas 5 Sightings 5 1 21st century sightings 5 1 1 April 2005 Minga Well sighting 5 1 2 September 2006 Dead individual 5 1 3 April 2015 Live individual capture 5 1 4 2016 2021 5 2 2013 2016 2017 Retracted records 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksTaxonomy EditOrnithologist John Gould described the night parrot in 1861 3 from a specimen the holotype that was collected 13 km southeast of Mt Farmer west of Lake Austin in Western Australia Its specific epithet is Latin occidentalis western The species was originally placed within its own genus Geopsittacus by Gould 4 5 though consensus soon swung in favour of placing it in Pezoporus James Murie dissected a specimen observing that it was very similar in anatomy and plumage to the ground parrot 6 Gould had posited a relationship to the kakapō based on similarity of the plumage 3 however Murie concluded they were markedly different anatomically 6 Despite its close relationship with the ground parrot its placement in the genus Pezoporus was uncertain with some authorities leaving it in its own genus as data on the night parrot was so limited A 1994 molecular study using the cytochrome b of several parrot species confirmed the close relationship of the taxa and consensus for its placement in Pezoporus It also revealed that the kakapō was not closely related to Pezoporus 7 Analysis of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences in a 2011 study showed that the night parrot most likely diverged from the ancestor of the eastern and western ground parrots around 3 3 million years ago 8 Alternative common names include porcupine parrot nocturnal ground parakeet midnight cockatoo solitaire 9 spinifex parrot and night parakeet 10 Description EditA relatively small and short tailed parrot the species colour is predominantly a yellowish green mottled with dark brown blacks and yellows Both sexes have this coloration It is distinguished from the two superficially similar ground parrot species by its shorter tail and different range and habitat Predominantly terrestrial taking to the air only when panicked or in search of water the night parrot has furtive nocturnal habits and even when it was abundant was apparently a highly secretive species Its natural habitat appears to be the spinifex grass which still dominates much of the dry dusty Australian interior other early reports also indicate that it never strayed far from water It may also inhabit chenopod shrublands eucalyptus woodlands and mallee shrublands One of the vocalisations of the night parrot has been described as a croak and identified as a contact call 11 Other calls mostly short ding ding whistles and a more drawn out whistle have been recorded from Queensland and Western Australia 12 Diet Edit Triodia GrassHistoric sources indicate that the night parrot eats seeds of grasses especially Triodia and herbs Conservation status EditThe population size of this species is not known but assumed to be continuing to decline As of July 2022 update it is listed on the IUCN Red List as Critically endangered According to the IUCN Red List the night parrot has a population of 40 500 or possibly larger 1 It is listed as Endangered under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 by the Australian government 13 Important Bird Areas Edit Sites identified by BirdLife International as being important for night parrot conservation are the Diamantina and Astrebla Grasslands of western Queensland and the Fortescue Marshes of the Pilbara 14 Sightings EditThe night parrot remains one of the world s most elusive and mysterious birds Reliable records of the bird have been few and far between with efforts to locate the species proving fruitless after an authenticated report from 1912 7 In 1979 ornithologist Shane Parker from the South Australian Museum spotted an apparent flock of the birds in the far north of South Australia 15 A roadkill specimen was discovered in 1990 by scientists returning from an expedition in a remote part of Queensland 16 17 21st century sightings Edit April 2005 Minga Well sighting Edit Three individuals seen near Minga Well Pilbara region of Western Australia and near the Fortescue Marshes 16 18 The approval of the A 2 billion Cloud Break mine project through the then Minister for the Environment Ian Campbell was criticised because of a number of endangered species in the area of the future mine among them the night parrot 19 In order to gain EPA approval the mine had to implement a management plan to ensure that mining activities would not have a negative effect on the species survival in the area The occurrence of the night parrot in the future mining area at Minga Well on 12 April 2005 was discovered during a 2005 survey commissioned by FMG which was carried out by two contract biologists Robert Davis and Brendan Metcalf who sighted a small group of the birds Unconfirmed sightings of the bird had been made previously in a nearby area in 2004 20 21 The sighting was at dusk and Davis and Metcalf were not able to obtain a photograph of the three birds they saw but are confident that they spotted three night parrots The detailed descriptions of their sighting were accepted by the Birds Australia Rarities Committee BARC making it the first accepted night parrot sighting in modern times Based on this acceptance by scientific peers a paper describing the sighting was published in the Australian ornithological journal Emu in 2008 The two biologists carried out further searches at Minga Well and Moojari Well the following five nights after the sighting but were unable to see the birds again 20 A follow up survey of the Fortescue Marsh area in May 2005 was unsuccessful in finding any conclusive evidence of the species 22 September 2006 Dead individual Edit Dead female flown into a barbed wire fence in Diamantina National Park in south western Queensland 23 16 24 25 April 2015 Live individual capture Edit Live night parrot held by ornithologist Steve MurphyOn 4 April 2015 ornithologist Steve Murphy and partner Rachel Barr captured and radio tagged a live individual whom they nicknamed Pedro in southwestern Queensland Photographs of the bird in Murphy s hand were released to Australian media on 10 August 2015 while keeping the precise location secret 26 27 A conservation reserve covering some 56 000 hectares has been created in the area to protect the species 28 Sean Dooley of Birdlife The Magazine described the find as The bird watching equivalent of finding Elvis flipping burgers in an outback roadhouse 29 South Australian Museum collection manager Philippa Horton called the find One of the holy grails one of the world s rarest species probably 28 2016 2021 Edit 2016 Nicholas Leseberg PhD student at the University of Queensland photographed a fledgling in 2016 in the Pullen Pullen Reserve in Western Queensland 30 January 2017 Whistle call attributed to night parrot recorded in southern Northern Territory by zoologist Chris Watson and colleague Mark Carter 31 March 2017 Photograph of a living specimen in Western Australia seen by four birders from Broome 32 33 February 2018 Image of a young bird aged 3 to 5 months old is recorded by Nicholas Leseberg in Pullen Pullen Reserve 30 June 2017 April 2018 Targeted environmental survey confirms the presence of night parrots around Kumpupintil Lake in Western Australia 34 November 2018 Second known photo captured in the Great Sandy Desert in the Kimberley region of Western Australia by Indigenous rangers the Indigenous Desert Lions 35 August 2020 Indigenous rangers of the Martu people and University of Queensland record night parrot sounds in the Pilbara desert around salt lakes the fifth confirmed location in Western Australia 36 37 August 2021 The Martu Rangers capture the fourth confirmed photograph of the parrot in flight in a remote region of Western Australia 38 2013 2016 2017 Retracted records Edit In May 2013 naturalist and wildlife cinematographer John Young who made headlines in 2006 with an allegedly fake photo series of the blue fronted fig parrot claimed to have made the first ever photographs and video footage of a living specimen 29 39 40 Young said that he had captured the images and 17 second video after seventeen thousand hours in the field over 15 years of searching 41 He revealed his results during an invitation only press conference on 3 July 2013 42 43 but kept the exact range in Queensland where he had observed this individual secret to protect this species from poaching Young provided five feathers from a roost site in the Lake Eyre basin to the Western Australian Museum s Molecular Systematics Unit where DNA analysis conclusively matched the feathers to DNA samples of dead Pezoporus occidentalis birds 44 45 2016 Young announces he has found night parrots in Diamantina National Park adjacent to the Pullen Pullen nature reserve Seven sightings are recorded including a pair and three active nests with eggs 46 47 September 2016 Camera trap records what appears to be a night parrot on property owned by the AWC Kalamurina Station in the northern Lake Eyre region SA but the photo is not clear 48 July 2017 Single night parrot feather found in a finch nest on the Kalamurina property by John Young and Keith Bellchambers from the Australian Wildlife Conservancy 48 September 2018 Recording of a night parrot call downloaded from an acoustic monitor at Kalamurina 49 In October 2018 Australian Wildlife Conservancy AWC commenced an investigation into claims that some of John Young s first photographs of the night parrot may have been staged after Australian National University ornithologist Penelope Olsen author of Night Parrot Australia s Most Elusive Bird raised concerns Young resigned from the AWC in September 2018 50 and the AWC removed all information about the night parrot from its website 51 In March 2019 Young s reports were found to have issues relating to robustness of much of his work done in Queensland and South Australia labelled as unscientific deceptive and damaging to the AWC In 2019 the AWC retracted its reports based on work done by Young 41 A panel of experts had looked at the nest and eggs found at Diamantina 2016 the feather found at Kalamurina 2017 and the recording of the call 2018 They found that each one had separate issues and none could be said to provide robust evidence of the parrot s presence 49 References Edit a b BirdLife International 2022 Pezoporus occidentalis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2022 e T22685237A211825128 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2022 3 RLTS T22685237A211825128 en Retrieved 22 July 2022 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 14 January 2022 a b Gould John 1861 On a new genus and species of parakeet from Western Australia Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 100 01 Forshaw Joseph M amp Cooper William T 1981 Parrots of the World 3rd ed Willoughby Australia Press Gould J 1972 1865 Handbook to the Birds of Australia London Lansdowne Press a b Murie James 1868 On the nocturnal Ground Parakeet Geopsittacus occidentalis Gould Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 158 65 a b Leeton Peter R J Christidis Leslie Westerman Michael amp Boles Walter E 1994 Molecular phylogenetic relationships of the Night Parrot Geopsittacus occidentalis and the Ground Parrot Pezoporus wallicus PDF Auk 111 4 833 43 doi 10 2307 4088815 JSTOR 4088815 Leo Joseph Alicia Toon Erin E Schirtzinger Timothy F Wright 2011 Molecular systematics of two enigmatic genera Psittacella and Pezoporus illuminate the ecological radiation of Australo Papuan parrots Aves Psittaciformes Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 59 3 675 684 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2011 03 017 PMID 21453777 Olsen Penny 2018 Night Parrot Australia s Most Elusive Bird CSIRO Publishing p 12 ISBN 978 1 4863 0299 4 Morcombe Michael 1986 The great Australian birdfinder Sydney Lansdowne Press p 316 ISBN 978 0701819620 Murphy S A Austin J J Murphy R K Silcock J Joseph L Garnett S T Leseberg N P Watson J E M Burbidge A H 28 February 2017 Observations on breeding Night Parrots Pezoporus occidentalis in western Queensland Emu 117 2 107 113 doi 10 1080 01584197 2017 1292404 S2CID 89725902 Leading Night Parrot Conservation nightparrot com au Department of the Environment Water Heritage and the Arts 2008 Pezoporus occidentalis Night Parrot Biodiversity Species Profile and Threats Database Australian Government Retrieved 10 August 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Night Parrot Important Bird Areas BirdLife International 2012 Archived from the original on 30 June 2007 Retrieved 31 October 2012 John Blyth Night Parrot Pezoporus occidentalis Interim Recovery Plan for Western Australia 1996 to 1998 Archived 2008 07 31 at the Wayback Machine dec wa gov au a b c Roberts Greg Bad news for one night parrot good for species Archived 2007 02 17 at the Wayback Machine The Australian 16 February 2007 Retrieved 16 February 2007 Boles Walter E Longmore N W amp Thompson M C 1994 A Recent Specimen of the Night Parrot Geopsittacus occidentalis Emu 94 1 37 40 doi 10 1071 MU9940037 Davis Robert A Brenden M Metcalf 2008 The Night Parrot Pezoporus occidentalis in northern Western Australia a recent sighting from the Pilbara region Emu 108 3 233 236 doi 10 1071 MU07058 S2CID 85412524 Campbell stands by Cloud Break mine approval ABC News published 24 July 2006 accessed 9 November 2010 a b Management Plan Archived 2011 07 06 at the Wayback Machine EPA website published April 2005 accessed 9 November 2010 Pezoporus occidentalis Night Parrot Department for Sustainability Environment Water Population and Communities website accessed 9 November 2010 Fortescue Wetlands Area Presence of Endangered Species Parliamentary Question Parliament of Western Australia published 8 November 2005 accessed 9 November 2010 Andrew McDougall Gary Porter Maree Mostert Robert Cupitt Sue Cupitt Leo Joseph Stephen Murphy Heather Janetzki Adrian Gallagher Allan Burbidge 2009 Another piece in an Australian ornithological puzzle a second Night Parrot is found dead in Queensland Emu 109 3 198 203 doi 10 1071 MU08018 S2CID 84859858 Twitchers cry foul in case of the deceased parrot Brisbane Times 23 June 2007 Retrieved 9 April 2008 Ex parrot sighting in Qld sparks interest Australian Broadcasting Corporation 19 February 2007 Retrieved 19 February 2007 Milman Oliver 10 August 2015 Night parrot capture and tagging hailed as holy grail moment for bird lovers The Guardian Guardian News and Media Limited Retrieved 10 August 2015 Grewal Jessica 10 August 2015 Looking for a night parrot in a haystack Found one The Australian News Ltd Retrieved 10 August 2015 a b McLeish Kathy 10 August 2015 Night parrot conservation reserve created in Queensland for endangered and elusive bird ABC News Retrieved 10 August 2015 a b BBC World Service Discovery The Chase Back from the Dead BBC Retrieved 26 February 2019 a b Critically endangered night parrot fledgling photographed on Queensland reserve Australian Geographic 8 February 2018 Beavan Katrina 24 May 2017 Probable night parrot found in Central Australia thanks to audio recordings ABC News Retrieved 27 February 2019 Jones Ann 23 March 2017 Night parrot sighting in Western Australia shocks birdwatching world ABC News ABC Radio National Australian Broadcasting Corporation Night Parrot rediscovered in Western Australia Bird Guides 23 March 2017 Harewood Greg July 2018 Night Parrot Survey Report Lake Disappointment Potash Project PDF Version 3 ed Reward Minerals Ltd Borrello Eliza 10 October 2003 Second known photo of rare night parrot taken in the Kimberley audio ABC Radio Retrieved 22 August 2020 Michelmore Karen Birch Laura 21 August 2020 Night parrot located by KJ rangers on Martu country in the Pilbara ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 21 August 2020 Barry Derek 21 August 2020 Night parrot pops up in Western Australia The North West Star Retrieved 22 August 2020 Hannam Peter 27 August 2021 Rare night parrot photograph gives us hope there are more out there The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 27 August 2021 Tony Koch 29 June 2013 Is this a sighting of Australia s most elusive bird the night parrot The Australian Worthington Elise 4 July 2013 Queensland bird enthusiast presents museum with photos of elusive night parrot ABC news Retrieved 10 July 2015 a b Jones Ann Sveen Benjamin Lewis David 22 March 2019 Night parrot research labelled fake news by experts after release of damning report ABC News Background Briefing Australian Broadcasting Corporation Pickrell John 3 July 2013 Night parrot tantalising clues revealed Australian Geographic Archived from the original on 7 July 2013 Retrieved 4 July 2013 Leo Joseph 29 December 2013 Found world s most mysterious bird but why all the secrecy The Conversation DNA confirms elusive Night Parrot found Western Australian Museum Western Australian Museum Fraser Andrew DNA test confirms rare night parrot find The Australian Archived from the original on 10 August 2013 Retrieved 9 August 2013 O Donnell Jenna 1 November 2016 Yes More Australian Night Parrots Have Been Discovered National Audubon Society Retrieved 2 November 2016 Wahlquist Calla 25 October 2016 Night parrot population discovered in Queensland national park The Guardian Retrieved 2 November 2016 a b McCarthy Marty 13 September 2017 Night parrot feather discovery proves Australia s most elusive bird is alive in South Australia ABC News Australian Broadcasting Commission Retrieved 14 September 2017 a b AWC receives findings from independent Night Parrot review panel Australian Wildlife Conservancy 29 March 2019 Retrieved 22 August 2020 Henriques Gomes Luke 12 October 2018 Wildlife group investigates claim night parrot photos were staged The Guardian Retrieved 13 October 2018 Taylor Tegan 12 October 2018 Night parrot questions about the veracity of evidence for back from the dead bird appearing in SA ABC News Retrieved 13 October 2018 Further reading EditLeseberg Nick 25 March 2019 Nick Leseberg on Night Parrot research audio Bush Heritage Australia Weidensaul S 2002 The Ghost with Trembling Wings Science Wishful Thinking and the Search for Lost Species North Point Press New York ISBN 0 86547 668 3 pp 75 81 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pezoporus occidentalis Wikispecies has information related to Pezoporus occidentalis Night Parrot Recovery Team Night Parrot Recovery Team Night Parrot Australian Museum Night Parrot Internet Bird Collection Night Parrot Parrot Encyclopedia World Parrot Trust Night Parrot Pezoporus occidentalis BirdLife Species Factsheet BirdLife International Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Night parrot amp oldid 1171833273, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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