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Red-tailed black cockatoo

The red-tailed black cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus banksii) also known as Banksian- or Banks' black cockatoo, is a large black cockatoo native to Australia. Adult males have a characteristic pair of bright red panels on the tail that gives the species its name. It is more common in the drier parts of the continent. Five subspecies are recognised, differing chiefly in beak size. Although the more northerly subspecies are widespread, the two southern subspecies, the forest red-tailed black cockatoo and the south-eastern red-tailed black cockatoo are under threat.

Red-tailed black cockatoo
A pair (male on left and female on right)
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Psittaciformes
Family: Cacatuidae
Genus: Calyptorhynchus
Species:
C. banksii
Binomial name
Calyptorhynchus banksii
(Latham, 1790)
Subspecies
  • C. b. banksii
  • C. b. graptogyne
  • C. b. macrorhynchus
  • C. b. naso
  • C. b. samueli
Red-tailed black cockatoo range (in red)
Female, Northern Territory
Male, Northern Territory

The species is usually found in eucalyptus woodlands, or along water courses. In the more northerly parts of the country, these cockatoos are commonly seen in large flocks. They are seed eaters and cavity nesters, and as such depend on trees with fairly large diameters, generally Eucalyptus. Populations in southeastern Australia are threatened by deforestation and other habitat alterations. Of the black cockatoos, the red-tailed is the most adaptable to aviculture,[2] although black cockatoos are much rarer and much more expensive in aviculture outside Australia.[3]

Taxonomy and naming

The species complex was first described by the ornithologist John Latham in 1790 as Psittacus banksii,[4] commemorating English botanist Sir Joseph Banks. The red-tailed black cockatoo also has the distinction of being the first bird from Eastern Australia illustrated by a European, as a female, presumably collected at Endeavour River in north Queensland, was sketched by Banks' draughtsman Sydney Parkinson in 1770.[5] Narrowly predating Latham, English naturalist George Shaw described Psittacus magnificus from a specimen collected somewhere in the Port Jackson (now Sydney) region.[6] For many years, the species was referred to as Calyptorhynchus magnificus,[7] proposed by Gregory Mathews in 1927 as Shaw's name had predated Latham's 1790 description. For several decades, Mathews' proposal was accepted by many authorities, although it was unclear whether the original Port Jackson reference had actually referred to the red-tailed black or, more likely, the glossy black cockatoo. In 1994, an application to conserve Calyptorhynchus banksii as the scientific name was accepted by the ICZN.[8] The red-tailed black cockatoo is the type species of the genus Calyptorhynchus,[9] the name of which is derived from the Greek calypto-/καλυπτο- "hidden" and rhynchus/ρυγχος "beak".[10] The change was first made by Anselme Gaëtan Desmarest in 1826.[11]

In 1827, Jennings proposed the name Psittacus niger for the bird.[12] The binomial combination had already been used by Carl Linnaeus for the lesser vasa parrot in 1758,[13] and by Johann Friedrich Gmelin for the palm cockatoo in 1788; it was thus invalid even though both other species were already known by different names at the time. Alternate common names include Banks' black cockatoo, Banksian black cockatoo, or simply black cockatoo.[14] Indigenous people of the central Cape York Peninsula have several names for the bird: (minha) pachang in Pakanh; (inh -) inhulg in Uw Oykangand; and (inh -) anhulg in Uw Olkola. (The bracketed prefix (inh- or minha) is a qualifier meaning 'meat' or 'animal'.)[15] Ngarnarrh or karnamarr are terms used by the Kunwinjku of Arnhem Land.[16][17] In Central Australia, southwest of Alice Springs, the Pitjantjatjara term for the subspecies C. b. samueli is iranti.[18] Karrak is a Noongar term derived from the call for the southwestern race C. b. naso.[19] In the language of the Bungandidj of south-eastern South Australia and western Victoria this bird was called treen.[20]

Classification

The red-tailed black cockatoo's closest relative is the glossy black cockatoo; the two species form the subgenus Calyptorhynchus within the genus of the same name.[14] They are distinguished from the other black cockatoos of the subgenus Zanda by their significant sexual dimorphism and calls of the juveniles; one a squeaking begging call, the other a vocalization when swallowing food.[14][21]

A 1999 mtDNA phylogenetic study of cockatoos utilizing among others, the red-tailed black cockatoo supported the hypotheses that cockatoos originated in Australia before the Paleogene and Neogene periods (66 mya, marking the end of the Mesozoic, to 2.6 mya) and that the genus Cacatua diversified in two separate radiations to the islands of Indonesia, New Guinea, and the South Pacific. It concluded that the first extant cockatoo to diverge from the ancestral cockatoos was the palm cockatoo, followed by a subclade containing the black cockatoos.[22]

A 2008 mitochondrial and nuclear DNA phylogenetic study of the parrots, cockatoos and related taxa by utilizing among others the yellow-tailed black cockatoo, provides confirmatory evidence for a Gondwanaland origin of the ancestral parrots in the Cretaceous period, and an Australasia divergence of the ancestral cockatoos from the parrots in either late Cretaceous (66 mya) or Paleogene (45 mya) periods depending on baseline assumptions.[23]

Five subspecies are recognised; they differ mainly in the size and shape of the beak, the overall bird size and female colouration:[24]

  • C. b. banksii is found in Queensland and, rarely, in far northern New South Wales; it is the largest subspecies by overall body size and has a moderate-sized bill.[24] It merges with subspecies macrorhynchus around the Gulf of Carpentaria. It has disappeared from much of its former range in northern New South Wales and southeast Queensland.[25]
  • C. b. graptogyne, (Endangered)[26] known as the south-eastern red-tailed black cockatoo, is found in southwestern Victoria and southeastern South Australia in an area bordered by Mount Gambier to the west, Portland to the south, Horsham to the northeast and Bordertown to the north.[27] The smallest of the five subspecies,[24] it was only recognised as distinct in the 1980s.[28][29] It is predominantly dependent on stands of Eucalyptus baxteri (brown stringybark), Eucalyptus camaldulensis (river redgum) and Allocasuarina luehmannii (buloke) for feeding and nesting.[30] These tree species have been all threatened by land clearing and most remaining are on private land; possibly only 500–1000 individuals remain.[31] The subspecies and its habitat are the subject of a national recovery plan.[32] In 2007 local landowners are being reimbursed for assisting in regenerating suitable habitat.[33]
  • C. b. macrorhynchus, given the name great-billed cockatoo by Mathews,[34] is found across northern Australia. Although thought to be widespread and abundant, this subspecies has been little studied. It is also large and has a large beak, as its subspecific name implies. Females lack red colouration in their tails.[7]
  • C. b. naso (Vulnerable)[35] is known as the forest red-tailed black cockatoo and is found in the southwest corner of Western Australia between Perth and Albany. This form has a larger bill,[36] and favours marri (Corymbia (formerly Eucalyptus) calophylla), jarrah (E. marginata) and karri (E. diversicolor).[37] Two of the most significant threats to this subspecies are illegal shooting and feral honeybees.[38]
  • C. b. samueli exists in four scattered populations: in central coastal Western Australia from the Pilbara south to the northern Wheatbelt in the vicinity of Northam, and inland river courses in Central Australia, southwestern Queensland and the upper Darling River system in Western New South Wales. Birds of this subspecies are generally smaller with smaller bills than the nominate banksii.[39]

Description

 
Red-tailed black cockatoo (female), C. b. naso subspecies, Whicher Range National Park, south-west Western Australia

Red-tailed black cockatoos are around 60 centimetres (24 in) in length and sexually dimorphic. The male's plumage is all black with a prominent black crest made up of elongated feathers from the forehead and crown. The bill is dark grey. The tail is also black with two lateral bright red panels. Females are black with yellow-orange stripes in the tail and chest, and yellow grading to red spots on the cheeks and wings. The bill is pale and horn-coloured. The underparts are barred with fine yellow over a black base. Male birds weigh between 670 and 920 grams (1.5–2 lb), while females weigh slightly less at 615–870 grams (1.25–1.75 lb).[25] In common with other cockatoos and parrots, red-tailed black cockatoos have zygodactyl feet, two toes facing forward and two backward, that allow them to grasp objects with one foot while standing on the other, for feeding and manipulation. Black cockatoos are almost exclusively left-footed (along with nearly all other cockatoos and most parrots).[40]

Juvenile red-tailed black cockatoos resemble females until puberty, which occurs around four years of age, but have paler yellow barred underparts.[25] As the birds reach maturity, males gradually replace their yellow tail feathers with red ones; the complete process takes around four years.[41]

As with other cockatoos, the red-tailed black cockatoo can be very long-lived in captivity; in 1938, ornithologist Neville Cayley reported one over fifty years old at Taronga Zoo.[42] Another bird residing at London and Rotterdam Zoos was 45 years and 5 months of age when it died in 1979.[43]

Several calls of red-tailed black cockatoos have been recorded. The bird's contact call is a rolling metallic krur-rr or kree, which may carry long distances and is always given while flying;[44] its alarm call is sharp.[44] Displaying males vocalize a sequence of soft growling followed by a repetitive kred-kred-kred-kred.[21]

Distribution and habitat

 
Red-tailed black cockatoo (juvenile male), Darling Scarp, Roleystone, south-west Western Australia

The red-tailed black cockatoo principally occurs across the drier parts of Australia. It is widespread and abundant in a broad band across the northern half of the country, where it has been considered an agricultural pest,[45] with more isolated distribution in the south. It is found in a wide variety of habitats, from shrublands and grasslands through eucalypt, sheoak and Acacia woodlands, to dense tropical rainforests.[5] The bird is dependent on large, old eucalypts for nesting hollows, although the specific gums used vary in different parts of the country.

Cockatoos are not wholly migratory, but they do exhibit regular seasonal movements in different parts of Australia. In the northern parts of the Northern Territory, they largely leave areas of high humidity in the summer wet season.[46] In other parts of the country cockatoo seasonal movements tend to follow food sources, a pattern recorded in Northern Queensland,[47][48] and New South Wales. In southwest Western Australia, both extant subspecies appear to have a north–south pattern; northwards after breeding in the case of subspecies naso,[49] while movements by subspecies samueli in the wheatbelt can be irregular and unrelated to the seasons.[50]

Behaviour

 
In flight
 
Red-tailed black cockatoo in flight, Healesville Sanctuary

Red-tailed black cockatoos are diurnal, raucous and noisy, and are often seen flying high overhead in small flocks, sometimes mixed with other cockatoos. Flocks of up to 500 birds are generally only seen in the north or when the birds are concentrated at some food source. Otherwise, they are generally rather shy of humans. In northern and central Australia, birds may feed on the ground, while the two southern subspecies, graptogyne and naso, are almost exclusively arboreal.[51] They tend to fly rather slowly with intermittent deep flapping wingbeats, markedly different from the shallow wingbeats of the similar glossy black cockatoo. They also often fly at considerable height.[44]

Breeding

The male red-tailed black cockatoo courts by puffing up crest and cheek feathers, and hiding the beak; it then sings and struts, ending in a jump and a flash of red tail feathers toward the female who will most often reply by defensively biting him.[52] Breeding generally takes place from May to September except in the case of the South-eastern subspecies, which nests during summer (December to February). Pairs of the subspecies samueli in the Wheatbelt region of Western Australia may produce two broods,[37] while those of South-eastern subspecies only produce one.[53] Nesting takes place in large vertical tree hollows of tall trees. Isolated trees are generally chosen, so birds can fly to and from them relatively unhindered. The same tree may be used for many years. Hollows can be 1 to 2 metres (3–7 ft) deep and 0.25–0.5 metres (10–20 in) wide, with a base of woodchips. A clutch consists of one or two white, lustreless eggs, although the second chick is in most cases neglected and perishes in infancy.[54]

Feeding

Although red-tailed black cockatoos feed on a wide variety of native and introduced grains, the mainstay of their diet is eucalyptus seeds. There is a specific relationship between the species and larger-fruited species of gums. These vary across Australia but include the marri in Southwest Western Australia, Darwin woollybutt E. miniata across the north of the country, E. baxteri in Victoria and the bloodwood species Corymbia polycarpa and C. intermedia in Queensland. Cockatoos bite off branchlets with clusters of seed capsules, then hold them with their feet while chewing and harvesting seeds before littering the ground with debris. Among other seeds and nuts consumed are those of Acacia, Allocasuarina, Banksia, Grevillea and Hakea, as well as berries, fruits and various insects.[44] Cockatoos have adapted to eating some introduced plants such as the doublegee (Emex australis). There is some evidence of consumption of wild radish (Raphanus raphanistrum), wild turnip (Brassica tournefortii) and melon (Citrullus or Cucumis).[36] Red-tailed black cockatoos have been implicated as agricultural pests of peanut and other crops at Lakeland Downs in Far North Queensland. Here the cockatoos, in flocks of up to several hundred birds, have learned to sever the peanut plants above ground level before pulling the peanuts out of the ground by their stems and shelling them. They also damage electrical cables on pivot irrigators.[55][56]

Conservation status

 
A juvenile male red-tailed black cockatoo feasting on the seeds of a Casuarina tree on McMinn St, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia

The red-tailed black cockatoo is protected under the Australian Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Amendment (Wildlife Protection) Act 2001.[57] These birds are listed internationally under Appendix II of CITES, which allows international trade in live wild-caught and captive-bred specimens, if such exports are not detrimental to wild populations.[58] However, the current Australian restrictions on commercial exports from Australia are not imposed by CITES.[57] C. b. graptogyne is also specifically listed as endangered on the Australian Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999.

Status of the red-tailed black cockatoo as a species, and as a subspecies, also varies from state to state within Australia. For example:

  • The south-eastern red-tailed black cockatoo subspecies C. b. graptogyne is listed as endangered on Schedule 7 of the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972 of South Australia.[59] and is the smallest of the species. Though a June, 2012 count of approximately 1500 individuals is a notable increase from the 2007 count of just 1000, it remains in danger of extinction.[60][61]
  • C. b. graptogyne is also listed as threatened on the Victorian Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988.[62] Under this Act, an Action Statement for the recovery and future management of this species has been prepared.[63] However, it should also be noted that the red-tailed black cockatoo is listed under this Act under its previous Latin name, Calyptorhynchus magnificus. On the 2007 advisory list of threatened vertebrate fauna in Victoria, this subspecies is listed as endangered.[64]
  • The red-tailed black cockatoo is listed as vulnerable on the NSW Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995[65]

Like many Australian cockatoos and parrots, the red-tailed black cockatoo is threatened by the thriving illegal trade in bird smuggling.[66] High demand and high transit mortality mean that many more birds are taken from the wild than actually sold.[67]

In 1997, the Northern Territory Government's Department of Natural Resources, Environment and The Arts (now defunct) proposed a plan for management of the trade in eggs and nestlings of C. b. macrorhynchus. To date the plan has not been implemented.[Notes 1] The Australian Senate inquiry into the Commercial Utilisation of Australian Native Wildlife concluded in early 1998 that routine capture and commercial use of adult wild birds should be prohibited.[67]

The bird is part of an annual census, the Great Cocky count, that has been held every year since 2009 to track the population change of Red-tailed and other black cockatoos.[70]

Aviculture

 
Adult tame female of subspecies samueli

In the late 1990s, red-tailed black cockatoos fetched prices of $1750 in Australia and $8900 (~US$6000) overseas.[3] Hand-raised birds can be bought for anywhere between $15,000 to $40,000 in the United States, where they are seldom seen in aviculture.[71] Hand-reared birds are able to learn a few words and can be quite affectionate, although males may become imprinted and unlikely to breed. The red-tailed black cockatoo is the most commonly seen of the black cockatoos in captivity,[2] and can be hardy and long-lived if given plenty of space. Until now, most birds in captivity have been of subspecies C. b. banksii and C. b. samueli. Birds were often previously bred without much attention to subspecies of origin. However, with an increase in interest in conservation, more aviculturists are concerned about maintaining the integrity of the separate subspecies in cultivation, and so avoid crossbreeding.[2]

The birds breed easily in captivity[72] and can lay eggs every 3 weeks between February and November. Once the female has one egg in her nest, she will not lay another. An egg takes about 30 days to hatch.[73] The eyes of the young open around 3 weeks and the yellow down will show black pin feathers at about 6 weeks. The best time for hand raising is at about 10 weeks when their black feathers are in place but the tail feathers are still short. Young birds fledge after about 4 months and both sexes have the colouring of their mother. Mature male birds will become aggressive to young male birds at puberty (4 years); they must be separated if caged.[72]

Captive breeding guidelines may be found in Husbandry Guidelines for the Red-tailed Black Cockatoo (Bennett, 2008).[74]

Cultural depictions

 
Banksian Cockatoo by Thomas Watling, the first professional European artist to paint in New South Wales
  • A red-tailed black cockatoo, named Karak, was the official mascot of the 2006 Commonwealth Games held in Melbourne.[75] Promotion coincided with an implementation of initiatives to ensure the survival of the south-eastern subspecies graptogyne, as well as increased environmental awareness at the games.
  • A traditional story from western Arnhem Land tells of Black Cockatoo and her husband Crow, who are Bird-people, sprouting black feathers after becoming afflicted with a sickness from across the sea to the north. In fear of being buried underground, they transform into birds and fly high in the sky.[76]
  • In the folklore of the Tiwi people, the red-tailed black cockatoo is said to accompany the dead to heaven.[77]

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  65. ^ DEC | NSW threatened species – Red-tailed Black-Cockatoo
  66. ^ Anon (1995). "More "Renegades" Sentenced". Traffic USA. 14 (2): 6–7.
  67. ^ a b c Senate Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport Committee (2003). . Parliament of Australia. Archived from the original on 10 June 2007. Retrieved 17 June 2007.
  68. ^ Trial Management Program for the Red-tailed Black Cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus banksii) in the Northern Territory of Australia. Parks and Wildlife Commission of the Northern Territory. February 1997.
  69. ^ Vardon, M; Noske R; Moyle B (1997). "Harvesting black cockatoos in the Northern Territory: catastrophe or conservation?". Australian Biologist. 10 (1): 84–93.
  70. ^ "Record number of volunteers sign up for Great Cocky Count". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2 April 2014. Retrieved 15 September 2016.
  71. ^ Baker, Joe (2007). . Birds of Paradise Aviaries. Archived from the original on 11 September 2007. Retrieved 26 August 2007.
  72. ^ a b Forshaw, p. 104
  73. ^ Forshaw, p. 102
  74. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 July 2015.
  75. ^ "Karak the cocky to be mascot for Melbourne Games". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2 April 2004. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
  76. ^ Berndt, Catherine H.; Yunupingu, Djoki (1979). Land of the Rainbow Snake: Aboriginal Children's Stories and Songs from Western Arnhem Land. Sydney: Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-184384-4.
  77. ^ Goodfellow, Denise Lawungkurr. pers. comm.

Notes

  1. ^ Proposed C. b. macrorhynchus quota plan: This subspecies, which is relatively abundant in the territory's northern part, was thought plentiful enough to sustain limited harvesting of young for commercial purposes. This involved the protection of selected 'harvest zones' and the capping of harvest at 600 eggs or hatchlings per year; all captive birds were to be marked with microchips. Separate permits would be issued for collection and export, as well as keeping one as a pet.[68] The Northern Territory government's plan for a restricted harvest was supported by a group of biologists who argued that a 'do-nothing approach' had failed to address illegal trafficking and that limited public funds were available for species or habitat conservation. They felt that a catastrophic collapse in the Northern Territory population was highly unlikely, and that the cockatoo would benefit from increased awareness and a greater understanding of its ecology by local landowners. There would also be a valuable contribution to the science of sustainable utilisation of wild resources.[69] Other experts raised serious concerns with the management plan; the famed psittacine biologist Joseph Forshaw opposed it on several grounds. He expressed concerns that, given the birds' long lifespan, recruitment problems may be masked for many years, by which time recovery of the cockatoo population may be impossible. He also feared that increasing supply would lower prices and hence lower profitability for those involved. Other groups such as the Avicultural Federation of Australia (AFA) raised concerns that populations may be aging due to lack of breeding sites, so they may be especially vulnerable to loss of juveniles which, again, may not be apparent for many years. They also feared that since adults mate for life, a bird whose partner was taken may not mate again.[67]

Cited texts

  • Forshaw, Joseph M.; William T. Cooper (2002). Australian Parrots (3rd ed.). Robina: Alexander Editions. ISBN 978-0-9581212-0-0.
  • Flegg, Jim (2002). Birds of Australia: Photographic Field Guide. Sydney: Reed New Holland. ISBN 978-1-876334-78-9.
  • Lendon, Alan H. (1973). Australian Parrots in Field and Aviary. Angus & Robertson. ISBN 978-0-207-12424-2.
  • Garnett, S. (1993) Threatened and Extinct Birds of Australia. RAOU. National Library, Canberra. ISSN 0812-8014

External links

  • World Parrot Trust Parrot Encyclopedia – Species Profiles
  • Website of Conservation Program of South-eastern Red-tailed Black Cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus banksii graptogyne)

tailed, black, cockatoo, tailed, black, cockatoo, calyptorhynchus, banksii, also, known, banksian, banks, black, cockatoo, large, black, cockatoo, native, australia, adult, males, have, characteristic, pair, bright, panels, tail, that, gives, species, name, mo. The red tailed black cockatoo Calyptorhynchus banksii also known as Banksian or Banks black cockatoo is a large black cockatoo native to Australia Adult males have a characteristic pair of bright red panels on the tail that gives the species its name It is more common in the drier parts of the continent Five subspecies are recognised differing chiefly in beak size Although the more northerly subspecies are widespread the two southern subspecies the forest red tailed black cockatoo and the south eastern red tailed black cockatoo are under threat Red tailed black cockatooA pair male on left and female on right Conservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PsittaciformesFamily CacatuidaeGenus CalyptorhynchusSpecies C banksiiBinomial nameCalyptorhynchus banksii Latham 1790 SubspeciesC b banksii C b graptogyne C b macrorhynchus C b naso C b samueliRed tailed black cockatoo range in red Female Northern TerritoryMale Northern TerritoryThe species is usually found in eucalyptus woodlands or along water courses In the more northerly parts of the country these cockatoos are commonly seen in large flocks They are seed eaters and cavity nesters and as such depend on trees with fairly large diameters generally Eucalyptus Populations in southeastern Australia are threatened by deforestation and other habitat alterations Of the black cockatoos the red tailed is the most adaptable to aviculture 2 although black cockatoos are much rarer and much more expensive in aviculture outside Australia 3 Contents 1 Taxonomy and naming 1 1 Classification 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour 4 1 Breeding 4 2 Feeding 5 Conservation status 6 Aviculture 7 Cultural depictions 8 References 9 Notes 10 Cited texts 11 External linksTaxonomy and namingThe species complex was first described by the ornithologist John Latham in 1790 as Psittacus banksii 4 commemorating English botanist Sir Joseph Banks The red tailed black cockatoo also has the distinction of being the first bird from Eastern Australia illustrated by a European as a female presumably collected at Endeavour River in north Queensland was sketched by Banks draughtsman Sydney Parkinson in 1770 5 Narrowly predating Latham English naturalist George Shaw described Psittacus magnificus from a specimen collected somewhere in the Port Jackson now Sydney region 6 For many years the species was referred to as Calyptorhynchus magnificus 7 proposed by Gregory Mathews in 1927 as Shaw s name had predated Latham s 1790 description For several decades Mathews proposal was accepted by many authorities although it was unclear whether the original Port Jackson reference had actually referred to the red tailed black or more likely the glossy black cockatoo In 1994 an application to conserve Calyptorhynchus banksii as the scientific name was accepted by the ICZN 8 The red tailed black cockatoo is the type species of the genus Calyptorhynchus 9 the name of which is derived from the Greek calypto kalypto hidden and rhynchus rygxos beak 10 The change was first made by Anselme Gaetan Desmarest in 1826 11 In 1827 Jennings proposed the name Psittacus niger for the bird 12 The binomial combination had already been used by Carl Linnaeus for the lesser vasa parrot in 1758 13 and by Johann Friedrich Gmelin for the palm cockatoo in 1788 it was thus invalid even though both other species were already known by different names at the time Alternate common names include Banks black cockatoo Banksian black cockatoo or simply black cockatoo 14 Indigenous people of the central Cape York Peninsula have several names for the bird minha pachang in Pakanh inh inhulg in Uw Oykangand and inh anhulg in Uw Olkola The bracketed prefix inh or minha is a qualifier meaning meat or animal 15 Ngarnarrh or karnamarr are terms used by the Kunwinjku of Arnhem Land 16 17 In Central Australia southwest of Alice Springs the Pitjantjatjara term for the subspecies C b samueli is iranti 18 Karrak is a Noongar term derived from the call for the southwestern race C b naso 19 In the language of the Bungandidj of south eastern South Australia and western Victoria this bird was called treen 20 Classification The red tailed black cockatoo s closest relative is the glossy black cockatoo the two species form the subgenus Calyptorhynchus within the genus of the same name 14 They are distinguished from the other black cockatoos of the subgenus Zanda by their significant sexual dimorphism and calls of the juveniles one a squeaking begging call the other a vocalization when swallowing food 14 21 A 1999 mtDNA phylogenetic study of cockatoos utilizing among others the red tailed black cockatoo supported the hypotheses that cockatoos originated in Australia before the Paleogene and Neogene periods 66 mya marking the end of the Mesozoic to 2 6 mya and that the genus Cacatua diversified in two separate radiations to the islands of Indonesia New Guinea and the South Pacific It concluded that the first extant cockatoo to diverge from the ancestral cockatoos was the palm cockatoo followed by a subclade containing the black cockatoos 22 A 2008 mitochondrial and nuclear DNA phylogenetic study of the parrots cockatoos and related taxa by utilizing among others the yellow tailed black cockatoo provides confirmatory evidence for a Gondwanaland origin of the ancestral parrots in the Cretaceous period and an Australasia divergence of the ancestral cockatoos from the parrots in either late Cretaceous 66 mya or Paleogene 45 mya periods depending on baseline assumptions 23 Five subspecies are recognised they differ mainly in the size and shape of the beak the overall bird size and female colouration 24 C b banksii is found in Queensland and rarely in far northern New South Wales it is the largest subspecies by overall body size and has a moderate sized bill 24 It merges with subspecies macrorhynchus around the Gulf of Carpentaria It has disappeared from much of its former range in northern New South Wales and southeast Queensland 25 C b graptogyne Endangered 26 known as the south eastern red tailed black cockatoo is found in southwestern Victoria and southeastern South Australia in an area bordered by Mount Gambier to the west Portland to the south Horsham to the northeast and Bordertown to the north 27 The smallest of the five subspecies 24 it was only recognised as distinct in the 1980s 28 29 It is predominantly dependent on stands of Eucalyptus baxteri brown stringybark Eucalyptus camaldulensis river redgum and Allocasuarina luehmannii buloke for feeding and nesting 30 These tree species have been all threatened by land clearing and most remaining are on private land possibly only 500 1000 individuals remain 31 The subspecies and its habitat are the subject of a national recovery plan 32 In 2007 local landowners are being reimbursed for assisting in regenerating suitable habitat 33 C b macrorhynchus given the name great billed cockatoo by Mathews 34 is found across northern Australia Although thought to be widespread and abundant this subspecies has been little studied It is also large and has a large beak as its subspecific name implies Females lack red colouration in their tails 7 C b naso Vulnerable 35 is known as the forest red tailed black cockatoo and is found in the southwest corner of Western Australia between Perth and Albany This form has a larger bill 36 and favours marri Corymbia formerly Eucalyptus calophylla jarrah E marginata and karri E diversicolor 37 Two of the most significant threats to this subspecies are illegal shooting and feral honeybees 38 C b samueli exists in four scattered populations in central coastal Western Australia from the Pilbara south to the northern Wheatbelt in the vicinity of Northam and inland river courses in Central Australia southwestern Queensland and the upper Darling River system in Western New South Wales Birds of this subspecies are generally smaller with smaller bills than the nominate banksii 39 Description nbsp Red tailed black cockatoo female C b naso subspecies Whicher Range National Park south west Western AustraliaRed tailed black cockatoos are around 60 centimetres 24 in in length and sexually dimorphic The male s plumage is all black with a prominent black crest made up of elongated feathers from the forehead and crown The bill is dark grey The tail is also black with two lateral bright red panels Females are black with yellow orange stripes in the tail and chest and yellow grading to red spots on the cheeks and wings The bill is pale and horn coloured The underparts are barred with fine yellow over a black base Male birds weigh between 670 and 920 grams 1 5 2 lb while females weigh slightly less at 615 870 grams 1 25 1 75 lb 25 In common with other cockatoos and parrots red tailed black cockatoos have zygodactyl feet two toes facing forward and two backward that allow them to grasp objects with one foot while standing on the other for feeding and manipulation Black cockatoos are almost exclusively left footed along with nearly all other cockatoos and most parrots 40 Juvenile red tailed black cockatoos resemble females until puberty which occurs around four years of age but have paler yellow barred underparts 25 As the birds reach maturity males gradually replace their yellow tail feathers with red ones the complete process takes around four years 41 As with other cockatoos the red tailed black cockatoo can be very long lived in captivity in 1938 ornithologist Neville Cayley reported one over fifty years old at Taronga Zoo 42 Another bird residing at London and Rotterdam Zoos was 45 years and 5 months of age when it died in 1979 43 Several calls of red tailed black cockatoos have been recorded The bird s contact call is a rolling metallic krur rr or kree which may carry long distances and is always given while flying 44 its alarm call is sharp 44 Displaying males vocalize a sequence of soft growling followed by a repetitive kred kred kred kred 21 Distribution and habitat nbsp Red tailed black cockatoo juvenile male Darling Scarp Roleystone south west Western AustraliaThe red tailed black cockatoo principally occurs across the drier parts of Australia It is widespread and abundant in a broad band across the northern half of the country where it has been considered an agricultural pest 45 with more isolated distribution in the south It is found in a wide variety of habitats from shrublands and grasslands through eucalypt sheoak and Acacia woodlands to dense tropical rainforests 5 The bird is dependent on large old eucalypts for nesting hollows although the specific gums used vary in different parts of the country Cockatoos are not wholly migratory but they do exhibit regular seasonal movements in different parts of Australia In the northern parts of the Northern Territory they largely leave areas of high humidity in the summer wet season 46 In other parts of the country cockatoo seasonal movements tend to follow food sources a pattern recorded in Northern Queensland 47 48 and New South Wales In southwest Western Australia both extant subspecies appear to have a north south pattern northwards after breeding in the case of subspecies naso 49 while movements by subspecies samueli in the wheatbelt can be irregular and unrelated to the seasons 50 Behaviour nbsp In flight nbsp Red tailed black cockatoo in flight Healesville SanctuaryRed tailed black cockatoos are diurnal raucous and noisy and are often seen flying high overhead in small flocks sometimes mixed with other cockatoos Flocks of up to 500 birds are generally only seen in the north or when the birds are concentrated at some food source Otherwise they are generally rather shy of humans In northern and central Australia birds may feed on the ground while the two southern subspecies graptogyne and naso are almost exclusively arboreal 51 They tend to fly rather slowly with intermittent deep flapping wingbeats markedly different from the shallow wingbeats of the similar glossy black cockatoo They also often fly at considerable height 44 Breeding The male red tailed black cockatoo courts by puffing up crest and cheek feathers and hiding the beak it then sings and struts ending in a jump and a flash of red tail feathers toward the female who will most often reply by defensively biting him 52 Breeding generally takes place from May to September except in the case of the South eastern subspecies which nests during summer December to February Pairs of the subspecies samueli in the Wheatbelt region of Western Australia may produce two broods 37 while those of South eastern subspecies only produce one 53 Nesting takes place in large vertical tree hollows of tall trees Isolated trees are generally chosen so birds can fly to and from them relatively unhindered The same tree may be used for many years Hollows can be 1 to 2 metres 3 7 ft deep and 0 25 0 5 metres 10 20 in wide with a base of woodchips A clutch consists of one or two white lustreless eggs although the second chick is in most cases neglected and perishes in infancy 54 nbsp Chick at 1 hour old nbsp Chick at 1 day old nbsp Chick at 1 week old nbsp Chick at 2 weeks old nbsp Chick at 3 weeks old nbsp Chick at 4 weeks old nbsp Chick at 5 weeks old nbsp Chick at 6 weeks oldFeeding Although red tailed black cockatoos feed on a wide variety of native and introduced grains the mainstay of their diet is eucalyptus seeds There is a specific relationship between the species and larger fruited species of gums These vary across Australia but include the marri in Southwest Western Australia Darwin woollybutt E miniata across the north of the country E baxteri in Victoria and the bloodwood species Corymbia polycarpa and C intermedia in Queensland Cockatoos bite off branchlets with clusters of seed capsules then hold them with their feet while chewing and harvesting seeds before littering the ground with debris Among other seeds and nuts consumed are those of Acacia Allocasuarina Banksia Grevillea and Hakea as well as berries fruits and various insects 44 Cockatoos have adapted to eating some introduced plants such as the doublegee Emex australis There is some evidence of consumption of wild radish Raphanus raphanistrum wild turnip Brassica tournefortii and melon Citrullus or Cucumis 36 Red tailed black cockatoos have been implicated as agricultural pests of peanut and other crops at Lakeland Downs in Far North Queensland Here the cockatoos in flocks of up to several hundred birds have learned to sever the peanut plants above ground level before pulling the peanuts out of the ground by their stems and shelling them They also damage electrical cables on pivot irrigators 55 56 Conservation status nbsp A juvenile male red tailed black cockatoo feasting on the seeds of a Casuarina tree on McMinn St Darwin Northern Territory AustraliaThe red tailed black cockatoo is protected under the Australian Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Amendment Wildlife Protection Act 2001 57 These birds are listed internationally under Appendix II of CITES which allows international trade in live wild caught and captive bred specimens if such exports are not detrimental to wild populations 58 However the current Australian restrictions on commercial exports from Australia are not imposed by CITES 57 C b graptogyne is also specifically listed as endangered on the Australian Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 Status of the red tailed black cockatoo as a species and as a subspecies also varies from state to state within Australia For example The south eastern red tailed black cockatoo subspecies C b graptogyne is listed as endangered on Schedule 7 of the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972 of South Australia 59 and is the smallest of the species Though a June 2012 count of approximately 1500 individuals is a notable increase from the 2007 count of just 1000 it remains in danger of extinction 60 61 C b graptogyne is also listed as threatened on the Victorian Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988 62 Under this Act an Action Statement for the recovery and future management of this species has been prepared 63 However it should also be noted that the red tailed black cockatoo is listed under this Act under its previous Latin name Calyptorhynchus magnificus On the 2007 advisory list of threatened vertebrate fauna in Victoria this subspecies is listed as endangered 64 The red tailed black cockatoo is listed as vulnerable on the NSW Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995 65 Like many Australian cockatoos and parrots the red tailed black cockatoo is threatened by the thriving illegal trade in bird smuggling 66 High demand and high transit mortality mean that many more birds are taken from the wild than actually sold 67 In 1997 the Northern Territory Government s Department of Natural Resources Environment and The Arts now defunct proposed a plan for management of the trade in eggs and nestlings of C b macrorhynchus To date the plan has not been implemented Notes 1 The Australian Senate inquiry into the Commercial Utilisation of Australian Native Wildlife concluded in early 1998 that routine capture and commercial use of adult wild birds should be prohibited 67 The bird is part of an annual census the Great Cocky count that has been held every year since 2009 to track the population change of Red tailed and other black cockatoos 70 Aviculture nbsp Adult tame female of subspecies samueliIn the late 1990s red tailed black cockatoos fetched prices of 1750 in Australia and 8900 US 6000 overseas 3 Hand raised birds can be bought for anywhere between 15 000 to 40 000 in the United States where they are seldom seen in aviculture 71 Hand reared birds are able to learn a few words and can be quite affectionate although males may become imprinted and unlikely to breed The red tailed black cockatoo is the most commonly seen of the black cockatoos in captivity 2 and can be hardy and long lived if given plenty of space Until now most birds in captivity have been of subspecies C b banksii and C b samueli Birds were often previously bred without much attention to subspecies of origin However with an increase in interest in conservation more aviculturists are concerned about maintaining the integrity of the separate subspecies in cultivation and so avoid crossbreeding 2 The birds breed easily in captivity 72 and can lay eggs every 3 weeks between February and November Once the female has one egg in her nest she will not lay another An egg takes about 30 days to hatch 73 The eyes of the young open around 3 weeks and the yellow down will show black pin feathers at about 6 weeks The best time for hand raising is at about 10 weeks when their black feathers are in place but the tail feathers are still short Young birds fledge after about 4 months and both sexes have the colouring of their mother Mature male birds will become aggressive to young male birds at puberty 4 years they must be separated if caged 72 Captive breeding guidelines may be found in Husbandry Guidelines for the Red tailed Black Cockatoo Bennett 2008 74 Cultural depictions nbsp Banksian Cockatoo by Thomas Watling the first professional European artist to paint in New South WalesA red tailed black cockatoo named Karak was the official mascot of the 2006 Commonwealth Games held in Melbourne 75 Promotion coincided with an implementation of initiatives to ensure the survival of the south eastern subspecies graptogyne as well as increased environmental awareness at the games A traditional story from western Arnhem Land tells of Black Cockatoo and her husband Crow who are Bird people sprouting black feathers after becoming afflicted with a sickness from across the sea to the north In fear of being buried underground they transform into birds and fly high in the sky 76 In the folklore of the Tiwi people the red tailed black cockatoo is said to accompany the dead to heaven 77 References BirdLife International 2012 Calyptorhynchus banksii IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2012 Retrieved 26 November 2013 old form url a b c Forshaw p 103 a b Rural Industries Research amp Development Corporation 1997 Sustainable Economic of Native Australian Birds and Reptiles Can controlled trade improve conservation of species Barton The Corporation p 3 ISBN 978 0 642 24638 7 Online summary Archived 6 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine Latham John 1790 Index Ornithologicus Sive Systema Ornithologiae Complectens Avium Divisionem In Classes Ordines Genera Species Ipsarumque Varietates in Latin Vol 1 London Leigh amp Sotheby p 107 a b Forshaw p 94 Rowley Ian 1997 Cacatuidae In del Hoyo J Elliott A Sargatal J eds Handbook of the Birds of the World Volume 4 Sandgrouse to Cuckoos Cacatuidae summary Lynx Edicions ISBN 978 84 87334 22 1 a b Lendon p 64 Schodde Richard Bock Walter 1994 Case 2856 Psittacus banksii Latham 1790 and P lathami Temminck 1807 currently Calyptorhynchus banksii and C lathami Aves Psittaciformes proposed conservation of the specific names Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 51 3 253 255 doi 10 5962 bhl part 7207 Forshaw p 55 Liddell Henry George Robert Scott 1980 Greek English Lexicon Abridged Edition Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 910207 5 Desmarest Anselme Gaetan 1826 Perroquet Dictionnaire des Sciences Naturelles dans lequel on traite methodiquement des differens etres de la nature consideres soit en eux memes d apres l etat actuel de nos connoissances soit relativement a l utilite qu en peuvent retirer la medecine l agriculture le commerce et les arts Suivi d une biographie des plus celebres naturalistes Par plusieurs Professeurs du Jardin du Roi et des principales Ecoles de Paris in French Strasbourg F G Levrault pp 21 117 OCLC 4345179 Jennings J 1827 Ornithologia or The Birds a poem in two parts with an introduction to their natural history and copious notes London Poole amp Edwards p 399 Linnaeus Carl 1758 Systema naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis Tomus I Editio decima reformata in Latin Holmiae Laurentii Salvii p 824 Archived from the original on 19 March 2015 a b c Forshaw p 89 Hamilton P 1997 red tailed black cockatoo Calyptorhynchus magnificus Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Archived from the original on 12 February 2008 Retrieved 8 June 2007 Garde Murray karnamarr Bininj Kunwok online dictionary Bininj Kunwok Regional Language Centre Retrieved 16 June 2019 Goodfellow Denise Lawungkurr 2005 Birds of Australia s Top End Parap Northern Territory Scrubfowl Press ISBN 978 0 9578849 0 8 Cliff Goddard 1992 Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara To English Dictionary 2nd ed Alice Springs Institute for Aboriginal Development p 21 ISBN 978 0 949659 64 4 Abbott Ian 2001 Karrak watch The Forest red tailed black cockatoo NatureBase Western Australia Dept of Environment and Conservation Archived from the original on 22 September 2007 Retrieved 12 June 2007 Smith Mrs James 1880 The Booandik Tribe of South Australian Aborigines A Sketch of Their Habits Customs Legends and Language Adelaide E Spiller Government Printer a b Courtney J 1996 The juvenile food begging calls food swallowing vocalisation and begging postures in Australian Cockatoos Australian Bird Watcher 16 236 49 Brown DM Toft CA 1999 Molecular systematics and biogeography of the cockatoos Psittaciformes Cacatuidae Auk 116 1 141 157 doi 10 2307 4089461 JSTOR 4089461 Wright et al 18 July 2008 A Multilocus Molecular Phylogeny of the Parrots Psittaciformes Support for a Gonwanan Origin During the Cretaceous Molecular Biology and Evolution 25 10 2141 2156 doi 10 1093 molbev msn160 PMC 2727385 PMID 18653733 a b c Higgins Peter Jeffrey 1999 Handbook of Australian New Zealand and Antarctic Birds Volume 4 Parrots to Dollarbird Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 553071 1 a b c Forshaw p 90 Garnett p 99 Hill R Burnard T 2001 A Draft Habitat Management Plan for the South eastern Red tailed Black Cockatoo Unpublished report to the Red tailed Black Cockatoo Recovery Team Ford J 1980 Morphological and ecological divergence and convergence in isolated populations of the Red tailed Black Cockatoo Emu 80 3 103 120 doi 10 1071 MU9800103 Schodde R 1988 New subspecies of Australian birds Canberra Bird Notes 13 4 119 122 Joseph L 1982 The Red tailed Black Cockatoo in south eastern Australia Emu 82 1 42 45 doi 10 1071 MU9820042 Joseph L Emison W B Bren W M 1991 Critical assessment of the conservation status of the Red tailed Black Cockatoo in south eastern Australia with special reference to nesting requirements Emu 91 1 46 50 doi 10 1071 MU9910046 National Recovery Plan for the South Eastern Red Tailed Black Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus banksii graptogyne Australia Department of the Environment and Heritage 2005 Archived from the original on 9 September 2007 Retrieved 12 August 2007 Landholders rewarded for helping save red tailed black cockatoo ABC Southwest Victoria Australian Broadcasting Corporation 4 April 2007 Archived from the original on 8 November 2016 Retrieved 13 August 2007 Schodde Richard February 2000 The Mathews collection and the Birds of Australia NLA News National Library of Australia Archived from the original on 27 August 2006 Retrieved 15 August 2007 Species Profile and Threats Database Calyptorhynchus banksii naso Forest Red tailed Black Cockatoo Karrak Australian Department of Agriculture Water and the Environment Retrieved 24 April 2021 a b Saunders D Rowley I Smith G T 1985 The effects of clearing for agriculture on the distribution of cockatoos in the southwest of western Australia In Keast A Recher HF Ford H Saunders DA eds Birds of Eucalypt Forests and Woodlands Ecology Conservation Management Chipping Norton Surrey Beatty pp 309 21 ISBN 978 0 949324 06 1 a b Saunders D A 1977 Red tailed Black Cockatoo breeding twice a year in the south west of Western Australia Emu 77 3 107 110 doi 10 1071 MU9770107 Forest Black Cockatoo Baudin s Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus baudinii and Forest Redtailed Black Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus banksii naso Recovery Plan Australian Government Department of Climate Change Energy the Environment and Water 14 May 2008 Retrieved 24 June 2023 Forshaw p 91 2 Stewart Doug 10 January 1996 Why Cockatoos are Left Footed National Wildlife Federation Retrieved 7 August 2016 Lendon p 66 Lendon p 68 Brouwer K Jones M King C Schifter H 2000 Longevity records for Psittaciformes in captivity International Zoo Yearbook 37 299 316 doi 10 1111 j 1748 1090 2000 tb00735 x a b c d Forshaw p 99 100 Lim T K Bowman L Tidemann S 1993 A report on the survey of winged vertebrate pest damage on crops in the Northern Territory Technical Bulletin Northern Territory Dept Of Primary Industry and Fisheries 209 Storr GM 1977 Birds of the Northern Territory Special publications of the Western Australia Museum 7 Perth Western Australia Museum ISBN 978 0 7244 6281 0 Bravery J A Jim 1970 The birds of the Atherton Shire Queensland Emu 70 2 49 63 doi 10 1071 MU970049 Gill HB 1970 Birds of Innisfail and hinterland Emu 70 3 105 116 doi 10 1071 MU970105 Ford JR 1965 New Information on the distribution of birds of south western Australia The Western Australian Naturalist 10 1 7 12 Sedgwick Eric H 1949 Bird movements in the wheatbelt of Western Australia The Western Australian Naturalist 2 2 25 33 Forshaw p 97 8 Forshaw p 100 Emison WB White CM Caldow WD 1995 Presumptive Renesting of Red tailed Black Cockatoos in South eastern Australia PDF Emu 95 2 141 144 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 565 7859 doi 10 1071 MU9950141 Beruldsen Gordon 2003 Australian Birds Their Nests and Eggs Kenmore Hills G Beruldsen p 240 ISBN 978 0 646 42798 0 Ahmet Mike 1998 The damage caused by Red tailed Black Cockatoos Calyptorhynchus banksii on peanut and other crops within the farming district of Lakeland Downs Cape York Peninsula Report to Queensland Department of Environment 1 Garnett Stephen 1998 Red tailed Black Cockatoo damage and damage mitigation at Lakeland Downs Cape York Peninsula Eclectus 5 26 34 a b Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Amendment Wildlife Protection Act 2001 Commonwealth of Australia Law Australian Government Attorney General s Department 11 July 2001 Retrieved 5 September 2007 Inskipp T Gillett HJ 2003 Checklist of CITES Species PDF Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora 84 Archived from the original PDF on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 24 August 2007 National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972 Schedule 7 Impey Tasha 6 June 2012 Breeding baby Red tailed Black cockatoos ABC South East SA Retrieved 12 November 2012 Department of the Environment and Water Resources 3 June 2011 National Recovery Plan for the South eastern Red tailed Black Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus banksii graptogyne Canberra Australian Capital Territory Commonwealth of Australia Department of Sustainability and Environment Victoria Archived 18 July 2005 at the Wayback Machine Department of Sustainability and Environment Victoria Archived 11 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine Victorian Department of Sustainability and Environment 2007 Advisory List of Threatened Vertebrate Fauna in Victoria 2007 East Melbourne Victoria Department of Sustainability and Environment p 15 ISBN 978 1 74208 039 0 DEC NSW threatened species Red tailed Black Cockatoo Anon 1995 More Renegades Sentenced Traffic USA 14 2 6 7 a b c Senate Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport Committee 2003 Commercial Utilisation of Australian Native Wildlife Chapter 13 Aviculture Parliament of Australia Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 17 June 2007 Trial Management Program for the Red tailed Black Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus banksii in the Northern Territory of Australia Parks and Wildlife Commission of the Northern Territory February 1997 Vardon M Noske R Moyle B 1997 Harvesting black cockatoos in the Northern Territory catastrophe or conservation Australian Biologist 10 1 84 93 Record number of volunteers sign up for Great Cocky Count Australian Broadcasting Corporation 2 April 2014 Retrieved 15 September 2016 Baker Joe 2007 Rare unusual difficult to find Black Palm Red Tail and Gang Gang Cockatoos Blue Napes Hawk Heads Birds of Paradise Aviaries Archived from the original on 11 September 2007 Retrieved 26 August 2007 a b Forshaw p 104 Forshaw p 102 Husbandry Guidelines for the Red tailed Black Cockatoo PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 July 2015 Karak the cocky to be mascot for Melbourne Games Australian Broadcasting Corporation 2 April 2004 Retrieved 28 July 2014 Berndt Catherine H Yunupingu Djoki 1979 Land of the Rainbow Snake Aboriginal Children s Stories and Songs from Western Arnhem Land Sydney Collins ISBN 978 0 00 184384 4 Goodfellow Denise Lawungkurr pers comm Notes Proposed C b macrorhynchus quota plan This subspecies which is relatively abundant in the territory s northern part was thought plentiful enough to sustain limited harvesting of young for commercial purposes This involved the protection of selected harvest zones and the capping of harvest at 600 eggs or hatchlings per year all captive birds were to be marked with microchips Separate permits would be issued for collection and export as well as keeping one as a pet 68 The Northern Territory government s plan for a restricted harvest was supported by a group of biologists who argued that a do nothing approach had failed to address illegal trafficking and that limited public funds were available for species or habitat conservation They felt that a catastrophic collapse in the Northern Territory population was highly unlikely and that the cockatoo would benefit from increased awareness and a greater understanding of its ecology by local landowners There would also be a valuable contribution to the science of sustainable utilisation of wild resources 69 Other experts raised serious concerns with the management plan the famed psittacine biologist Joseph Forshaw opposed it on several grounds He expressed concerns that given the birds long lifespan recruitment problems may be masked for many years by which time recovery of the cockatoo population may be impossible He also feared that increasing supply would lower prices and hence lower profitability for those involved Other groups such as the Avicultural Federation of Australia AFA raised concerns that populations may be aging due to lack of breeding sites so they may be especially vulnerable to loss of juveniles which again may not be apparent for many years They also feared that since adults mate for life a bird whose partner was taken may not mate again 67 Cited textsForshaw Joseph M William T Cooper 2002 Australian Parrots 3rd ed Robina Alexander Editions ISBN 978 0 9581212 0 0 Flegg Jim 2002 Birds of Australia Photographic Field Guide Sydney Reed New Holland ISBN 978 1 876334 78 9 Lendon Alan H 1973 Australian Parrots in Field and Aviary Angus amp Robertson ISBN 978 0 207 12424 2 Garnett S 1993 Threatened and Extinct Birds of Australia RAOU National Library Canberra ISSN 0812 8014External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Red tailed Black Cockatoo nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Calyptorhynchus banksii nbsp Australia portal nbsp Birds portalWorld Parrot Trust Parrot Encyclopedia Species Profiles Website of Conservation Program of South eastern Red tailed Black Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus banksii graptogyne Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Red tailed black cockatoo amp oldid 1180785503, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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