NEWS RELEASE
Birdlife Australia’s NSW and ACT
Twitchathon - 26-27 October 2013
Founded in 1901, Birds
Australia, now Birdlife Australia, is Australia's oldest national conservation
organisation, dedicated to the study and conservation of native birds and their
habitats. To assist the organisation in raising some of its funds,
it conducts a Twitchathon on the last weekend of October each year.
Over the past sixteen years, birdwatchers all over NSW and the ACT have
formed into teams and raced about NSW and the ACT to find as many species of
birds as possible over the 24 hour Twitchathon period. Each member of the team
has found sponsorship from friends, family, colleagues or corporations for each
species of bird seen or heard by each team. It has become an extremely
competitive race and enormous fun! Team members have won some fantastic
prizes, which have been sponsored by very supportive corporations and
individuals. They have raised funds for projects associated with
endangered species such as the purchase of trailer and watering units for the
Capertee Regent Honeyeater Volunteer Operations Group, as well as equipment for
both the Educational Units at Gluepot Reserve SA & the Birdlife Australia
Discovery Centre, Sydney Olympic Park. Funds have been provided for the
Hunter Shorebird Roost Site Protection Project, Gosford’s Friends of the Bush
Stone-curlew, the Kangaroo Island SA Glossy Black Cockatoo Conservation Project
and the Murray Valley Bush Stone-curlew Captive Release Project, and monitoring
by volunteers of the NSW Important Bird Areas. Last year we provided
funds for a project to increase both the area and connectivity of native
habitats in the Cowra District, which is located on the Central Tablelands of
NSW, c.100 km south west of Orange NSW and 317 km west of Sydney. In the
last three years, approximately $24,500 was raised each year for the projects
outline.
This
year’s Twitchathon aims to continue the support given in the 2011 Twitchathon
to the Powerful Owl Project. It is intended that the additional funds
will enable Birdlife Southern NSW to extend the project for a third breeding
season. The Powerful Owl Project features the Powerful Owl (Ninox
strenua) in the Greater Sydney region, with new information
collected, analysed and displayed on the new, interactive Birds in Backyards
(BIBY) website. The Powerful Owl serves as a focal point for the
collection of new information on all nocturnal bird species. The aims of
this project are to stimulate and harness community interest in this iconic
Australian species so that, for the first time, an accurate assessment can be
made of its population size, distribution and breeding success in the Sydney
region. Project Officer, David Bain, advises that the Powerful Owls are
now well into breeding season with a number of owls known to be on the nest
with eggs. Chicks will be starting to emerge soon and with over 120
volunteers between Wollongong and Newcastle now involved with the Project, he
expects that we should get a greater understanding of what is happening this
season. Excitingly the project is partnering with Gibberagong
Environmental Education Centre and Taronga Zoo to provide a Powerful Owl
education program to schools in the northern suburbs of Sydney. In other
exciting news there is a nestCAM up and running – check it out at http://birdsinbackyards.net/Powerful-Owl-NestCAM.
Twitchathon 2013 aims to raise about $30,000 to assist this project.
So watch
out for your local Twitchathon team and follow them through this fun event –
watch them “twitch” about in rainforests, swamps, grasslands, woodlands,
sewerage works, backyards and river estuaries, intensely listening, and
desperately searching, for the most or the rarest species. Experience the
excitement of “ticking” and “dipping” on the birds, the desperation to win, the
thrills, the spills of this great weekend adventure! The teams
could be competing in 40° temperatures or during a thunder storm but they will
stick firmly to the Twitchathon Rules! They’ll never give up the thrill of the
chase during the race because so many $’s are at stake! Teams are not
just competing for the highest score, but for the most dollars raised prizes
or even the Lucky Twitcher’s Prize.
You can
also sponsor a few dollars to your local team by contacting:
Alan Morris
Tel (02) 43342776 Email: a.morris42@optusnet.com.au
Your local
Twitchathon team is the Black-necked Stalkers (Greg
Clancy, Gary Eggins, Russell Jago).
Their local
bird club is the Clarence Valley Birdos
See you on the
Twitchathon trail???
For further
information contact : Alan Morris, Twitchathon Coordinator
Birdlife Australia Southern
NSW Group Sydney
Tel 02 4334 2776