Saturday, 2 May 2009

Bugs to listen in on wildlife's most wanted, Weekend Australian, 2 May, 2009.

Bugs to listen in on wildlife's most wanted

Stapleton, JohnWeekend Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 02 May 2009: 9.
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"Ornithologists have been searching for the night parrot for years, but it is just so rare the chance of being in the right place at the right time is very small," Dr [Elizabeth Tasker] said. "It may turn out not to be extinct; and these units are our best chance to find out whether it has survived."
Dr Tasker said the technology had great potential to be used across a range of species, particularly birds and frogs because of their distinctive calls. The even rarer eastern bristlebird, said to look and behave more like a bush rat than a bird, is likely to be the next bird researchers look for.
Leonie Gale, chief executive of the Foundation for National Parks and Wildlife, said the technology could revolutionise the way threatened species were monitored, located and protected. "Australia will lose many species in the next 30 years; this is a remote management tool for threatened species which could help stop that happening," she said.

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