Register      Login
Wildlife Research Wildlife Research Society
Ecology, management and conservation in natural and modified habitats
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Mortality and Dispersal of Juvenile Galahs, Cacatua roseicapilla, in the Western Australian Wheatbelt

I Rowley

Australian Wildlife Research 10(2) 329 - 342
Published: 1983

Abstract

'From 265 tag or band returns (11% of the birds marked) shooting accounts for most galah deaths in the Western Australian wheatbelt, with cats, raptors and motor vehicles as other major mortality factors; a quarter of the young birds that leave the nest may die before they are deserted by their parents after 6 weeks. Newly independent galahs tend to disperse down-wind to the north-west from then on during the dry summer and autumn (January-April). In late autumn and winter dispersal becomes roughly random and the distance travelled increases. Of galahs marked as juveniles and later found dead, 80% had travelled less than 20 km, whilst one third had remained within 5 km of where they were hatched or netted. Juvenile dispersal appears to end in the second autumn of life, when individuals tend to join flocks of non-breeding birds that are only locally nomadic. It is from these local flocks that replacements to the resident breeding pool of adult birds come.

https://doi.org/10.1071/WR9830329

© CSIRO 1983

Committee on Publication Ethics


Rent Article (via Deepdyve) Export Citation Cited By (12) Get Permission

View Dimensions