Timaru Bird Club, New Zealand

Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Timaru is set to get a slick new aviary thanks to the efforts of the Timaru Bird Club and Timaru Council. The new aviary was approved on 9 February this year after lots of local lobbying. Construction will start on 1 March and take two months.

The project was funded using $100,000 of council money while the Timaru Bird Club made up a $25,000 shortfall. The club reached its fundraising target in half the time council gave them, showing how much support the project had amongst members of the public – who even wrote letters of support to the local newspaper about it. Fundraising efforts kicked off during the Christmas period with a $10,000 donation by the club and the rest was raised through raffles, barbeques and donations. It is certainly a great effort.


Source: Pat Rule, Vice President, Timaru Bird Club, New Zealand.



Bird smuggler arrested in Melbourne

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

In the latest audacious attempt to circumnavigate Australia’s quarantine laws, a Melbourne man has been arrested after customs found birds down his pants.

The Meadow Heights man was stopped by officers at Tullamarine Airport when he arrived from Dubai earlier this month.

Officers claim to have found a multivitamin container on him containing two eggs, live pigeons down his tights and plant seeds in a money belt.

Australia’s tough stance on international bird trade can be argued to be keeping this kind of black market alive. But is it in our ecological interests to open the gates?

Starving spider devours bird

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

These gruesome pictures show what happens when a spider misses breakfast – he eats a bird.

Taken in the backyard of an Atherton property, west of Cairns, they show Golden Orb Weaver spider clenching its legs around a Chestnut-breasted Mannikin that apparently became trapped in its web.

Wildlife experts say the images, which have been making their way around the internet, are real.

But they also say the spider would not have eaten the entire bird, but would use its venom to break the bird down.

Queensland Museum’s Greg Czechura said cases of Golden Orbs eating small birds were “well known but rare”.

“It builds a very strong web,” he said.

“But if a spider gets a bird it is a lucky spider.”

Unlucky bird though.


Recent Blogs