Important Bird Area in Western Australia
The IBA is an important site for long-billed black cockatoos
North Dandalup Important Bird Area comprises a highly fragmented 76 km2 tract of land lying about 50 km south of Perth in the Peel region of south-west Western Australia . It is named after the nearby small town of North Dandalup .
Description
The Important Bird Area (IBA) boundaries are defined by remnant native vegetation, mainly eucalypt open forest and woodland, within a 6 km foraging radius of non-breeding season roost sites for black cockatoos . The IBA consists of all blocks of native vegetation greater than one hectare in water catchment areas , state forests , nature reserves and private land. Part of the IBA lies within the Serpentine National Park . The region has a Mediterranean climate .[ 1]
Birds
The site has been identified by BirdLife International as an IBA because it supports at least 765 long-billed black cockatoos with roosting sites and associated foraging habitat outside the breeding season, as well as small numbers of short-billed black cockatoos and populations of red-capped parrots , rufous treecreepers , red-winged fairywrens , western spinebills , western yellow and white-breasted robins , and western thornbills .[ 2] The forest redtail subspecies of the red-tailed black cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus banksii naso ) is regularly recorded in the IBA.[ 1]
References
32°27′26″S 116°02′29″E / 32.45722°S 116.04139°E / -32.45722; 116.04139