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Family fun day at Hastings Thermal Springs

13/11/2009

Hastings Cave is throwing open the doors to the thermal springs pool for a family fun day on Saturday, 28 November.
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Planned fuel reduction burn in the southwest

29/10/2009

The Parks and Wildlife Service and Forestry Tasmania are conducting a planned burn in the Southwest National Park and on lands managed by Forestry Tasmania today.
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Volunteer Campground Hosts Sought for Cockle Creek

21/10/2009

The Parks and Wildlife Service (PWS) is seeking people with a passion for the beautiful Cockle Creek area in Tasmania's far south area to be volunteer campground hosts for several weeks during the coming summer.More

Ground Parrot, Pezoporus wallicus

Ground parrotGround Parrot (Photography by Dave Watts)

Description

The beautifully patterned Ground Parrot is a medium-size bird (290-320mm), bright green with black and yellow markings and a pale yellow wing bar. It has a small orange-red band on the lower forehead. 

Habitat

The Ground Parrot is a secretive bird found in the west of Tasmania, where it prefers buttongrass and open heathlands. The species is not usually seen unless it is flushed out from cover. Although it also occurs on mainland Australia, it is now only found there in fragmented populations where pockets of habitat remain undisturbed.

The Ground Parrot is one of only three ground-dwelling parrots in the world, the others being the extremely rare Night Parrot and New Zealand's highly endangered Kakapo. When disturbed, it flies swiftly just above the ground before dropping back into the vegetation again.

Diet

Ground Parrots usually feed on the ground, eating seeds of sedges, grasses, herbaceous plants and shrubs.

Breeding

The Ground Parrot constructs a shallow nest of fine sticks and grass which is well-hidden under low shrubs. The female incubates the eggs and broods the young. During this time of incubation and brooding, the female is fed by the male, who also feeds the young when they hatch.

Call

The presence of the bird is often only revealed by its characteristic dusk and dawn call, a clear, whistling sequence of notes that rise in pitch before fading. It is silent in flight.

Distribution

Found in suitable habitat throughout western Tasmania and Hunter Island off the northwest coast.