POLAR GOULDIANS wrote:Hi Greg, it's a reference to the dribbler, and hopefully you never have to hear it.
Hi,
This is a reply to a post from GregH in another topic. I wanted to add that same reply to this discussion because it is more or less a reply to the discussion. I haven't changed anything, so it might sometimes be a bit strange t read as a reply to post on this discussion. Also, I am not a native speaker/writer.
I found the story about the gouldians in Hervey Bay the most surprising. I'd like to see that one day.
Someone mentioned that gouldian numbers are rising again. When I spotted the gouldian finches near Timber Creek, I contacted Mike Reed (who wrote the birdwatching guide I mentioned earlier) to thank him for writing the guide (for without the guide I probably wouldn't have seen any at that time of year) and he emailed me to say that the gouldian numbers were indeed rising again in the NT. So that is good news!
As far as Mareeba is concerned, I asked the people working there (one of my visits) if there were really any gouldians breeding in the wild. I didn't get a straight answer and was only told what I had already read on the internet and read again in the links shown in your discussion: that gouldian finches were spotted once + a photo of a banded gouldian finch fouraging on a man made feeding table.
Forgive me my criticism, but if that bird is used to eating at that feeding table/spot, so would his young or they would al least be around the feeding table somewhere. There is a high possibility that they would visit that table quite frequently at least part of the year and therefore it would be possible to take more pictures and have much more sightings. This is not the case, on the contrary. If it would be the case, they would let the world know with much pride and would probably have more visitors who had photos of the gouldians they spotted. I've been there four times. I like the place a lot and I'm happy to visit. So are many other bird lovers who pay for a one (or more) day birding trip. I presuppose that if any of them, for several years, would have seen a gouldian finch in the wild in Mareeba it would have been first page news. But this has not been the case either. So if you ask me, are there any gouldians in Mareeba, I'd say I don't think so, but I don't know!
But, actually I think this is for me partly what magnificant Australia is all about! The mistery related to the size of the country. That it is still possible to be unsure if there are any gouldians somewhere in a region in Queensland. An older man (breeder from a Cairns club) told me he had seen gouldians in Northern Queensland about 15 years ago. Others say they might be around somewhere else. This is for me what it is all about: the wildness of Australia and therefore also the consequence that there aren't any correct data on the number of gouldians or the places they can be seen. I just hope they are out there somewhere and only hope, with you, that I will spot some in Queensland one day, real wild ones!
Also I think it is not necessary to introduce the birds in the wild from breeder populations and not the best option or most logical one. I think much more engery should be put in preserving the habitat of the bird (and other animals that go with that habitat), where the known populations are residing now, but also to make sure that strips or parcels of their kind of habitat are linked (or almost) all throughout the North of Australia. This way the existing wild populations get a chance - with a little help from concervationists and all concerned Australians - to migrate when tey would be doing better. Helping place nest boxes to counter the competition from longtails and masked finches is also a good solution I think, because the lack of good nesting sites as a result of smaller habitat is a consequence of human endeavours.