June 1 - 30, 2026: Issue 655

Plastic walk-cycleway Newport to The Serpentine South Bilgola Beach: Updated pictures

This is due to finish in September 2026. For this project, $2.7M came from the State Government and $300K from Council. Work includes improvement to the old walkway east of the elevated walkway and planting. 

June 2026 report: Microplastic assessment report: Dee Why Lagoon Among Most Polluted in New South Wales - 56.55% of Manly Lagoon's plastic pollution is Artificial Turf - Pittwater Least Polluted

The council has installed plastic grass and rubber crumb softfall in the flood zone of Narrabeen's 'Rat Park' and has already installed, without consultation and despite objections, plastic turf in flood zones alongside Narrabeen Lagoon, in Avalon's Dunbar Park and at Bayview's Kamilaroi Park, and at Lynne Czinner Park - Lynne was passionate about maintaining the Pittwater environment.

Further in:


Some photos taken this month (from inside bus - apologies for blurry window). At the south end leading onto Newport beach carpark further runnels and planks have been installed this week (end of June 26) - these pictures were taken Sunday June 14:


 

NSW strengthens surveillance for H5 bird flu

On Wednesday June 24 2026 the NSW Government announced it has increased surveillance and boosted biosecurity capacity for H5 bird flu by dedicating additional resources to identifying potential cases coupled with an awareness campaign focused on input from the community and the needs of industry.

'Surveillance operations have ramped up as state prepares for a potential detection in NSW, including establishing a H5 bird flu call centre, training over 380 additional staff, including Local Land Services and National Parks and Wildlife Service field officers to undertake surveillance for H5 bird flu.' the government stated

'All surveillance testing for H5 bird flu takes place at the Elizbeth Macarthur Agricultural Institute (EMAI), which is funded by the NSW Government.

The State Coordination Centre has been stood up at the Department of Primary Industry and Regional Development (DPIRD)’s Orange Agricultural Institute to provide coordination of surveillance operations and NSW’s response should a detection be confirmed.

NSW DPIRD has delivered a series of webinars and workshops with government field staff and veterinarians to build practical capability to respond to an H5 bird flu detection in NSW.

The focus has been on hands-on skills including roles, reporting, sampling and PPE, resulting in strong improvements in participant confidence.

The NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water has developed detailed wildlife preparedness plans for 34 priority sites, and state-wide response plans for vulnerable species including little penguins and fur seals.

NSW has well developed wildlife surveillance systems to facilitate early detection and there are established national arrangements for responding to incursions of H5 bird flu in wildlife.

An awareness campaign is underway direct with industry and across social media providing the essential information. Briefings have been held with environmental groups, and an industry briefing is planned for later this week.

Additional resources have been deployed to manage the Emergency Animal Disease Hotline.'

To date, H5 bird flu has not been detected in NSW. NSW remains free of H5 bird flu.

NSW Health advises that the risk to human health remains low.

If unusual deaths or illness in wild birds are observed please AVOID contact, RECORD by taking photos or video and REPORT immediately to the Emergency Animal Disease Hotline on 1800 675 888.

NSW Minister for Agriculture Tara Moriarty said:

“We are doing everything possible to keep H5 out of NSW and protecting our primary industries sector by strengthening surveillance and boosting biosecurity capacity and capability across the production and environmental fronts.

“We have delivered more than 50 briefings and workshops to key agricultural and wildlife stakeholders, ensuring if it does arrive industry and the community have the vital information to manage an outbreak.

“We are using the best available data to target actions for our most at-risk wildlife species and important natural places.

“We continue to offer our support to Western Australia following its confirmed cases, in technical or operational areas; we want to provide support where we can to help WA and contain the virus.”

NSW Chief Veterinary Officer Jo Coombe said:

“We are establishing innovative spatial mapping tools, decision-support systems and response databases to enable rapid, evidence-based action during a wildlife outbreak.

“While the current incursion has only been confirmed in two birds, eradication or containment of H5 bird flu in wildlife is unlikely to be possible if it becomes established in wildlife populations.

We continue to ask the community to AVOID, RECORD and REPORT any unusual signs of illness or deaths of multiple birds, especially on the coastline, so we can manage any incursion quickly.

“We are working closely with the Australian Government and following national arrangements in place.

“Our focus, if it were to become established in NSW, would be to minimise risk of onward transmission to commercial poultry, protect human health, where possible reduce the impact on the environment, and ensure stakeholders are kept informed.”

NSW Government offers support following H5 bird flu in Western Australia

The NSW Government has offered support to Western Australia following a confirmed case of H5 bird flu in a dead wild bird in Western Australia.

The case is the first detection of H5 bird flu on the Australian continent, following confirmation by the Australian Centre for Disease Preparedness.

While the Western Australian Government is the lead agency NSW Government will provide support in technical or operational areas.

To date, H5 bird flu has not been detected in NSW.

NSW has well developed wildlife surveillance systems to facilitate early detection and there are established national arrangements for responding to incursions of H5 bird flu in wildlife.

If unusual deaths or illness in wild birds are observed please AVOID contact, RECORD by taking photos or video and REPORT immediately to the Emergency Animal Disease (EAD) Hotline on 1800 675 888.

NSW Minister for Agriculture Tara Moriarty said:

“The NSW Government will work with our colleagues in Western Australia and providing support where we can to ensure that we are doing everything possible to contain the virus.

“NSW has been preparing across government and industry for several years for a H5 avian influenza incursion.

“We are urging the community to report any unusual signs of illness or deaths of multiple birds, especially on the coastline, so we can detect any incursion quickly.

NSW Chief Veterinary Officer Jo Coombe said:

“While the current incursion has only been confirmed in one bird, eradication or containment of H5 bird flu in wildlife is unlikely to be possible if it becomes established in wildlife populations.

“Our focus, if it were to become established would be to minimise risk of onward transmission to commercial poultry, protect human health, where possible minimise impact on the environment, and ensure broader stakeholders are kept informed.”

“Australia has a National Management Agreement in place, which establishes the national arrangements for responding to incursions of H5 bird flu in wildlife, were it to become established.” 

See report published Sunday June 21 2026:  H5 Bird Flu Confirmed in Australia; Brown Skau death - H5 bird flu findings from Heard Island and McDonald Island: Southern Elephant Seal Pup Mortality 76 per cent - up to 97 per cent in one area 

H5 bird flu (H5N1, a strain of highly pathogenic avian influenza) is an infectious disease that can affect wild, farmed and pet birds.

Large-scale outbreaks of H5 bird flu (H5N1) have killed millions of wild birds and tens of thousands of mammals around the world. Until now, Australia and New Zealand have remained free of the virus.

An outbreak of H5 bird flu in Australian birds could be catastrophic, as one in six Australian birds are already facing the threat of extinction.

BirdLife Australia has consistently advocated for robust monitoring and preparedness ahead of an outbreak.

We are watching this development closely and seeking further information. We will keep you updated as more details emerge.

If you find a sick or dead bird that you suspect could have Avian Influenza (H5N1), remember to:

❌ AVOID contact with sick or dead wildlife and their environment. Do not touch, move or approach the bird, and do not allow pets to touch or eat sick or dead wildlife.

📸 RECORD what you see, the location the animal was found, and take photos or video (if possible) without approaching the bird.

📞REPORT any unusual illness or death in wild birds and other wildlife immediately via the Emergency Animal Disease Hotline on 1800 675 888.

Brown Skua,  (Stercorarius antarcticus) photographed offshore from Pittwater - Photos: A J Guesdon

Bird flu has spread to two Australian states. Here’s how it could accelerate our extinction crisis

Jason Edwards/Getty
Euan Ritchie, Deakin University

The deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu has now been found in a second state, South Australia, after earlier being identified in Western Australia.

Authorities have confirmed three seabirds have died of the highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 virus. It is too early to know if H5N1 has spread beyond these animals to other wildlife or livestock in Australia. But it appears very much a matter of when, not if, this happens.

Globally, H5N1 has already devastated wildlife populations. In Australia, this deadly virus could greatly disrupt ecosystems and push our most threatened species even closer to extinction.

Why is H5N1 so dangerous?

The H5N1 strain of bird flu spreads through contact with bodily fluids such as saliva and faeces, infected animals or contaminated environments. It can also be transmitted through scavenging by species that feed on infected carcasses.

Since 2021, the H5N1 strain has killed millions of the world’s wild birds, mammals and poultry. This is because it can spread faster than other HPAI strains – including between mammals – and move between continents via migratory birds.

However, it’s hard to predict how H5N1 will affect our wildlife and ecosystems. This strain of the virus is not yet established in Australia. And many of our species are endemic – meaning they’re not found anywhere outside Australia – so we don’t have the data needed to reliably predict how H5N1 may affect them.

Threatened species most at risk

For threatened species, an H5N1 outbreak could be catastrophic. And a mass mortality event could be the final straw that finishes off a species. This is especially true if a population is already in decline, is geographically restricted or gathers to breed during certain seasons.

After the initial outbreak passes, populations may rebound through breeding and immigration. However, an extreme drop in numbers can create a genetic bottleneck, leading to rapid, substantial loss of genetic diversity. This, in turn, can threaten a population’s long-term health.

Since detecting H5N1 in Australia, authorities have understandably focused on protecting Australia’s spectacular birds – including the threatened regent honeyeater and orange-bellied parrot.

What’s received less attention are our iconic but increasingly threatened mammals. This includes the egg-laying platypus, native rodents such as the rakali and numerous marsupial species. In the United States, the virus has already done widespread damage to native rodents such as squirrels and voles, and the marsupial Virginia Opossum. It may well do the same to Australia’s mammals.

Carnivorous marsupials such as endangered Tasmanian devils and quoll species are also at risk, as their hunting and scavenging may expose them to infected carcasses.

Kangaroos, wallabies, possums and bandicoots can also scavenge and eat meat, meaning they could come in contact with H5N1. Species that live near shore birds in coastal and island habitats – including endangered mainland eastern barred bandicoots and threatened quokkas – are even more at risk.

The H5N1 strain could also prove deadly to our Australian sea lion and black swan populations. Black swans appear particularly susceptible to H5N1, which may be because they evolved in the isolated island continent of Australia. Unlike other swan species, they lack certain genetic traits that might help their immune systems fight the H5N1 virus.

Long-term damage to ecosystems

Beyond individual species, H5N1 has the potential to greatly disrupt and devastate Australia’s ecosystems.

An H5N1 outbreak in predator species could see prey populations surge. If a local dingo population is wiped out by the virus, the kangaroos, wallabies, feral goats and other herbivores they prey on could rapidly increase in numbers. This could lead to overgrazing, which in turn would deprive other animals of food and shelter.

In freshwater and marine environments, an H5N1 outbreak could see many birds die in and around waterways in a short period. Nutrients from the bird carcasses could pollute waterways if not cleaned up, worsening water quality and oxygen levels and potentially causing widespread fish kills.

So, what can we do?

Compared to other countries and continents, Australia has had longer to prepare for an H5N1 outbreak.

The federal government has so far invested A$113 million to bolster our H5N1 response. This money will go towards disease surveillance, invasive species control, captive breeding programs and efforts to monitor wildlife health.

But we can also help stop the spread of H5N1 on an individual level by:

  • immediately reporting any sick or dead animals to the Emergency Animal Disease hotline on 1800 675 888 or organisations such as Wildlife Health Australia

  • not touching native wildlife

  • only feeding birds in backyards, never in the wild, and following strict hygiene measures such as cleaning water baths weekly and opting for hanging bird feeders

  • keeping dogs and cats away from wildlife, animal faeces and especially dead carcasses.

The arrival of H5N1 in Australia is not cause for panic, as this outbreak is yet to unfold. But we must be extra vigilant in how we observe and interact with wildlife and nature. The future of our most vulnerable species depends on it. The Conversation

Euan Ritchie, Professor in Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, School of Life & Environmental Sciences, Deakin University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Bird flu is here. Can we stop the spread?

Dave Irving/Getty
Jane Younger, University of Tasmania

On a remote beach near Esperance, Western Australia, two sick seabirds have brought the bird flu crisis to Australia.

Testing has confirmed highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 in a brown skua and a giant petrel. Both are species of seabirds commonly found in the Southern Ocean.

H5N1 is a type of avian influenza, or bird flu, caused by an influenza A virus. The strain has been confirmed as HPAI H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4b, a globally circulating strain that can spread rapidly. Over the past five years, this strain of the virus has killed millions of wild animals and poultry.

These are the first confirmed detections of this strain in Australia. But the coming weeks will tell us whether these are isolated cases, or the start of a wider outbreak.

Spreading far and wide

Since 2021, the HPAI H5N1 strain of bird flu has spread through every continent except Australia. Overseas, it has devastated wildlife and caused major losses in poultry. This strain has also repeatedly spilled over into mammals including dairy cattle, seals and sea lions.

This strain of H5N1 is a different challenge to the bird flu outbreaks Australia has seen before. That’s because this strain can infect a much wider variety of species and spreads more quickly than other strains, including between mammals and across continents.

Transmission occurs through close contact with infected animals or contaminated environments, including scavenging of carcasses. This is why birds living in large colonies such as gannets, terns and albatrosses are most vulnerable. Tasmanian devils and other scavengers are also more exposed to the virus.

For humans, the current risk is low. Human infections are rare and most cases involve direct or indirect exposure to infected animals or contaminated environments. Examples include dairy farms, live poultry markets or beaches with sick or dying wild birds and marine mammals.

How did it get to Australia?

The species of the two confirmed bird flu cases are the first clue to how the virus reached our shores. Brown skuas and giant petrels are Southern Ocean seabirds who fly across huge distances and may scavenge contaminated carcasses.

Their detection in Western Australia suggests the virus likely reached mainland Australia through Southern Ocean wildlife movements, rather than the northern migratory shorebird routes.

Our research shows migratory wildlife, including seabirds, have spread this virus thousands of kilometres across the Southern Ocean from South America since 2023.

Genetic sequencing of the virus will be essential to show how closely the virus in these birds is related to viruses from Heard Island, Antarctica, South America or elsewhere.

A devastating disease

In the United States, this virus has decimated the country’s poultry and dairy industries. It has led to the mass culling of commercial flocks, both to contain the virus and prevent price hikes for consumers.

At this stage, no H5N1 cases have been detected on Australian poultry or dairy farms. However, poultry producers now must follow government guidance on maintaining biosecurity standards. This involves minimising contact between domestic birds and wild birds, protecting feed and water sources and immediately reporting unusual illness or deaths.

Also at risk are Australian fur seals and colony nesting seabirds such as terns, gannets, and albatrosses. Tasmania’s endemic shy albatross and culturally significant yula, or short-tailed shearwater, are also vulnerable to the virus.

Freshwater birds such as ducks are another concern, as they can spread influenza viruses through water. For critically endangered birds such as orange-bellied parrots, even a few bird flu deaths can put the entire species at risk.

So, what can we do?

Given Australia was the last H5N1-free continent, we’ve had time to prepare.

Since 2024, a dedicated national taskforce has led the country’s response to a potential H5N1 outbreak. This taskforce – jointly led by the National Emergency Management Agency and the federal agriculture, environment and health departments – has conducted outbreak exercises and increased surveillance across Australia.

This preparation must now become action. Surveillance should expand around seabirds, wetlands, scavengers, marine mammals, backyard poultry and commercial poultry. Positive samples should be sequenced quickly to map how the virus may spread. Wildlife managers need plans for vulnerable wildlife populations before they get exposed.

Beyond surveillance, there are other tools we can use. In the United States, researchers are trialling bird flu vaccination in seals as a way to protect endangered Hawaiian monk seals. If our outbreak worsens, Australia should consider similar options for highly vulnerable wildlife, such as fur seals, black swans and other native birds.

The public can help authorities contain the spread of H5N1 by reporting any sick or dead birds or marine mammals to the Emergency Animal Disease Hotline on 1800 675 888. It’s best to note the location and share any photos taken from a safe distance. The public should also avoid touching sick or dead animals, and keep dogs away from any carcasses.The Conversation

Jane Younger, Senior Lecturer in Southern Ocean Vertebrate Ecology, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Bird flu is deadly for backyard chickens – and even cats. A vet expert explains

Cavan Images/Getty
Ricardo J. Soares Magalhaes, The University of Queensland

The deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu has been found in seabirds in two Australian states.

But don’t be fooled by the name: this virus also rapidly infects other animals. It has caused havoc in poultry farms and backyard chicken flocks in the northern hemisphere. And it can also infect, and even kill, cats.

Domestic pet owners, particularly homes that keep backyard chicken flocks, should be on alert for signs of this highly infectious virus. Now is the time to think about how you will respond.

A deadly strain of the virus

I have been working on the H5N1 since 2004. In more than two decades it has evolved into a highly infectious “zoonotic” disease – able to jump between several animal species and occasionally to humans.

The tipping point occurred in the United States in 2023–24, when the virus was transmitted from wild birds into poultry farms and high-density dairy farms in Texas, Kansas, Michigan and Idaho. Transmission has also occurred between cattle and cats, with cats feeding on infected cow colostrum (the first milk after a mammal gives birth), and some later dying.

In the past three years, we have seen many cases in Peru, Chile and southern Antarctica, including the deaths of thousands of seal pups on Heard Island.

How long has it been here?

Initially, Australian authorities were concerned the virus would come predominantly from the north during the annual migration of migratory shorebirds. There was uncertainty about whether sick birds would be strong enough to fly here from far-off Antarctica.

But two of the sick birds in Western Australia and South Australia were found alive. Given this virus was first identified on June 20, it’s possible it arrived in Australia much earlier since these species tend to make their way from the sub-Antarctic region from March onwards.

It makes sense this virus has arrived in winter – it is most easily transmitted during cold weather. In China we saw it typically emerge around Chinese New Year – a time when low temperatures coincide with high demand for poultry for celebratory meals.

How quickly can it move from wild birds?

The World Organisation for Animal Health tracks where the virus is reported for different countries (WAHIS).

Analysing this data, we find it takes between 2 and 6 weeks, on average, for the virus to move into poultry species following the first report in wild birds. Of course, this differs according to the comprehensiveness of a country’s surveillance and the level of data aggregation provided by different countries reporting to the system.

For example, considering data reported between 2020 and 2024 in Denmark, it took a little more than three weeks between finding the virus in wild birds and reporting it in poultry.

In Australia, and considering data from other countries it is possible we will see outbreaks in poultry in the next 4–5 weeks. This obviously depends on the role bridging species will play on bringing infection into Australian poultry facilities, as well as the level of biosecurity of Australian poultry husbandry systems. Everyone is on high alert, and state and federal agriculture departments have ramped up surveillance and public messaging for producers and the public.

In the past few years, an avian influenza surveillance system has tested the faeces of wild birds at nesting sites to watch for the virus. Now this surveillance is likely to be expanded to include poultry. Testing will also be informed by farmers, producers and backyard chicken owners reporting suspected illness.

What’s the risk to my household pets?

Poultry

The risks are very real. When this virus ends up in a densely housed commercial farm, mortality rates of close to 100% are likely. The greatest risk of exposure is when free-range hens spend some time outdoors and are exposed to contact with wild birds. This is the same for backyard chickens.

If you have a flock of chickens, keep them housed as much as possible. “Bridging species” like crows, magpies and other urban birds can bring infection into backyard flocks.

Keep an eye on your chooks and monitor their health for lethargy and neurological signs. If you notice a bird seems disoriented or unwell you should call the Emergency Animal Disease Hotline on 1800 675 888.

If warranted, a biosecurity officer will come and take nasal swabs and bird droppings away to be tested. In the meantime, you will be asked not to move your poultry and to keep them housed.

Unfortunately, all poultry in a farm or backyard flock where H5N1 infection is identified will have to be euthanised.

This virus can infect humans, though it is rare. Do not approach the bird or animal, just call the hotline on 1800 675 888. If there is a need to move the animal, wear gloves and a PPE mask, and dispose of them carefully afterwards.

Cats

Evidence from the US suggests cats are at much greater risk of severe disease than dogs. Where cats ingested contaminated material, such as milk from cattle, there were fatalities. Australian cat owners should be vigilant about what their cat is “investigating” outside, including dead birds.

Dogs

The evidence for serious illness is not as strong as cats. We know they can be exposed, but they don’t seem to be an at-risk species. Other terrestrial carnivores, such as skunk and foxes, have shown neurological illness and respiratory distress. We will have to watch the dingo population closely, because they scavenge on dead wild birds.

Caged birds

Caged birds such as budgerigars are unlikely to come into contact with wild birds. But if this is possible, and there are signs of illness, these should be reported.

Emergency Animal Disease Hotline – 1800 675 888The Conversation

Ricardo J. Soares Magalhaes, Professor, School of Veterinary Science, The University of Queensland

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The first case of H5N1 bird flu in Australia has been confirmed. What does this mean?

Marcel Klaassen, Deakin University; Meagan Dewar, Federation University Australia, and Michelle Wille, The University of Melbourne

On Saturday, a suspected case of deadly H5 bird flu, also known as high pathogenicity avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1, was confirmed in a brown skua.

This large seabird was found in Cape Le Grand National Park near Esperance, about 700 kilometres south-east of Perth in Western Australia.

The virus is also suspected to have affected another seabird, a southern giant petrel, found at the same area.

Following the initial testing, samples collected from these birds were sent to the CSIRO to confirm the first Australian cases of H5N1, specifically the clade 2.3.4.4b H5N1 lineage. Avian influenza viruses are categorised by subtype (creating the H and N number combination, here H5N1) and specific clades within the H5 subtype.

This virus has devastated wildlife populations in other continents, and this could be the start of a long push to protect Australian birds and wildlife in Australia.

Where did this virus come from?

Avian influenza viruses, of which HPAI H5N1 is just one kind, have been around for millenia. In the vast majority of cases they cause no disease in birds. These strains are referred to as low pathogenicity avian influenza viruses.

However, in 1996 one of these viruses evolved to become disease causing, and since then, this HPAI H5N1 has caused severe disease in poultry, and has become endemic in poultry. With chickens now forming about 70% of all birds worldwide, this is a critical reservoir where the virus continues to evolve.

The devastating effect of HPAI H5N1 is unfortunately not limited to poultry. Since 2021, HPAI H5N1 has caused a global animal pandemic, with enormous consequences for wildlife in all continents. It has killed millions of wild birds and caused significant drops in the global population of some species. It has also spread into wild and domestic mammals, with various species of seals particularly affected.

How it spreads

Part of the challenge in controlling HPAI H5N1 is that it can spread through a wide range of transmission pathways. For example, the virus typically spreads through faeces, especially when in water. Imagine infected ducks in a pond, where the pond water acts as a conduit to infecting other ducks which are feeding or cleaning themselves.

It can also be spread through direct contact and aerosol transmission, particularly in poultry farms. And it is spread through predation and scavenging, where animals like foxes maybe eat the carcasses of infected birds they find.

While it has so far been found in more than 400 different bird species, the spread of HPAI H5N1 in the northern hemisphere is facilitated by freshwater dabbling ducks. Dabbling duck species feed predominantly at the surface of the water, sometimes even grazing on land.

Importantly, ducks have very limited signs of disease when infected with HPAI H5N1, and appear to be able to continue to migrate while infected, allowing them to potentially spread the virus long distances.

Overall, this virus has been devastating for wild birds. For example, 33–47% of all adult northern gannets died in 2022 due to HPAI H5N1. On subantarctic Heard Island, 13,000 baby southern elephant seals died due to HPAI during the 2025–26 summer.

Why has it taken so long to reach Australia?

Despite being in Asia since the 1990s, and in Antarctica since 2024, HPAI H5N1 has not been detected in Australia until now. This is likely because there are no duck species which routinely migrate between Australia and Asia, nor are there ducks that migrate through Antarctica.

Despite the lack of ducks in Antarctica, the virus did arrive there in the summer of 2023–24, and subsequently spread thousands of kilometres through the subantarctic in the summer of 2024–25. Available evidence suggests birds like gulls, skuas and giant petrels may have taken on the role of long distance virus carriers in the Antarctic and subantarctic.

The various species of skuas and giant petrels that breed in Antarctic waters go on to roam the Southern Ocean, also venturing into the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans during the southern hemisphere winter. While rarely seen on our shores, these species are not too far offshore, looking for food and occasionally gathering in large groups.

Now that HPAI H5N1 has been found on mainland Australia, it will not necessarily establish itself and spread across the continent into other birds and mammals, including livestock.

Given that skuas and giant petrels are marine rather than freshwater species, and do not occur on land in large numbers outside the breeding season, there is still a chance that it may not spread further.

The biggest risk is that infected, sick birds are eaten or scavenged by native birds and mammals, which could transmit the virus to ducks.

Try to stop the spread

Once in ducks, the likely spread of the virus increases dramatically, and the outlook would be grim.

But for now, we are a few critical steps away from that happening. Continued surveillance and testing, being led by Western Australia, is critical to reveal the extent of the virus and whether it has spread to local animals.

Vigilance is key – do not touch or take sick animals into your care. Rather, report suspected cases immediately to the Emergency Animal Disease Hotline on 1800 675 888.

For farmers or people who own chooks, its critical to follow guidelines provided by government departments and report any suspicious mortality.The Conversation

Marcel Klaassen, Alfred Deakin Professor and Chair in Ecology, Deakin University; Meagan Dewar, Lecturer, Biological Sciences. Institute of Innovation, Science and Sustainability, Federation University Australia, and Michelle Wille, Senior research fellow, The University of Melbourne

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Please help Dee Why Lagoon: Clean Up

WHEN: Sunday 28th June at 10:00am
WHERE: Dee Why Lagoon
Meeting point: opposite Hadleigh Avenue - DY Lagoon side


WHAT TO BRING:
  • Gumboots (if you have them)
  • Hat
  • Water bottle
  • A smile
SUPPLIED:
  • Gloves
  • Pickers
  • Buckets
We really need your help for this one! Dee Why Lagoon is currently filled with rubbish, and the more volunteers we have, the bigger impact we can make.

Every pair of hands makes a difference, whether you can stay for 30 minutes or the whole clean-up. Together we can help restore this beautiful local environment for wildlife and our community.

If you can’t make it on the day, that’s completely okay! We’d love it if you could help by sharing this notice with your friends, family, colleagues, and local community groups. Every share helps us reach more potential volunteers.
NB Clean Up Crew
___________________

Streets as shared spaces - Avalon Beach: New Permanent design open for feedback

Comments opened: Fri 19 Jun 2026

Comments close: Sun 19 Jul 2026

At the council meeting on 17 December 2025, the council accepted the tender of Nangle Pty Ltd for the sum of $170,900 excluding GST for design services for the permanent installation of the one-way shared zone, and in keeping with the character of Avalon Beach prepare a design for high-quality upgrades to seating, lighting, landscaping and other infrastructure. 

Nangle as the landscape architect, led a team of experts including civil, hydraulic and stormwater engineers and has prepared the concept plan to make the shared space permanent.

These concept plans are now on exhibition, with the council inviting residents to provide feedback for the same.

These show the one-way zone is being extended beyond the shared zone. The council states the extension of the one-way zone aims to:

  • simplify traffic movements
  • reduce vehicle conflicts
  • improve pedestrian safety and comfort
  • support a more cohesive shared street environment.

One of the key priorities for this project was to address the existing flooding issues at the site. While flooding cannot be fully eliminated due to the site’s position as a natural low point and in an ancient flood zone, the council states the project improves stormwater management by:

  • introducing better drainage and flow paths
  • using permeable paving and water sensitive urban design
  • adjusting pavement grades to keep water moving through the shared zone and avoid ponding.

There are a number of proposed changes to parking arrangements, to make vehicle movements simpler and safer along with improving flooding issues:

  • Closing the existing carpark entrance to provide a single entry and exit point for the carpark, further away from the shared zone.
  • Replacing the 90-degree and parallel parking along Old Barrenjoey Road with 60-degree parking on both sides.
  • The short-stay parking will be formalised, with 3 spaces proposed to be located on the eastern side of the street to improve access and passenger safety.

The council states the proposed changes are intended to improve vehicle movements and increase pedestrian safety and will result in the addition of one car parking space.

Council states it anticipates the works will commence in Autumn 2027. Construction updates will be provided on the project webpage.

we invite you to review the final concept plan and share your feedback by either: 

  • completing the council's online form
  • emailing: council@northernbeaches.nsw.gov.au - use ‘Streets as Shared Spaces - Avalon Beach’ plan' as a header so it doesn't get lost among other emails the council would receive
  • writing to the council marked ‘Streets as Shared Spaces - Avalon Beach’ to Northern Beaches Council, PO Box 82 Manly NSW 1655.

Comments close 11.59pm on Sunday 19 July 2026. 

The project webpage is at: yoursay./streets-shared-spaces-avalon-beach - where you can also download the full concept plan

The montage of the new plans, courtesy of the NBC, is:

Concept plan

Birdseye view

Perspective – visual delineation between pedestrian and roadway

Perspective – representation of informal seating areas

Proposed parking

Proposed water management

 

Energy savings for NSW households: loans and discounts to help families lower their bills

On Wednesday June 17 the Minns NSW Government announced eligible households will now be able to access zero-interest loans of up to $15,000 to install energy-saving and cost-cutting upgrades such as rooftop solar, household batteries, insulation, reverse-cycle air conditioning, switchboard upgrades, ceiling fans and draught-proofing.

From Wednesday, the Government’s $557 million Home Energy Saver program is available to help NSW families lower their power bills by making energy-saving upgrades more affordable.

Many NSW households are already saving money through rooftop solar, home batteries and efficient appliances – with just over half of all houses in the state equipped with solar and 13,000 new batteries being installed each month.

While energy-efficient upgrades reduce costs in the long run, the upfront costs have locked many people out, and this program will make upgrades significantly more affordable.

In addition to loans, the program will provide discounts of up to $4,000 to eligible families looking to upgrade with energy-saving measures.

The Home Energy Saver program includes:

Zero-interest loans to households with a combined taxable income of up to $210,000. This will allow eligible households to pay off up to $15,000 in upgrades over ten years rather than upfront. This is expected to benefit more than 32,000 households. This is a $480 million commitment.

Targeted discounts of up to $4,000 will be available later in 2026 to households with a combined annual income of up to $80,000, or eligible concession card holders. This is a $77 million commitment.

For example, if your household earns $200,000 and you want to purchase a solar and home battery system for $10,000, you can apply for a loan and pay it off over ten years.

Eligible households wanting to apply for a discount and a zero-interest loan on a single upgrade are advised to apply for the discount first, then seek a loan to cover the remaining amount.

Discounts will also be available to renters, to make upgrades with their landlord’s permission.

Households will enjoy benefits such as lowering their monthly power bills and making their homes more comfortable year-round, cooler through summer hat and warmer through winter.

For information and to apply, visit www.energy.nsw.gov.au/home-energy-saver.

Premier Chris Minns said:

“We know energy bills are putting pressure on families right now, and while this won't solve every cost-of-living challenge people are facing, it's practical help that can make a real difference.

“For many households, the upfront cost of these upgrades has simply been too high. We're stepping in to help where we can, so more families can access technology that lowers their bills and makes their homes more comfortable.

“We're doing what we can to help families now, while making sure NSW has a more reliable and secure energy system for the future.”

Minister for Climate Change and Energy, Penny Sharpe said:

“For too many households, energy-saving upgrades have felt like something other people can afford. This is about changing that and giving more families a fair opportunity to access the kinds of improvements that make their homes more comfortable, more efficient and better to live in.

“Every household that upgrades to more efficient technology is playing a part in NSW’s energy future. Making these technologies more accessible helps more households enjoy a cooler home in summer, a warmer home in winter, and smaller power bills every month.”

Smart Energy Council CEO, David McElrea said:

"This program is a massive win for households looking to take control of their energy bills.

“Helping lower-income earners and renters to overcome the cost barrier to modernising their homes with smart solar, batteries, efficient cooling and heating is the fastest way to permanently drive down household expenses while building a more resilient grid."

Give electronic devices and household items a new life

Each year, thousands of residents drop off quality pre-loved items at council Reuse and Recycle Events.

Thanks to charity and social enterprise partners, donations don’t just get a second life, they support people in need. And for the first time in a while, residents can now drop off electronics such as TVs, computers, phones, cameras and kitchen appliances, through The Bower Reuse & Repair Centre.

With the next event on Saturday 4 July at the Warringah Aquatic Centre carpark, get organised and plan what items you can donate by visiting council's webpage for the same, which lists what you can drop off.

By dropping off your pre-loved clothes, toys, electronics, wood, metal and sundry items, council's partners can turn them into something meaningful:

Electronics

The Bower Reuse & Repair Centre's House to Home program helps furnish social and crisis housing for people rebuilding their lives. Items not needed for the program are sold in Bower stores, with money supporting their ongoing reuse and repair initiatives. 

Clothing

Pre-loved and new adult clothing, accessories, and Manchester and new hygiene items such as soap, shampoo and deodorant are collected by Anglicare. They pass on items directly to people in need, including foster care homes and Op Shops to fund essential community services.

Nursery items

Dandelion Support Network accepts essential nursery items for babies and children. They distribute donations to disadvantaged families such as those living in housing stress, escaping domestic violence and abuse, living with mental health issues and refugees.

Toys

Volunteers at Peninsula Senior Citizens Toy Repair Group mend, fix up and upcycle toys, extending their life and bringing joy to children locally and globally. Recently toys collected at Council events were sent to Ghana, where they are now putting smiles on children’s faces.

Bikes, scooters and e-bikes

Revolve ReCYCLING collect wheeled items to fix up, donate and sell. In January, their team travelled 3,000 km to Alice Springs to deliver bikes to families in remote communities.

Useful items

The Sydney Library of Things is a not-for-profit service giving residents the chance to borrow useful items that are only needed occasionally. Currently they’re appealing for donations of high quality pre-loved fishing rods.

Miscellaneous

Cardboard, small metal items, plastic plant pots and raw timber, flat pack furniture and raw pallets can all be donated. These are recycled via Kimbriki Resource Recovery Centre. Learn more about what happens to your items.

For more information on the Reuse and Recycling Event next month, visit council's website. 

 In Trafalgar Park, Newport - old tree stump made into useful ART

PNHA Activities 2026

Our walks for 2026 are listed below. 

You are very welcome to bring friends and older children on these outings. Please book by emailing pnhainfo@gmail.com and include  your PHONE NUMBER so we can contact you in case of changes because of weather etc. 

Looking forward to getting out and about in our lovely area! 

Your PNHA Committee

Pittwater Natural Heritage Association

The Pittwater Natural Heritage Association has been formed to act to protect and preserve the Pittwater areas major and most valuable asset - its natural heritage.

PNHA is an incorporated association seeking broad based community membership and support to enable it to have an effective and authoritative voice speaking out for the preservation of Pittwater's natural heritage.

Our Aims

  • To raise public awareness of the conservation value of the natural heritage of the Pittwater area: its landforms, watercourses, soils and local native vegetation and fauna.
  • To raise public awareness of the threats to the long-term sustainability of Pittwater's natural heritage.
  • To foster individual and community responsibility for caring for this natural heritage.
  • To encourage Pittwater Council and the NSW Government to adopt and implement policies and works which will conserve, sustain and enhance the natural heritage of Pittwater.

Some of our interests and concerns include:

  • Native Tree Canopy
  • "Wildlife Friendly" Gardens
  • Weed Infestation
  • Keeping our Waterways Healthy
  • Beaches and Dunes

Act to Preserve and Protect!

If you would like to join us, please fill out the Membership Form. Visit: https://pnha.org.au

Sunday April 26 Fauna: Underpass below Mona Vale Rd East, Ingleside.

If you missed this walk last year, here’s your chance to see how fauna can move between areas of bushland, so important for finding territory, mates and food. 

Meet 9am at corner of Ingleside Rd and Laurel Rd East. Walk ends about 11am.

Saturday May 23: PNHA stall at Avalon Car Boot Sale, Dunbar Park Avalon.

From 8am to 2pm, we’ll offer Information on identifying and controlling weeds. See our posters about invertebrates in local gardens. Our famous $2 local flora, fauna and scenery cards will be for sale. Come and have a chat. 

Sunday May 24: Walk in Red Hill Bushland Reserve, Beacon Hill

Meet 9am on Lady Penrhyn Drive opposite no. 41A, close to the open gate. Flora, birds, views. Walk ends about 11.30. 

Sunday June 28: Crown to the Sea Walk, Newport

Meet 9am please note that the meeting point is on Burke Rd next to Porter Reserve. Walk ends about 12 noon. This walk goes through several very different bushland reserves with coastal heath and littoral rainforest.

Wildflowers, ferns and coastal views. Moderate fitness needed for some steep tracks and many steps. Limit: 15 people so please book early. We will provide the Crown to the Sea map to participants on booking.

Sunday July 26: Ingleside Chase Reserve

Meet 9am at end of Irrawong Rd North Narrabeen, walk ends about 11am. Birds and swamp forest along Mullet Creek. Swamp Mahoganies will be flowering attracting birds. Binoculars a must for this walk.

Sunday August 23: Spring in the Bush

Meet 9am at corner of Mallawa Rd and Bulara St, Terrey Hills. Walk ends about 11am. With a focus on botany, we’ll see flowering plants in the Proteaceae plant family, waratahs, endangered Grevillea caleyi , right, and others in the major Australian Proteaceae plant family. Birds, too. 

Sunday September 27: The Chiltern Track, Ku-ring-gai N.P.

Meet 9am at track entrance with barred gate on Chiltern Rd Ingleside. Walk ends about 11am. One of our favourite walks to see Sydney sandstone flora in spring. Native plant species list available. Birds too, often a Yellow-tufted Honeyeater here. 

Sunday October 25: Katandra by Night

Meet 6.45pm at Katandra Bushland Sanctuary on Lane Cove Rd Ingleside. Walk ends about 8.45pm. Sunset is about 7.15. The bush by night is wonderful. We hope to see fireflies again as on previous walks here in October. Bring a torch, or headtorch, preferably with a red light option so as not to dazzle possums. Moderate fitness needed for the bush track and steps. Limit: 15 people, so please book early. 

Sunday November 22: Deep Creek Reserve

Meet 9am in Deep Creek reserve, off Wakehurst Parkway. Walk ends about 11am. Birds and bushland. From the bridge across the creek we may see Dollarbirds, summer breeding migrants that nest in hollows, with their youngsters. Black Bitterns have been observed along the creek margins, so bring binoculars. 

Native species back from the brink: NSW commits to next decade of wildlife recovery

The Minns Government announced on Monday 29 June 2026 it is extending its long-term partnerships with Australian Wildlife Conservancy (AWC) and the University of NSW (UNSW) Wild Deserts program for a further ten years to support the next decade of threatened species recovery in NSW national parks.

The partnerships will continue at three major feral predator-free areas: Mallee Cliffs National Park and Pilliga State Conservation Area, delivered with AWC, and Sturt National Park, delivered through UNSW Sydney’s Wild Deserts program.

To date, across these three partnership sites, 13 species locally extinct in NSW have been reintroduced, including the greater bilby, bridled nail-tailed wallaby, numbat, western quoll and Shark Bay bandicoot.

Some of these species had not been seen in the wild in NSW for more than 100 years but are now breeding in areas protected from feral cats and foxes.

The three partnership sites form part of NSW’s broader network of ten feral predator-free areas. Collectively, the network is working to reduce the extinction risk for 33 species locally extinct in NSW and help secure a further 45 threatened species.

Around half of the state’s surviving mammal species are threatened with extinction, with predation by feral cats and foxes remaining a major driver of decline.

The renewed partnerships build on the success of the last ten years and support the long-term management of threatened mammal populations, including research and monitoring that can inform future opportunities for safe releases beyond fenced areas.

Minister for the Environment Penny Sharpe recently visited Mallee Cliffs National Park to meet the team behind the program and join them in releasing burrowing bettongs back into the feral predator-free area after health checks.

Minister for the Environment, Penny Sharpe said:

“We’re bringing native species back from the brink. Bilbies, Numbats and Shark Bay Bandicoots are back where they had disappeared from and they’re thriving.

“The next ten years of these partnerships is not just about what happens inside fenced areas, it’s about improving our knowledge of what contributes to successful reintroductions, so we can drive recovery of threatened species and tackle our extinction crisis.”

AWC Chief Executive Officer, Tim Allard said:

“By working together, we’ve proven what long-term collaboration can deliver for conservation in Australia.

“Together with NPWS, we’re turning the tide of extinction by restoring threatened species to their former range, rebuilding resilient ecosystems and reconnecting local communities to nature.

“With this partnership now extended, we’re excited to build on this success and see an even greater impact for Australia’s wildlife over the next decade.”

UNSW Scientia Professor and Leader of Wild Deserts Project, Professor Richard Kingsford:

“This is a realisation of the tremendous progress we have made over the last decade in restoring the desert ecosystem in Sturt National Park by reintroducing marsupial species that were wiped out by cats and foxes more than a hundred years ago. There is so much more to be done.

“Our focus on science linked to adaptive management is producing new learnings which improve the effectiveness of our management and are applicable not only to the Wild Deserts site in Sturt National Park but useful across NSW and nationally.

“The great strength of our success has come from our deep partnerships, with Ecological Horizons, NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service and Taronga Conservation Society, as well as neighbouring landholders and volunteers.”

Photo: NSW Environment Minister Penny Sharpe at Brush-tailed Bettong Wildlife-release at Mallee Cliffs National Park. Image credit: AWC/NPWS

As part of the partnership with NPWS, AWC has restored eight species to the park’s 9,750 hectare feral predator-free fenced area. Most of these mammals have been absent from NSW national parks for over 90 years, and nearly all are threatened with extinction.

Mammals restored to Mallee Cliffs include the Greater Bilby (2019), Greater Stick-nest Rat (2020), Numbat (2020), Brush-tailed Bettong (2021), Red-tailed Phascogale (2021), Mitchell’s Hopping Mouse (2022), Burrowing Bettong (2023) and Bridled Nailtail Wallaby (2024). The final two mammals planned for reintroduction are the Shark Bay Bandicoot and Western Quoll.

First-ever reintroduction of threatened rufous bettongs in Ngambaa Nature Reserve

Announced: Wednesday June 24 2026

A threatened native species is making a comeback on the NSW mid-north coast, with the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS), Aussie Ark and the University of Newcastle delivering a state-first wild release of rufous bettongs into a feral predator-free area at Ngambaa Nature Reserve.

Seventeen adult rufous bettongs, 10 males and 7 females, were translocated from Aussie Ark’s Barrington Tops facility in NSW, marking the first release under this landmark partnership with NPWS after years of careful planning and preparation.

It is the first cohort of approximately 30 rufous bettongs to be reintroduced to Ngambaa Nature Reserve over the next 18 months.

A small, nocturnal marsupial, the rufous bettong is the largest member of the potoroo family and plays a vital role in maintaining healthy ecosystems by digging and turning over soil, helping disperse fungi and nutrients, all of which support healthier forest and woodland ecosystems.

Recent surveys for rufous bettongs indicate a significant reduction in their distribution and abundance, where they were previously well-known to occur in NSW.  

They play an important ecological role by digging and turning over soil, helping disperse fungi and nutrients, all of which support healthier forest and woodland ecosystems.

Once released into Ngambaa Nature Reserve, the rufous bettongs are monitored using cameras, remote microchip scanners and health checks.

The project forms part of NPWS’ 10 feral predator-free area sites spanning more than 60,000 hectares, which aims to support the conservation of more than 50 threatened species, including the re-establishment of nearly 30 species that are now either extinct in NSW or in local ecosystems.

The feral predator-free areas have been established in NSW to protect and restore some of Australia’s most vulnerable native animals from the impacts of feral cats and foxes, as part of NPWS’ commitment to zero extinctions in NSW parks.

The rufous bettong is the second species to be returned to Ngambaa Nature Reserve, joining a population of Parma wallabies that were reintroduced to the area last year and are doing well.

NPWS Manager Threatened Species, Feral Free Areas and Koalas, David Kelly said:

“Feral predator-free areas are one of the most effective measures available to protect native animals that have declined or become locally extinct through predation by feral cats and foxes.

“Returning rufous bettongs to Ngambaa Nature Reserve will help restore an important ecosystem engineer to the landscape, while contributing to the long-term security of the species.

“This project is part of a broader effort to rebuild healthier ecosystems in national parks and provide threatened native animals a better chance of recovery.”

Aussie Ark Operations Manager Dean Reid said:

“Aussie Ark is proud to work with the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service on this incredible conservation effort. Our breeding and rewilding program for the endangered rufous bettong is the largest on mainland Australia, helping save this iconic species from extinction.

“The 17 adults have been successfully ‘conditioned’ for the wild after their lives in our 400-hectare feral-proof Barrington Wildlife Sanctuary, and we’re confident they will adapt quickly and thrive in the Ngambaa Nature Reserve.

“Projects like this show what can be achieved when government, conservation organisations, researchers and landholders work together to protect Australia’s native wildlife.”

Photo: Rufous bettong being released by NPWS staff. Credit: DCCEEW

 

National Plant a Tree Day 2026: 30 Year Anniversary

Planet Ark's National Tree Day started in 1996 and has grown into Australia's largest community tree planting and nature care event.

It's a call to action for all Australians to get their hands dirty and give back to the community. While every day can be Tree Day, we generally celebrate Schools Tree Day and National Tree Day on the last Friday and Sunday in July.

2026 DATES

  • National Tree Day - Sunday 26 July
  • Schools Tree Day - Friday 24 July
  • Tropical Tree Day - Sunday 6 December

To find out more, get involved, or register a site, visit: nationaltreeday.org.au

At this stage only one local site is registered - but this section will be updated prior to NTD 2026 - that site is:

Saint Matthews Farm Reserve, Cromer

Everyone is invited to help us regenerate this important wildlife corridor with native plants. Make Cromer a cooler, greener and more connected place for our community, wildlife and creek stabilisation.

Sunday, 26 July 2026: 10:00am to 1:00pm

Site Organiser: Michael Kneipp - volunteer at this site

Have your say on the Caves Beach to Budgewoi Coastal Trail draft master plan

The draft master plan for a continuous coastal walking trail linking Caves Beach to Budgewoi will be on public exhibition from 12 June to 17 July.

National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) and Transport for NSW (TfNSW) invite community members, local residents, walkers and other interested stakeholders to review the draft master plan and provide feedback during the exhibition period.

The proposed trail corridor spans neighbouring suburbs including Budgewoi, Lake Munmorah, Catherine Hill Bay and Caves Beach, crossing both Central Coast and Lake Macquarie local government areas.

Most of the proposed trail is located within Wallarah National Park and Munmorah State Conservation Area.

The draft master plan is intended to guide the development of a safe and sustainable coastal walking trail that connects people with the area’s natural landscapes and supports nature-based recreation. Proposed features include improved access for walking and connecting with nature, educational signage and places to rest.

The master plan is being developed by NPWS with the project delivered in partnership with TfNSW. Current funding supports the development of the draft master plan.

NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service Director for Hunter Central Coast, Kylie Yeend stated:

“This draft master plan sets out an exciting vision for a coastal trail with ocean views, coastal bushland and places to stop and take in the scenery.

“It’s great to be progressing this election commitment and planning a trail that will benefit locals from Budgewoi to Caves Beach, as well as visitors.

“The draft master plan will be online from 12 June and you can attend a drop-in session – the full details are on the website at Caves Beach to Budgewoi Coastal Trail."

Transport for NSW Deputy Secretary Trudi Mares said:

“Spending time outdoors is one of the best things you can do for your mental and physical health, and this draft master plan is an important step towards another fantastic coastal trail for our state.

“The NSW Government has launched a consultation that will inform the development of the state’s first ever Walking Strategy to improve the way government and councils plan, fund and design public spaces to encourage walking.

“This draft masterplan for what’s set to be one of our most iconic coastal walks and we want to hear valuable feedback from the community, especially if you live locally or have an interest in sustainable track development.”

Dingoes in national parks in New South Wales Upper House Inquiry

Submissions close July 17

An Upper House committee has commenced an inquiry into the cultural and ecological significance of dingoes and their treatment in national parks in New South Wales.

The inquiry will consider a range of matters, including the genetic status of dingoes, their ecological role and the management of them in national parks, as well as the cultural significance of dingoes for First Nations communities.

Chair of the committee, the Hon Emma Hurst MLC, said "Dingoes occupy a unique place in Australia's natural environment and cultural landscape, and this inquiry provides an opportunity to consider how they are classified, managed and conserved in national parks in New South Wales".

The Chair continued, "The committee will examine whether existing legislative and policy frameworks are fit for purpose, and look at ways in which Indigenous knowledge and leadership could be more effectively incorporated into dingo conservation practices."

The committee welcomes submissions from interested stakeholders, including First Nations groups, government bodies, community organisations, and members of the public. The closing date for submissions is Friday 17 July 2026.

For more information about this inquiry, including the committee membership, terms of reference, and how to lodge a submission, visit the inquiry webpage.

TERMS OF REFERENCE

(1) That the Animal Welfare Committee inquire into and report on the treatment and the cultural and ecological significance of dingoes in national parks in New South Wales, and in particular:

(a) the genetic status of dingoes, the distinction between dingoes and dogs and recent research into the genetic profile of NSW dingoes

(b) the legislative, regulatory and policy frameworks governing the management of dingoes in New South Wales in national parks

(c) the ecological role of dingoes in national parks

(d) the cultural significance of dingoes for First Nations communities

(e) the impact of current government policies and programs for the management of dingoes in national parks

(f) dingo management including opportunities for incorporation of Indigenous knowledge and leadership in dingo conservation in national parks, and

(g) any other related matters.

The terms of reference for the inquiry were self-referred by the committee on 19 May 2026.

Muogamarra open season 2026: Bookings Open

Nature lovers are urged to get in quick as the hottest ticket in town, to wander through the wildflowers at magnificent Muogamarra Nature Reserve, is now open for bookings.

The nature reserve north of Sydney is open for just 6 weeks a year in order to protect its precious plants and fragile Aboriginal cultural heritage.

It’s a short window that packs a punch, coinciding with peak flowering of more than 900 species of native plants.

Think waratahs, majestic angophoras, banksias, pink boronias and delicate native orchids.

Walking tracks around the nature reserve also offer stunning views of the Hawkesbury River and Berowra Creek, as well as expansive views of Bar, Milson and Spectacle islands.

Steeped in cultural heritage in the lands of the traditional custodians, Muogamarra protects important Aboriginal sites, including rock engravings, grinding grooves and shell middens.

The reserve was established by railway engineer and conservationist John Duncan Tipper in 1934, who named the sanctuary Muogamarra, after what he believed was an Awabakal word meaning ‘preserve for the future’. Driven by a passion to safeguard the area’s native flora and fauna from development, he secured a lease for the land. Public access was limited to subscription visits and special wildflower days to protect the vulnerable ecosystem. In 1953, Tipper handed over the reins to the government and the tradition continues.

Visit: Muogamarra Nature Reserve in Cowan celebrates 90 years: a few insights into The Vision of John Duncan Tipper, Founder - 2024 History Feature

Four different types of guided tours are on offer. Each tour covers a unique section of the park and range from around 3 to 10 kilometres of walking.

Tickets for the season from 15 August to 20 September are available now and usually sell out. Entry is by booked guided or self-guided tour only.

Bookings here: nswparks.info/muogamarra

National Parks and Wildlife Service Discovery Coordinator David Thompson said:

“This is one of our most popular opportunities in NSW national parks, with good reason.

“Wandering through the wildflowers of Muogamarra is a rare, memorable experience, and every year bookings go fast, as more and more people discover this secret garden on Sydney’s doorstep.”


Bird Sanctuary (Lady Hore Ruthven). J. D. Tipper, Prop., August 1935.  Lady Hore Ruthven was NSW Governor’s wife  Reference: State Library NSW  (Created before 1955).  Bird Sanctuary (Lady Hore Ruthven). J. D. Tipper, Prop., August 1935 . Retrieved from https://collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/1xqG6x6Y/2lMEwmvBJrkD0


The Hon Penny Sharpe – Minister for the Environment, with Susan Rumble – Chase Alive Discovery programme volunteer tour guide, Muogamarra Nature Reserve and David Thompson – Discovery Coordinator, Muogamarra Nature Reserve, September 1st 2024

2026 Tour de Gorge

Mountain bike riders, families and outdoor adventurers are invited to experience the rugged beauty of the Pilliga when the annual Tour de Gorge returns on Saturday 5 September 2026.

The much-loved cycling event will take riders through some of the most spectacular and rarely accessed areas of the Pilliga Forest and Pilliga Nature Reserve, near Baradine, featuring dramatic sandstone formations, towering cypress pines, wildflowers and rich wildlife habitats.

Since launching in 2013, Tour de Gorge has become a popular spring event in regional NSW, offering something for all ages and experience levels with multiple ride options through one of Australia’s most unique and rugged landscapes.

Participants can choose from a family-friendly short course or a longer adventure riding along unsealed forest trails that wind through the iconic Pilliga landscape. Riders will enjoy exclusive access to sections of the forest that are usually closed to the public. The event begins and ends at Pilliga Pottery, where visitors can relax after the ride, enjoy food and soak up the community atmosphere.

Cyclists can also purchase the official 2026 Tour de Gorge riding jersey when registering online. Entry costs $30 per rider and includes a registration pack. The pre-ride briefing begins at 8:30 am, with riders departing from 9 am. To register or find more information, visit the Tour de Gorge event page.

NPWS Director Northern Inland John Whittall stated:

“Tour de Gorge is a fantastic opportunity for people to explore the Pilliga and experience one of NSW’s most remarkable natural landscapes on two wheels.

“From towering cypress pines and sandstone gorges to vibrant spring wildflowers, the ride showcases the incredible diversity and beauty of the Pilliga Forest.

“This event is about more than cycling. It’s a chance to connect with nature, culture and community while enjoying a memorable day out in the heart of regional NSW.”

Solar for apartment residents: Co-funding

Less than 2% of apartment buildings in NSW have solar installed, but the NSW Department of Climate Chnage, Energy, the Environment and Water are on a mission to change this.

Their Solar for Apartment Residents grant is co-funding shared solar panel installations on eligible apartment buildings and multi-unit dwellings and has already helped thousands of households.

They’ve extended the program to help more homeowners and renters reduce their energy bills and have also allocated extra funds through a separate Boost grant to help priority communities too.

Application closes: 4 December 2026, 5:00 pm

Share this with your Owners Corporation or Stata Manager and check your building's eligibility at: www.nsw.gov.au/grants-and-funding/solar-for-apartment-residents-soar-grant-program

 

Dedicated alpine weather page part of latest BOM website improvements

The Bureau of Meteorology has delivered its latest website update.

In this release navigation has improved, there’s a new dedicated alpine weather page in time for the ski season, and the weather map has more place names.

Bureau of Meteorology CEO Dr Stuart Minchin said the update was a direct response to community feedback.

“Since launch, we've had requests for more locations to be added to the weather map,” Dr Minchin said.

“Our website is there to serve all Australians. We've now added more than 100 place names, primarily in the Northern Territory and Queensland.

“We'll be adding hundreds more in the months ahead.”

The weather map will now remember users’ most recent pan and zoom position, keeping the settings the same for the next time the page is viewed.

For example, if your last visit was a maximum zoomed-in view of Mount Isa, Queensland, this is the view you'll see next time you visit the rain radar.

“Changes like these will make it easier for everyone to find what they need,” Dr Minchin said.

Other changes include the UV Index being restored to the hourly forecast and updating the presentation of flood warnings.

A new alpine weather page provides weather map layers for snow, wind and temperature, and forecasts for snow resorts, towns, and remote areas in Australia's alpine regions in one page.

The updated Alpine regions page provides weather maps and forecasts for snow resorts, towns, and remote areas in Australia's alpine regions.

Alpine regions offers information across 2 tabs:

  • Forecasts – alpine districts and locations
  • Map – 3 hourly snow, wind and temperature forecasts.

Navigating the website has become easier with changes to tabs and page layouts on a number of key pages such as Forecasts and observations, Coasts and Oceans and state, territory and district pages.

“People have told us that navigating to forecasts and observations for districts and states was hard,” Dr Minchin said.

“We’ve paid close attention to this feedback.

“Combined with last month's search improvements, this will make it easier for regional web users to find out if their district is expecting rain or sunshine.”

Updates will continue to be made to the website in response to the feedback received from the community.

Information about recent changes is available at bom.gov.au/website-help/website-updates

The ski season starts on the June long weekend and runs until October's long weekend in NSW. 

The Kiandra Alpine Club's Snow Carnival, 1900. Photo: Kerry

Birdwood Park Bushcare Group Narrabeen

The council has received an application from residents to volunteer to look after bushland at 199/201 Ocean street North Narrabeen.

The group will meet once a month for 2-3 hours at a time to be decided by the group. Activities will consist of weeding out invasive species and encouraging the regeneration of native plants. Support and supervision will be provided by the council.

If you have questions or are interested in joining the group please email the council on bushcare@northernbeaches.nsw.gov.au

Sydney Wildlife (Sydney Metropolitan Wildlife Services) Needs People for the Rescue Line

We are calling on you to help save the rescue line because the current lack of operators is seriously worrying. Look at these faces! They need you! 

Every week we have around 15 shifts either not filled or with just one operator and the busy season is around the corner. This situation impacts on the operators, MOPs, vets and the animals, because the phone line is constantly busy. Already the baby possum season is ramping up with calls for urgent assistance for these vulnerable little ones.

We have an amazing team, but they can’t answer every call in Spring and Summer if they work on their own.  Please jump in and join us – you would be welcomed with open arms!  We offer lots of training and support and you can work from the office in the Lane Cove National Park or on your home computer.

If you are not able to help do you know someone (a friend or family member perhaps) who might be interested?

Please send us a message and we will get in touch. Please send our wonderful office admin Carolyn an email at  sydneywildliferescueline@gmail.com

622kg of Rubbish Collected from Local Beaches: Adopt your local beach program

Sadly, our beaches are not as pristine as we'd all like to think they are. 

Surfrider Foundation Northern Beaches' Adopt A beach ocean conservation program is highlighting that we need to clean up our act.

Surfrider Foundation Northern Beaches' states:
''The collective action by our amazing local community at their monthly beach clean events across 9 beach locations is assisting Surfrider Foundation NB in the compilation of quantitative data on the volume, type and often source of the marine pollution occurring at each location.

In just 6 sessions, clear indicators are already forming on the waste items and areas to target with dedicated litter prevention strategies.

Plastic pollution is an every body problem and the solution to fixing it lies within every one of us.
Together we can choose to refuse this fate on our Northern beaches and turn the tide on pollution. 
A cleaner coast together !''

Join us - 1st Sunday of the month, Adopt your local for a power beach clean or donate to help support our program here. https://www.surfrider.org.au/donate/

Event locations 
  • Avalon – Des Creagh Reserve (North Avalon Beach Lookout)
  • North Narrabeen – Corner Ocean St & Malcolm St (grass reserve next to North Narrabeen SLSC)
  • Collaroy– 1058 Pittwater Rd (beachfront next to The Beach Club Collaroy)
  • Dee Why Beach –  Corner Howard Ave & The Strand (beachfront grass reserve, opposite Blu Restaurant)
  • Curl Curl – Beachfront at North Curl Curl Surf Club. Shuttle bus also available from Harbord Diggers to transport participants to/from North Curl Curl beach. 
  • Freshwater Beach – Moore Rd Beach Reserve (opposite Pilu Restaurant)
  • Manly Beach – 11 South Steyne (grass reserve opposite Manly Grill)
  • Manly Cove – Beach at West Esplanade (opposite Fratelli Fresh)
  • Little Manly– 55 Stuart St Little Manly (Beachfront Grass Reserve)
… and more to follow!

Surfrider Foundation Northern Beaches

This Tick Season: Freeze it - don't squeeze it

Notice of 1080 Poison Baiting

The NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) will be conducting a baiting program using manufactured baits, fresh baits and Canid Pest Ejectors (CPE’s/ejectors) containing 1080 poison (sodium fluoroacetate) for the control of foxes. The program is continuous and ongoing for the protection of threatened species.

This notification is for the period to 31 July 2026 at the following locations:

  • Garigal National Park
  • Lane Cove National Park (baits only, no ejectors are used in Lane Cove National Park)
  • Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park
  • Sydney Harbour National Park – North Head (including the Quarantine Station), Dobroyd Head, Chowder Head & Bradleys Head managed by the NPWS
  • The North Head Sanctuary managed by the Sydney Harbour Federation Trust
  • The Australian Institute of Police Management, North Head

DO NOT TOUCH BAITS OR EJECTORS

All baiting locations will be identifiable by signs.

Please be reminded that domestic pets are not permitted on NPWS Estate. Pets and working dogs may be affected (1080 is lethal to cats and dogs). Pets and working dogs must be restrained or muzzled in the vicinity and must not enter the baiting location. Penalties apply for non-compliance.

In the event of accidental poisoning seek immediate veterinary assistance.

For further information please call the local NPWS office on:

NPWS Sydney North (Middle Head) Area office: 9960 6266

NPWS Sydney North (Forestville) Area office: 9451 3479

NPWS North West Sydney (Lane Cove NP) Area office: 8448 0400

NPWS after-hours Duty officer service: 1300 056 294

Sydney Harbour Federation Trust: 8969 2128

Volunteers for Barrenjoey Lighthouse Tours needed

Details:

Johnson Brothers Mitre 10 Recycling Batteries: at Mona Vale + Avalon Beach

Over 18,600 tonnes of batteries are discarded to landfill in Australia each year, even though 95% of a battery can be recycled!

That’s why we are rolling out battery recycling units across our stores! Our battery recycling units accept household, button cell, laptop, and power tool batteries as well as mobile phones! 

How To Dispose Of Your Batteries Safely: 

  1. Collect Your Used Batteries: Gather all used batteries from your home. Our battery recycling units accept batteries from a wide range of products such as household, button cell, laptop, and power tool batteries.
  2. Tape Your Terminals: Tape the terminals of used batteries with clear sticky tape.
  3. Drop Them Off: Come and visit your nearest participating store to recycle your batteries for free (at Johnson Brothers Mitre 10 Mona Vale and Avalon Beach).
  4. Feel Good About Your Impact: By recycling your batteries, you're helping support a healthier planet by keeping hazardous material out of landfills and conserving resources.

Environmental Benefits

  • Reduces hazardous waste in landfill
  • Conserves natural resources by promoting the use of recycled materials
  • Keep toxic materials out of waterways 

Reporting Dogs Offleash - Dog Attacks to Council

If the attack happened outside local council hours, you may call your local police station. Police officers are also authorised officers under the Companion Animals Act 1998. Authorised officers have a wide range of powers to deal with owners of attacking dogs, including seizing dogs that have attacked.

You can report dog attacks, along with dogs offleash where they should not be, to the NBC anonymously and via your own name, to get a response, at: https://help.northernbeaches.nsw.gov.au/s/submit-request?topic=Pets_Animals

If the matter is urgent or dangerous call Council on 1300 434 434 (24 hours a day, 7 days a week).

If you find injured wildlife please contact:
  • Sydney Wildlife Rescue (24/7): 9413 4300 
  • WIRES: 1300 094 737

Plastic Bread Ties For Wheelchairs

The Berry Collective at 1691 Pittwater Rd, Mona Vale collects them for Oz Bread Tags for Wheelchairs, who recycle the plastic.

Berry Collective is the practice on the left side of the road as you head north, a few blocks before Mona Vale shops . They have parking. Enter the foyer and there's a small bin on a table where you drop your bread ties - very easy.

A full list of Aussie bread tags for wheelchairs is available at: HERE 


Stay Safe From Mosquitoes 

NSW Health is reminding people to protect themselves from mosquitoes when they are out and about.

NSW Health states Mosquitoes in NSW can carry viruses such as Japanese encephalitis (JE), Murray Valley encephalitis (MVE), Kunjin, Ross River and Barmah Forest. The viruses may cause serious diseases with symptoms ranging from tiredness, rash, headache and sore and swollen joints to rare but severe symptoms of seizures and loss of consciousness.

A free vaccine to protect against JE infection is available to those at highest risk in NSW and people can check their eligibility at NSW Health.

People are encouraged to take actions to prevent mosquito bites and reduce the risk of acquiring a mosquito-borne virus by:
  • Applying repellent to exposed skin. Use repellents that contain DEET, picaridin, or oil of lemon eucalyptus. Check the label for reapplication times.
  • Re-applying repellent regularly, particularly after swimming. Be sure to apply sunscreen first and then apply repellent.
  • Wearing light, loose-fitting long-sleeve shirts, long pants and covered footwear and socks.
  • Avoiding going outdoors during peak mosquito times, especially at dawn and dusk.
  • Using insecticide sprays, vapour dispensing units and mosquito coils to repel mosquitoes (mosquito coils should only be used outdoors in well-ventilated areas)
  • Covering windows and doors with insect screens and checking there are no gaps.
  • Removing items that may collect water such as old tyres and empty pots from around your home to reduce the places where mosquitoes can breed.
  • Using repellents that are safe for children. Most skin repellents are safe for use on children aged three months and older. Always check the label for instructions. Protecting infants aged less than three months by using an infant carrier draped with mosquito netting, secured along the edges.
  • While camping, use a tent that has fly screens to prevent mosquitoes entering or sleep under a mosquito net.
Remember, Spray Up – Cover Up – Screen Up to protect from mosquito bite. For more information go to NSW Health.

Mountain Bike Incidents On Public Land: Survey

This survey aims to document mountain bike related incidents on public land, available at: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/K88PSNP

Sent in by Pittwater resident Academic for future report- study. 

Report fox sightings

Fox sightings, signs of fox activity, den locations and attacks on native or domestic animals can be reported into FoxScan. FoxScan is a free resource for residents, community groups, local Councils, and other land managers to record and report fox sightings and control activities. 

Our Council's Invasive species Team receives an alert when an entry is made into FoxScan.  The information in FoxScan will assist with planning fox control activities and to notify the community when and where foxes are active.



marine wildlife rescue group on the Central Coast

A new wildlife group was launched on the Central Coast on Saturday, December 10, 2022.

Marine Wildlife Rescue Central Coast (MWRCC) had its official launch at The Entrance Boat Shed at 10am.

The group comprises current and former members of ASTR, ORRCA, Sea Shepherd, Greenpeace, WIRES and Wildlife ARC, as well as vets, academics, and people from all walks of life.

Well known marine wildlife advocate and activist Cathy Gilmore is spearheading the organisation.

“We believe that it is time the Central Coast looked after its own marine wildlife, and not be under the control or directed by groups that aren’t based locally,” Gilmore said.

“We have the local knowledge and are set up to respond and help injured animals more quickly.

“This also means that donations and money fundraised will go directly into helping our local marine creatures, and not get tied up elsewhere in the state.”

The organisation plans to have rehabilitation facilities and rescue kits placed in strategic locations around the region.

MWRCC will also be in touch with Indigenous groups to learn the traditional importance of the local marine environment and its inhabitants.

“We want to work with these groups and share knowledge between us,” Gilmore said.

“This is an opportunity to help save and protect our local marine wildlife, so if you have passion and commitment, then you are more than welcome to join us.”

Marine Wildlife Rescue Central Coast has a Facebook page where you may contact members. Visit: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100076317431064


Watch out - shorebirds about

Pittwater is home to many resident and annually visiting birds. If you watch your step you won't harm any beach-nesting and estuary-nesting birds have started setting up home on our shores.

Did you know that Careel Bay and other spots throughout our area are part of the East Asian-Australasian Flyway Partnership (EAAFP)?

This flyway, and all of the stopping points along its way, are vital to ensure the survival of these Spring and Summer visitors. This is where they rest and feed on their journeys.  For example, did you know that the bar-tailed godwit flies for 239 hours for 8,108 miles from Alaska to Australia?

Not only that, Shorebirds such as endangered oystercatchers and little terns lay their eggs in shallow scraped-out nests in the sand, NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) Threatened Species officer Ms Katherine Howard has said.
Even our regular residents such as seagulls are currently nesting to bear young.

What can you do to help them?
Known nest sites may be indicated by fencing or signs. The whole community can help protect shorebirds by keeping out of nesting areas marked by signs or fences and only taking your dog to designated dog offleash area. 

Just remember WE are visitors to these areas. These birds LIVE there. This is their home.

Four simple steps to help keep beach-nesting birds safe:
1. Look out for bird nesting signs or fenced-off nesting areas on the beach, stay well clear of these areas and give the parent birds plenty of space.
2. Walk your dogs in designated dog-friendly areas only and always keep them on a leash over summer.
3. Stay out of nesting areas and follow all local rules.
4. Chicks are mobile and don't necessarily stay within fenced nesting areas. When you're near a nesting area, stick to the wet sand to avoid accidentally stepping on a chick.


Possums In Your Roof?: do the right thing

Possums in your roof? Please do the right thing 
On the weekend, one of our volunteers noticed a driver pull up, get out of their vehicle, open the boot, remove a trap and attempt to dump a possum on a bush track. Fortunately, our member intervened and saved the beautiful female brushtail and the baby in her pouch from certain death. 

It is illegal to relocate a trapped possum more than 150 metres from the point of capture and substantial penalties apply.  Urbanised possums are highly territorial and do not fare well in unfamiliar bushland. In fact, they may starve to death or be taken by predators.

While Sydney Wildlife Rescue does not provide a service to remove possums from your roof, we do offer this advice:

✅ Call us on (02) 9413 4300 and we will refer you to a reliable and trusted licenced contractor in the Sydney metropolitan area. For a small fee they will remove the possum, seal the entry to your roof and provide a suitable home for the possum - a box for a brushtail or drey for a ringtail.
✅ Do-it-yourself by following this advice from the Department of Planning and Environment: 

❌ Do not under any circumstances relocate a possum more than 150 metres from the capture site.
Thank you for caring and doing the right thing.



Sydney Wildlife photos

Aviaries + Possum Release Sites Needed

Pittwater Online News has interviewed Lynette Millett OAM (WIRES Northern Beaches Branch) needs more bird cages of all sizes for keeping the current huge amount of baby wildlife in care safe or 'homed' while they are healed/allowed to grow bigger to the point where they may be released back into their own home. 

If you have an aviary or large bird cage you are getting rid of or don't need anymore, please email via the link provided above. There is also a pressing need for release sites for brushtail possums - a species that is very territorial and where release into a site already lived in by one possum can result in serious problems and injury. 

If you have a decent backyard and can help out, Lyn and husband Dave can supply you with a simple drey for a nest and food for their first weeks of adjustment.

Mona Vale Dunes bushcare group: 2026 Dates

What’s Happening? Mona Vale Dunes Bushcare group catch-up. 

In 2026 our usual work mornings will be the second Saturday and third Thursday of each month. You can come to either or both. 

We are maintaining an area south of Golf Avenue. This was cleared of dense lantana, green cestrum and ground Asparagus in 2019-2020. 600 tubestock were planted in June 2021, and natural regeneration is ongoing. 

Photos: The site In November 2019, chainsaws at the ready. In July 2025, look at the difference - coastal dune vegetation instead of dense weeds. But maintenance continues and bushcarers are on the job. Can you join us?

(access to this southern of MV Dunes  - parking near Mona Vale Headland reserve, or walk from Golf Ave.) 

For comparison, see this image of MV dunes in 1969!, taken from atop the home units at the end of Golf Avenue. 

2026 Dates

Bangalley Headland WPA Bushcare 2026

Watch out for PNHA signs telling you about bush regeneration and our local environment. This is one of many coming up.

Bushcare in Pittwater: where + when

For further information or to confirm the meeting details for below groups, please contact Council's Bushcare Officer on 9970 1367 or visit Council's bushcare webpage to find out how you can get involved.

BUSHCARE SCHEDULES 
Where we work                      Which day                              What time 

Avalon     
Angophora Reserve             3rd Sunday                         8:30 - 11:30am 
Avalon Dunes                        1st Sunday                         8:30 - 11:30am 
Avalon Golf Course              2nd Wednesday                 3 - 5:30pm 
Careel Creek                         4th Saturday                      8:30 - 11:30am 
Toongari Reserve                 3rd Saturday                      9 - 12noon (8 - 11am in summer) 
Bangalley Headland            2nd Sunday                         9 to 12noon 
Catalpa Reserve              4th Sunday of the month        8.30 – 11.30
Palmgrove Park              1st Saturday of the month        9.00 – 12 

Bayview     
Winnererremy Bay                 4th Sunday                        9 to 12noon 

Bilgola     
North Bilgola Beach              3rd Monday                        9 - 12noon 
Algona Reserve                     1st Saturday                       9 - 12noon 
Plateau Park                          1st Friday                            8:30 - 11:30am 

Church Point     
Browns Bay Reserve             1st Tuesday                        9 - 12noon 
McCarrs Creek Reserve       Contact Bushcare Officer     To be confirmed 

Clareville     
Old Wharf Reserve                 3rd Saturday                      8 - 11am 

Elanora     
Kundibah Reserve                   4th Sunday                       8:30 - 11:30am 

Mona Vale     
Mona Vale Beach Basin          1st Saturday                    8 - 11am 
Mona Vale Dunes                     2nd Saturday +3rd Thursday     8:30 - 11:30am 

Newport     
Bungan Beach                          4th Sunday                      9 - 12noon 
Crescent Reserve                    3rd Sunday                      9 - 12noon 
North Newport Beach              4th Saturday                    8:30 - 11:30am 
Porter Reserve                          2nd Saturday                  8 - 11am 

North Narrabeen     
Irrawong Reserve                     2nd Saturday                   2 - 5pm 

Palm Beach     
North Palm Beach Dunes      3rd Saturday                    9 - 12noon 

Scotland Island     
Catherine Park                          2nd Sunday                     10 - 12:30pm 
Elizabeth Park                           1st Saturday                      9 - 12noon 
Pathilda Reserve                      3rd Saturday                      9 - 12noon 

Warriewood     
Warriewood Wetlands             1st Sunday                         8:30 - 11:30am 

Whale Beach     
Norma Park                               1st Friday                            9 - 12noon 

Western Foreshores     
Coopers Point, Elvina Bay      2nd Sunday                        10 - 1pm 
Rocky Point, Elvina Bay           1st Monday                          9 - 12noon

Friends Of Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment Activities

Bush Regeneration - Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment  
This is a wonderful way to become connected to nature and contribute to the health of the environment.  Over the weeks and months you can see positive changes as you give native species a better chance to thrive.  Wildlife appreciate the improvement in their habitat.

Belrose area - Thursday mornings 
Belrose area - Weekend mornings by arrangement
Contact: Phone or text Conny Harris on 0432 643 295

Wheeler Creek - Wednesday mornings 9-11am
Contact: Phone or text Judith Bennett on 0402 974 105
Or email: Friends of Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment : email@narrabeenlagoon.org.au

Gardens and Environment Groups and Organisations in Pittwater


Ringtail Posses 2023

Ten Australians are taking the government to the UN over fossil fuel exports. What is their case?

Bloomberg Creative/Getty
Maria Nawaz, UNSW Sydney and Gillian Moon, UNSW Sydney

Ten Australians – including a firefighter, First Nations leaders and young people – are bringing their concerns about the nation’s coal and gas exports to the United Nations.

On Tuesday, the group lodged a complaint with the UN Human Rights Committee, claiming the Australian government is failing to protect them from climate harms.

They argue Australia’s continued exports are inconsistent with limiting global warming to 1.5°C, as set out in the Paris Agreement.

This case spotlights Australia’s role as a major . And it’s the first case of its kind to go to the UN since the world’s highest court – the International Court of Justice – ruled countries have a legal obligation to protect the climate and prevent harm to the climate.

Last month, Australia supported a UN resolution backing the Court’s ruling.

So what is this case about? And why does it matter?

Relying on fossil fuels

Australia is the world’s second largest fossil fuel exporter, behind Russia. Our total fossil fuel exports generate around 3.5% of global carbon emissions annually.

Australia’s state and federal governments are continuing to approve and subsidise new coal and gas projects, most of which are for export. However, every approval increases global carbon emissions.

According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, every additional tonne of carbon emitted adds to global warming. For example, research shows Woodside’s Scarborough gas project in Western Australia could lead to 484 additional heat-related deaths in Europe alone, and may expose 516,000 people to unprecedented heat. Woodside has said the project “is expected to be one of the lowest carbon intensity sources of LNG delivered into north Asian markets”.

Despite growing concern about fossil fuel exports and emissions, authorities generally don’t give much weight to export-related climate harms when deciding to approve or reject fossil fuel projects.

Who is involved in this case?

The current case involves ten people making a claim against the government. These include First Nations leaders, people with disability, young people and a firefighter.

Each person says they have experienced climate harms, ranging from bushfires and extreme heat to flooding, rising sea levels and algal blooms. The First Nations claimants say extreme heatwaves have limited their ability to maintain certain cultural practices, such as engaging in controlled cultural burning. Floods have also displaced them from their traditional lands.

The case is now before the UN Human Rights Committee. This committee is made up of 18 independent human rights experts and checks whether signatory nations are upholding the terms of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. This is a key human rights treaty that Australia signed in 1972.

If this committee finds that Australia has breached the terms of this treaty, it can make recommendations to ensure Australia meets its obligations. While these recommendations are not legally binding, they carry weight.

What are they claiming?

The claimants have told the UN that Australia’s continued support for fossil fuel exports is inconsistent with limiting global warming to 1.5°C, as set out in the Paris Agreement.

They are making three main claims to support this:

  1. the climate emergency has already harmed the claimants, and these harms will get worse in the future

  2. Australia’s fossil fuel exports have and will materially contribute to climate change

  3. by continuing to produce fossil fuels for export, Australia has breached its obligations under international law to prevent significant and foreseeable climate harms.

The claimants will also argue Australia’s actions breach multiple human rights obligations. These include failing to respect and protect Australians’ rights to life, privacy, family and home life, and culture.

Yet to unfold

In this historic case, the claimants want to establish a clear link between human rights and Australia’s fossil fuel exports.

They have told the committee that climate harms such as extreme heat, bushfires, floods, and sea-level rise directly threaten the right to life by increasing the risk of serious injury or death.

For First Nations communities, climate harms also disrupt connection to Country and prevent communities from sharing traditional knowledge on Country, undermining the right to culture.

This case is unfolding in the wake of last year’s International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion. The court found that a clean, healthy and sustainable environment is needed to enjoy human rights. The court also recognised all states have a binding legal obligation to prevent significant harm to the climate.

Where to next

If this case is successful, the Australian government could be held responsible for climate harms caused to Australians by its fossil fuel exports.

The committee may also recommend Australia phase out its fossil fuel exports. This would expose Australia’s export industries to increased domestic and international scrutiny.

This case has the potential to shape future climate litigation, as well as government policy.The Conversation

Maria Nawaz, Project Lead, Australian Climate Accountability Project at the UNSW Australian Human Rights Institute, UNSW Sydney and Gillian Moon, Senior Visiting Fellow and Research Lead, UNSW Law & Justice, UNSW Sydney

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Victoria claims to have stopped native logging. So why is it importing Tasmanian forests?

Chris Taylor
David Lindenmayer, Australian National University and Chris Taylor, Australian National University

There is ongoing turmoil in the native forest logging industry, as revealed in the ABC’s Four Corners program that aired last night.

The evidence presented was unambiguous: the native forest logging industry has been in financial, social, and environmental decline for decades.

Yet it continues to be financially supported by federal and state government subsidies that are detrimental to the economy, environmental integrity and the efficient spending of taxpayer dollars.

Logging is banned on public land in Victoria. However, Four Corners revealed Victorian sawmills are sourcing wood from native forests in Tasmania, at taxpayer expense.

This is not in the public interest. Instead, governments should facilitate the restoration and protection of native forests.

Is there demand for native forest wood?

Advocates for the native forest logging industry claim that Australians have an insatiable appetite for hardwood, from species like mountain ash and alpine ash.

But government forestry products data tells a different story.

It shows sawn hardwood timber consumption has declined dramatically. In 2001-2002, about 1.4 million cubic metres was consumed, compared with 318,000 cubic metres consumed in 2024-25. This is close to an 80% decline.

In comparison, softwood sawn timber – cut from trees like pine – dominates the sawn timber market, producing an annual average of 4.2 million cubic metres over the same period.

In places like Victoria, over 80% of the wood removed in native forest logging was made into white copy paper. Yet demand for this product has declined – dropping 66% in the last 20 years. Australia’s consumption of white copy paper peaked at approximately 1.8 million tonnes in 2007-08, before falling sharply to around 660,000 tonnes by 2023-24.

Will we just import more hardwood timber?

Industry representatives said on Four Corners that without native forest logging, Australia would import vast amounts of hardwood timber.

However, this is not the case. According to government data, dressed and rough hardwood sawn timber imports have fallen from a combined total of 150,000 cubic metres in 2004-05 to 47,000 cubic metres in 2024-25 – a decline of nearly 70%.

In contrast, Australia has been a net exporter of sawn hardwood timber since 2022-23, and for the years 2008–2011 and 2013–2015. This means that as a nation we have exported more hardwood timber than we have imported.

Australia is actually a net exporter by volume of most wood products, but these are of lower value, such as unprocessed logs. In 2024-25, Australia imported only 1,000 cubic metres of unprocessed hardwood and softwood logs. In contrast, it exported 1.4 million cubic metres of these logs and nearly 4.7 million tonnes of woodchips.

However, Australia imports more high value-added wood products than what it exports. For example, in 2024-2025, Australia imported 1.1 million cubic metres of engineered wood products, but exported only 319,000 cubic metres of the same kind of products. Engineered wood products include veneers and cross laminated timber.

The large amounts of exported low value wood products versus the imports of high value-added wood products in lower volumes is one of the main reasons why Australia has a trade deficit in wood products.

A bare hill of clearfelled forest near Mt Matlock in Victoria.
Clearfell logging near Mt Matlock in Victoria. Chris Taylor

Why was the forest industry closed in Victoria?

Forest industry advocates have questioned why the native forest logging industry was closed in Victoria. There are several reasons. A key one is the government-owned forestry company VicForests routinely made large net losses.

For example, its annual reports show a $60 million loss in 2022-2023, and $54 million loss in 2021–22.

In addition, forests in Victoria were heavily overlogged. Our research has found the vast majority of mountain ash and alpine ash forest across the Central Highlands of Victoria has been either severely disturbed and fragmented by clearfell logging or high severity fire (and often both).

The Victorian native forest logging industry also had large numbers of regulatory breaches for its industrial operations and ongoing impacts on biodiversity.

Has Victoria really stopped native forest logging?

The Four Corners program showed footage of wood being trucked from Tasmanian forests across Bass Strait to be processed in Victorian mills in the towns of Heyfield and Powelltown.

Following the Victorian government’s announcement it would stop native forest logging on public land, it committed $1.5 billion of taxpayer funds to support the transition away from native forest logging in Victoria.

The Heyfield mill is 49% owned by the Victoria government. Hence, although the Victorian government says it has stopped logging, taxpayer funds are being used to cut forests in Tasmania and process them through the Heyfield and the Powelltown mills. Transition funds have been allowed to flow into native forest logging rather than out of it.

Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan rejected the suggestion Victoria was shifting logging pressure to Tasmania, saying the government was backing workers and regional communities. “We’ll always look at ways to back workers, particularly in these small rural communities where companies like this one, they’re a big and important source of income and support for that area”, she told the ABC.

An end to native logging

As researchers working on forests, we have collected and read reports from roughly one inquiry or review into the native forest logging industry in Australia almost every year since the end of World War II.

No matter how much public money, suggestions for change and reform or recommendations for value-adding, the industry simply cannot survive without massive subsidies and handouts from government. It has been like this for decades.

The taxpayer should not be expected to keep propping an industry that loses so much money. It is time to terminate contracts, cease handouts, and fully close the native forest logging industry in Australia. Instead, we should transition to a well managed plantation-only forestry sector – as New Zealand did in 2002.The Conversation

David Lindenmayer, Distinguished Professor of Ecology, Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National University and Chris Taylor, Research Fellow, Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Cheap, effective and dangerous: how Australian farmers came to depend on the toxic weedkiller paraquat

Richard Hamilton Smith/Getty
Sarah Rogers, The University of Melbourne; Sonia Graham, University of Wollongong, and Zoe Ju-Han Wang, James Cook University

It is illegal to use paraquat in at least 74 jurisdictions worldwide, including the European Union, China, Malaysia, Brazil and, most recently, the US state of Vermont.

But today, Australia’s chemical regulator gave this effective but highly toxic herbicide the green light.

After a nearly 30-year review, the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority (APVMA) finally decided paraquat can continue to be used on Australian farms.

It will have to be used at reduced rates and can no longer be applied with backpack sprayers, only in enclosed systems.

There’s no doubt paraquat is dangerous. It’s a Schedule 7 poison that is acutely toxic to humans if touched, swallowed or inhaled. Farmers have to be exceptionally careful in how they handle it.

Health advocacy groups and neurologists called for an outright ban on paraquat over concerns longer-term exposure could be linked to Parkinson’s disease.

Why is Australia so dependent on this chemical? As our recent research shows, the reasons are simple. Generic imported paraquat is cheap and effective, and there are few alternatives given the way we currently farm. Ironically, paraquat is largely imported from China, where its domestic use is banned.

How did Australia get here?

For broadacre Australian farmers who grow crops such as wheat, oats, chickpeas, canola and soybeans, paraquat is an essential tool. It is used to kill broadleaf and grassy weeds on no-till farms. No-till practices have been widely adopted in Australia to minimise soil disturbance, but require chemical weed control.

Paraquat also works on weeds that have become resistant to other major herbicides, such as glyphosate. Farmers often use these two herbicides together to effectively manage weeds.

This reliance is partly due to developments in the pesticide industry (a term covering herbicides, insecticides and fungicides). Until recently, this industry was dominated by large multinational European and American companies who sold patented (more expensive) and off-patent products.

But in the last two decades, Chinese manufacturers have ramped up cheap generic products. The global industry is now dominated by Chinese state-owned and private enterprises producing off-patent and far cheaper pesticides.

Tax rebates and other government incentives have helped companies such as Rainbow, Wynca, Adama, Yangnong and Syngenta China to become the world’s leading agrochemical companies. In 2006, Australia imported around 10% of its pesticides (by value) from China; by 2025 that figure was almost 50%.

The rise in generic pesticides has led to more product availability. The 2015 China-Australia Free Trade Agreement removed tariffs on pesticide imports, making imports easier. Australia’s regulatory agency doesn’t require a full assessment to register new products with approved active ingredients.

As a result, there are now 121 products containing paraquat registered in Australia, sold under names such as Rainquat, Gramoxone and Spraytop. While individual supply chains are difficult to trace, our research shows the chemicals in these products appear to be almost exclusively produced in China. The two leading agricultural chemical retailers in Australia, Nutrien and Elders, now have their own low-cost generic labels, sourcing generic formulations from China.

As one of the interviewees for our research told us: “there are less and less commercially attractive options outside of China these days… when I was in the business 20 years ago, we had a lot of material coming out of Europe. There’s almost nothing in Australia that comes out of Europe.”

aerial view of an Australian farm with tractor tilling soil.
Australian farmers rely heavily on herbicides such as paraquat. Charles G/Unsplash, CC BY-NC-ND

What would happen if paraquat was banned?

Prior to the APVMA’s announcement, many Australian farmers and agronomists were worried about a total ban on paraquat given the lack of readily available, affordable and effective replacement herbicides.

If paraquat was off the table, Australian farmers would have had to rely more heavily on non-chemical strategies, such as rotating crops and growing crops more densely to crowd out weeds.

A change like this would likely cause significant short-term disruption as farmers grapple with how to make it work. It could reduce yield and make food more expensive, though a lot of these crops are produced for export.

With heightened attention on the APVMA’s decision, now is a chance to rethink our deep dependence on pesticides to grow our food – especially those which can severely damage our health.

It is worth thinking about how we could farm without paraquat. Supplies of cheap, generic chemicals are not guaranteed. Chinese authorities have been reducing production volume in recent years. When faced with external crises, Chinese authorities tighten fertiliser export controls to protect Chinese farmers from price rises. They could decide to do the same for pesticides.

For now paraquat will continue to be used on Australian farms. But with an uncertain future, it is worth figuring out how we can best farm without it.The Conversation

Sarah Rogers, Associate Professor of Geography, The University of Melbourne; Sonia Graham, Future Fellow in Human Geography, University of Wollongong, and Zoe Ju-Han Wang, Senior Lecturer in Human Geography, James Cook University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Australia has already spent over $100 million dealing with Varroa mite. Here’s what we can do next

Fabian Kleiser/Unsplash
Kate Mounsey, University of the Sunshine Coast; Lucy R Miles, University of the Sunshine Coast; Robert J Harvey, University of the Sunshine Coast, and Roy Barkan, University of the Sunshine Coast

The honeybee mite, Varroa destructor, finally breached Australia’s biosecurity defences four years ago, and is here to stay. Even more concerning, our standard treatments – such as specialised pesticides – are already failing.

What does this mean for Australians, and what can we do about it?

Roughly the size of a pinhead, the parasitic mite is regarded as the most destructive pest of honeybees worldwide. It feeds on bees, weakening colonies and causing their collapse.

For decades, Australia was the only continent free of the mite. That changed in 2022, when Varroa was detected in sentinel hives at the Port of Newcastle, New South Wales.

An ambitious eradication campaign was launched, but abandoned by 2023. Today, Varroa is established across much of Australia’s eastern and southern states. The focus has shifted from eradication to management, and we now face a new threat – treatment-resistant mites.

Varroa is more than just a beekeeping problem. Managed honeybees underpin a significant portion of Australian agriculture, contributing about A$14 billion annually. More than 30% of food production depends on pollination from bees. When bee colonies collapse, the effects ripple through food production, farm profitability and ultimately food prices.

Native pollinators also play an important role, but they cannot fully replace managed honeybees for many large-scale crops.

This makes the health of honeybee populations critical to both food security and biodiversity.

Chemical control is under pressure

Controlling Varroa is costly and labour intensive for both commercial and backyard beekeepers. Current strategies rely heavily on chemical miticides – a type of pesticide engineered to control mites. These fall into two broad groups.

“Hard” miticides, such as formamidines (amitraz or Apivar) and pyrethroids (Bayvarol), are synthetic chemicals designed to kill mites quickly. “Soft” miticides, including formic acid, oxalic acid and thymol, are naturally derived compounds that tend to linger less in the environment.

While these treatments can suppress mite populations, they’re not a long-term solution. Varroa is well known to evolve resistance, and pyrethroid- and amitraz-resistant Varroa mites have already been found in Australia less than four years after the mite’s arrival.

A new generation of pest control

As conventional treatments falter, researchers are exploring new technologies. One of the most promising is RNA interference, or RNAi. RNA is a molecule found in all living organisms that helps control how genes are expressed.

RNAi is a natural process where small RNA fragments “switch off” specific genes, blocking the production of essential proteins the pests need to survive. The RNA fragments can be delivered to bees via sugar syrup. This then gets distributed through the hive and Varroa are exposed either by feeding or absorption.

RNAi pesticides are designed to be species specific, meaning they’re unlikely to cause harm to other organisms. This makes them more desirable than chemical pesticides that can have widespread effects on beneficial insects, the environment and even human health if not applied correctly.

RNAi treatments are also unlikely to give rise to genetic resistance. This is because resistance usually involves single-point changes in the gene sequence, while these treatments target larger gene segments. RNAi is also exceptionally safe because it don’t linger in the environment as much as a chemical pesticide might.

Furthermore, RNAi doesn’t create genetically modified organisms, because the RNA fragments don’t become part of the host genome.

Not just theoretical

RNAi pesticides are no longer theoretical. In 2025, the United States approved the first RNAi-based Varroa treatment, marketed as Norroa. This product targets a gene essential for mite reproduction, effectively acting as a form of “birth control” that reduces population growth within hives.

However, Norroa has its limitations. Because it suppresses reproduction rather than killing mites outright, it’s most effective when mite numbers are low. In heavily infested colonies, it can’t reduce populations quickly enough to prevent collapse.

Research is now focused on making RNAi more effective and adaptable. One key question is which genes to target. Many current research approaches focus on “housekeeping” genes – ones essential to mite biology and therefore survival. But these are often similar across species, raising the risk the treatment could kill other species we don’t want to wipe out.

Our research group is exploring an alternative strategy to target genes involved in the mite nervous system or muscles. These are the same systems affected by existing miticides, but RNAi would provide greater specificity.

A pest like no other

Varroa is the latest in a long line of invasive pests to reach Australia. But its impact is unusually far-reaching, touching agriculture, ecosystems and food supply.

The situation is already serious. Beekeepers are facing rising costs for miticides (which may or may not work) and hive losses, and treatment options are narrowing.

Yet there is also a window of opportunity, and Australia can still take proactive steps to manage Varroa effectively. Norroa and similar emerging RNAi treatments are not yet available for use in Australia, and would need to receive approval from the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority (APVMA).

Investment in research, including next-generation tools like RNAi, will be critical. So too will be coordinated management strategies, monitoring, and support for beekeepers adapting to this new reality.

The alarm bells are ringing. But with the right mix of innovation and action, we still have a chance to protect Australia’s bees and safeguard this billion-dollar industry.The Conversation

Kate Mounsey, Associate Professor and Program Coordinator, Biomedical Science, University of the Sunshine Coast; Lucy R Miles, Higher Degree by Research PhD Student, Novel Biopesticides, University of the Sunshine Coast; Robert J Harvey, Professor of Pathophysiology, Associate Dean (Research) School of Health, University of the Sunshine Coast, and Roy Barkan, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, School of Health, University of the Sunshine Coast

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Most bees are solitary and don’t live in hives. Climate change risks them starving

Native green-and-gold nomia bee (Lipotriches australica). Kerri-Lee Harris/iNaturalist, CC BY-NC
Brooke Zanco, Macquarie University and Carmen da Silva, Macquarie University

When we think of bees, we often think of flowers. The more flowers the better, right? Well, not exactly. Like us, bees need to consume specific nutrients in suitable amounts and combinations.

So, the mere presence of flowers doesn’t necessarily mean the bees are getting nutritionally adequate food.

This matters because climate change is altering both the quantity and nutritional composition of pollen and nectar. At the same time, what nutrition the bees need is likely shifting, too. This creates rapidly moving goalposts – it’s increasingly difficult for bees to find and consume the right nutrients they need to reproduce, develop and survive.

In our new paper published in Current Opinion in Insect Science, we argue these changes are unlikely to affect all bees equally. Currently, most of what we know about bee nutrition comes from highly social species such as honeybees or bumblebees.

Yet most bees, including many native Australian species, are solitary or communal (group living but with no queens and workers). They might experience the nutritional landscape and nutritional stress in very different ways.

Understanding these differences is crucial for predicting which bees are most vulnerable under climate change.

Aggregation of male Lipotriches, a genus of native Australian bee that’s not highly social. Alison Mellor, Invertebrates Australia

Not all bees will encounter nutritional stress

One way to better understand vulnerability to nutritional stress is to think about the traits that shape how different bees interact with their environments. These include:

  • how far they can forage
  • how flexible their diets are
  • whether they live alone or in groups
  • how large those groups tend to be.

These traits can influence whether bees even encounter nutritional stress in the first place.

For example, a species with a large foraging range and a broad diet might live in a nutritionally poor landscape, but still be able to travel far enough, or combine pollen from different flowers, to meet its nutritional requirements. In contrast, species with narrower diets or shorter foraging ranges might have fewer opportunities to balance their diets.

Native stingless bees, such as Tetragonula carbonaria, generally forage over shorter distances than honeybees. This could make them more dependent on the nutritional quality of nearby flowers and more vulnerable to a changing climate.

A small black bee carrying pollen from a white flower.
Australian native stingless bees Tetragonula carbonaria don’t travel as far as honeybees for their food. marielaurenceo/iNaturalist, CC BY-NC

Living in a group may help a little

Once nutritional stress occurs, other traits will determine how this stress is buffered and absorbed.

T. carbonaria, for instance, live in colonies with workers that collect food and share resources. This kind of social organisation can buffer short-term changes in the environment. Even if their foraging range is small, and one floral resource declines for a season, a colony might be able to shift foraging effort, draw on stored resources, or distribute food among nestmates and brood.

But despite potential buffering, poor nutrition can still impact social species. This can show up as fewer offspring, slower colony growth, smaller workers, weaker immunity, or reduced ability to cope with other stressors, such as heat or pesticides.

Solitary bees might have fewer safety nets

Solitary bees, by contrast, will likely face different problems when it comes to nutritional stress. Many native bees, such as blue banded bees (Amegilla chlorocyanea, pictured below), don’t benefit from the support of a colony.

A single female must find a nest, collect pollen, lay eggs and provide food for her offspring. Under predictable conditions, this can be a very effective way of interacting with the environment.

Male blue banded bees (Amegilla chlorocyanea) roosting on a plant stem. Alison Mellor, Invertebrates Australia

However, if the right flowers are missing, bloom too late, or produce pollen containing different nutrients to what the bee has evolved to expect, the effects could be more immediate: fewer nests, smaller offspring, fewer daughters and lower chance of survival.

In these species, the condition of one female can shape the next generation, so poor nutrition might lead to rapid population declines. This means the timing and quality of floral resources are likely to be especially important for many of our native bees.

How we can help our native bees

To accurately predict how species respond to climate change, future studies will need to connect floral nutrition with bee performance in real landscapes. Most importantly, we need to include a diverse range of bees with different social lives and traits in these studies.

For now, there are still practical steps we can take to support our native bees at home. Rather than simply planting more flowers, we need to be more deliberate about what we plant.

Nest entrance of Australian native bee Brevineura xanthoclypeata in a rose stem. Carmen da Silva.

Native plants are of course important, but we should plant them in diverse mixes, to account for variability in nutritional availability and timing.

The same applies to nesting habitats. Many native bees will not use a hive or a bee hotel. Some need bare or lightly disturbed ground; others use stems, wood or existing cavities.

So avoid the urge to over-manage every patch of ground – leave some bare earth and dead branching stems in your roses and other plants. This will make your garden or landscape more useful to more bees, so we can help support them in this rapidly changing world.The Conversation

Brooke Zanco, Postdoctoral Researcher, The Pollinator Futures Research Centre, Macquarie University and Carmen da Silva, Macquarie University Research Fellow, The Pollinator Futures Research Centre, Macquarie University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

We checked 2000 museum specimens and discovered a tiny new ‘ferocious’ Australian mammal

Pat Woolley
Andrew M. Baker, Queensland University of Technology

Australia is home to unusual mammals not found anywhere else – consider the platypus, Tasmanian devil or the red kangaroo.

But did you know our understanding of this continent’s incredible mammalian diversity is still incomplete?

We have discovered a new species in one of Australia’s cutest and fiercest mammal groups: planigales. And we also unearthed a second new planigale species, from a 100-year-old specimen held in a Swedish museum.

In the past five years alone, there have been 20 new mammals added to Australia’s mammal species list. So how is it we are still discovering new species of mammals in the 21st century? Let me explain.

Tiny, ferocious marsupials

But first, what is a planigale?

Planigales are the world’s smallest marsupials. Some species weigh just over two grams (the same as a couple of paper clips) and are about half the size of a house mouse.

With flattened heads, planigales can squeeze themselves into cracks and crevices to hide from predators and extreme weather conditions. They are tiny but fearsome predators that emerge at night to hunt for insects, spiders and vertebrates, such as small lizards and even young mammals. They generally live in varied habitats that overlay cracking clay soils in central and northern Australia.

Because planigales are so small, with subtly varying shades of brown fur, they are very difficult to tell apart. They are also difficult to catch, weighing so little that conventional small metal box traps are often not effective. We have to dig holes called “pitfall” traps instead. Most species live in remote areas, so it has been difficult to understand their diversity until now.

New mammal species awaiting discovery

There are several reasons we are still discovering new mammals in Australia.

First, many mammal species have suffered declining populations, and are now very difficult to find. Also, we are using more advanced technologies to help us tell mammals apart, including sophisticated genetic methods.

But over time, perhaps what has changed most is the amount of information we can draw on. Museum collections hold more than 200 years of specimens and data — an irreplaceable scientific record that helps us recognise species we may no longer detect in nature.

It was through studies of marsupial genetics we first realised the number of planigales in Australia was likely an underestimate.

A small number of genetic samples we previously studied suggested there were probably undescribed species of planigales in Australia. But we needed to gather more samples to work out exactly where they lived.

To do this, we partnered with organisations that survey for mammals in remote Australia, such as Australian Wildlife Conservancy, and pored over museum collections for extra genetic samples. This way, we gathered hundreds of genetic samples of planigales and were finally able to work out if there were more species in this group.

A planigale hiding among the rocks

In 2017, a genetic study first identified a unique planigale found in Kakadu National Park, in the Northern Territory. These results were based on only two genetic samples from preserved specimens held in the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory.

We exhaustively checked more than 2000 planigale specimens held in Australian museums and found a single specimen that matched the existing two. It was in the Queensland Museum, collected during the 1970s.

These three planigale specimens, two males and one female, are genetically distinct from all other planigale species and have their own unique appearance. They are large (well, for a planigale) with dark grizzled fur and a very long tail – longer than other planigale species.

And they were found in an unusual location, on top of a rocky plateau. Most other species of planigales tend to live in swampy habitats, or areas with heavy clay soils.

These factors confirmed we were dealing with a new species. We described it [https://doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlag082] as the Arnhem plateau planigale, Planigale petrophila (meaning “rock-lover”). Since it is only known from three specimens, we urgently need to do more work to determine whether it is rare or under threat of extinction.

A grey-coloured planigale on a rock.
This is Planigale ‘petrophila’, the ‘rock lover’. Martin Armstrong

But wait, there’s more

And that’s not all. During our study, we found specimens thought to represent a known species, Planigale ingrami, in the Kimberley region of Western Australia, were genetically distinct from those in the NT, Queensland and South Australia, even though they looked very similar.

This genetic information indicated these specimens were a “cryptic” species – something that can be identified by genetics but is difficult to tell apart based on appearance alone. By consulting historical research papers, we found these Kimberley planigales were in fact already described more than 100 years ago from a specimen collected in Australia that ended up in Sweden. With help from curators at the Swedish Museum of Natural History, we were able to confirm this old specimen matched the new ones from the Western Australian Museum.

We have called this the Kimberley planigale –Planigale subtilissima– as most of its range occurs in the Kimberley. Unlike the Arnhem plateau planigale, Kimberley planigales have been detected frequently by Australian Wildlife Conservancy and partners on recent surveys, so there is less concern for their future.

From five to nine species

Our work has so far added four new species of planigales to Australia, as we had previously identified the orange-headed Pilbara planigale and the cracking-clay Pilbara planigale.

This has increased the diversity of this group of tiny mammals in Australia to eight species in total, with an extra one known in Papua New Guinea.

It makes you wonder – how many more planigales and other mammals are out there waiting to be recognised?

This work would not have been possible without the help of my colleagues Linette Umbrello (WA Museum), Kenny Travouillon (WA Museum), Mike Westerman (La Trobe University), Mark Blacket (Agriculture Victoria), Skye Cameron (Australian Wildlife Conservancy) and Eridani Mulder (formerly Australian Wildlife Conservancy), and funding from the Australian Biological Resources Study and the Queensland University of Technology.The Conversation

Andrew M. Baker, Associate Professor in Ecology and Environmental Science, Queensland University of Technology

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Flooding rains, ocean gains: how a huge Murray flood gave the sea a feast

Geoscience Australia, CC BY-NC-ND
Paul McInerney, CSIRO; Brenton Zampatti, CSIRO, and Darren Giling, CSIRO

For decades, the rivers of the Murray-Darling Basin have been heavily regulated by dams and irrigation networks. As a result, the volume of water entering the ocean is about 60% smaller than 100 years ago. But nature broke through during massive floods over the summer of 2022–23, when heavy rains filled the Basin’s waterways.

The threshold for a flood on the Murray is when the daily water flow at the Victoria-South Australian border reaches 50 gigalitres a day. This flood reached 168 gigalitres a day – the largest in 66 years. A colossal plume of muddy floodwater reached 40 kilometres out from the Murray mouth into the Southern Indian Ocean.

For marine creatures, this was a dramatic event. What did it do to their ecosystems? To find out, we compared marine animals living directly inside the flood plume with those living further away in normal saltwater.

Our new research found the flood delivered a burst of nutrients into the ocean. We estimate more than 200,000 tonnes of organic carbon were carried out to sea between July 2022 to June 2023 – 29 times more than the same period in 2020–21.

This organic carbon came from the Basin’s rivers and their floodplains, and included large numbers of common carp. Millions of juvenile carp — a highly destructive, invasive freshwater fish — were flushed into the open sea.

Because carp cannot survive in saltwater, they perished en masse. Dead carp piled up on local beaches at astonishing densities of up to 7 kilograms per square metre. In marine rock pools more than 20km from the river mouth, we saw the local crab species such as the purple mottled shore crab and the reef crab having a field day.

Murray river in flood, aerial view of tree-lined road underwater.
The 2022-23 Murray flood inundated floodplains – and carried carp out to sea. BeyondImages/Getty

How the river fed the sea

These nutrients from the Murray provided a substantial boost to the middle of the ocean food chain. Scavengers such as crabs, and smaller fish such as yellow-eye mullet, were the main beneficiaries. They were feeding on scraps of organic matter, including dead carp, washed in from the Murray River.

We estimate a whopping 35% of the tissues of these animals came from the organic matter carried by the flood in the months afterwards.

Australasian snapper also benefited. These slow-growing larger fish frequently swam in and out of the flood zones. They preyed on smaller fish and crustaceans that had been eating food rich in nutrients from the flood. This means the floodwaters gave snapper and other predators a longer-term boost, effectively storing more of the land and river nutrients in the ocean food web.

beach with piles of dead fish piled up, blue sky.
Invasive common carp washed up on South Australian beaches following the flood. Chris Bice, CC BY-NC-ND

How to trace nutrients from a flood

It’s not easy to trace what happens to nutrients from a river once they wash into the ocean. But it can be done.

Every environment has a unique chemical fingerprint, which is reflected inside the tissues of its animals. When nutrients from rivers arrive, they impart part of this fingerprint to the residents of the ocean who eat them – you are what you eat.

We can detect this by testing the muscles of marine animals for these fingerprints.

Ocean water has a uniform sulfur signature. But the crabs we caught inside the flood plume had a very different sulfur signature, which meant they were eating land and river-based food (the carp).

Crabs usually scavenge detritus without much food value. But the crabs inside the flood plume had a heavily enriched nitrogen signature – another sign they had switched to eating dead carp. The crabs had effectively been bumped up a level on the food chain.

crabs eating dead fish on sea shore.
We observed reef crabs (Ozius truncatus) consuming dead common carp in marine rock pools 20km from the Murray River mouth. Ruan Gannon, CC BY-NC-ND

Did the nutrient pulse fuel the algal bloom?

In March 2025, a large and long-lasting harmful algal bloom developed off the coast of South Australia. The bloom killed many different marine species in large numbers.

Could the nutrient pulse from floodwaters have fuelled it? The bloom has been linked to a marine heatwave and nutrient-rich seasonal upwelling currents. The 2022–23 Murray River floods have also been proposed as a potential contributor. But this connection remains speculative because of the lag time of 18–24 months and a lack of continuous data collection.

Better monitoring after floods would help us understand whether there is a link.

Rivers matter to the sea

We can see floods not as a waste of water, but as a restoration of longstanding connections between ecosystems disrupted by human control of the river. Our research shows the benefits of these flood events aren’t restricted to land and river ecosystems – they give a major boost to surrounding oceans as well.

Floods are important for the long-term health and resilience of our coastal ecosystems and fisheries, though more research is necessary to fully understand these connections.The Conversation

Paul McInerney, Principal Research Scientist in Ecosystem Ecology, CSIRO; Brenton Zampatti, Principal Research Scientist in Aquatic Ecology, CSIRO, and Darren Giling, Senior Research Scientist in Aquatic Ecology, CSIRO

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Summer’s new normal is a hazard that’s testing Europe’s climate resilience

Júlia de Freitas Sampaio, University of Luxembourg

It is only June, and Europe is already baking through its second extreme heatwave in two months. Temperatures have topped 44 degrees Celsius in parts of the continent. Heat alerts are now in place for several countries, with six at the most severe red level.

France placed 72 of its 96 departments under red alert, and at least 40 people have drowned trying to escape the heat.

In Spain, temperatures peaked at 45.1°C, with 101 heat-related deaths in May alone, the highest ever recorded for the month.

The UK broke its all-time June temperature record. Cities are closing schools, power grids are buckling, and hospitals are reporting a surge in heat-related emergencies.

None of this should have been a surprise. Europe is the fastest-warming continent on Earth, heating at roughly twice the global average, and scientists have been warning for decades that human-made climate change would make extreme heat more frequent and more severe. Current projections expect the next five years to shatter even more records, making this the “new normal”.

Europe’s current heatwave is evidence of a new climatic reality shaped by anthropogenic warming, according to a report by France 24.

The summers European residents grew up with no longer exist, and extreme heat is no longer an anomaly, but the new baseline. This means the question now is no longer whether extreme heat will return, but whether European cities can survive it.

A climate disaster that isn’t treated like one

Extreme heat kills more Europeans than any other climate hazard.

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), over 175,000 people die every year from heat-related causes across the continent.

Despite the numbers, extreme temperatures have not been treated with the same urgency as other disasters, such as storms, wildfires, or floods. Most governments are still improvising, and there is no coordinated response to extreme heat, as it is still treated as a weather inconvenience rather than a life-threatening hazard.

However, this framing is starting to shift. At COP30, the United Nations office for Disaster Risk Reduction (NDRR) launched a new Extreme Heat Risk Governance Framework. It formally recognised extreme heat as one of the most deadly and least managed climate threats. Although this framework is a step forward, decades of fragmented policies, short-term crisis thinking, and chronic underinvestment in public services have left Europe dangerously exposed.

As a result, every summer that passes without meaningful progress is another summer that will cost lives.

Europe is not built for this

A recent report by the UK’s Climate Change Committee argued that the country is built for a climate that no longer exists, warning that temperatures exceeding 40°C are becoming increasingly common. The same could be said of virtually every European country. Cities were designed for a different era with concrete roads, pavements, and buildings that absorb and trap heat rather than deflect it, turning urban areas into furnaces that run four to six degrees warmer than their surroundings.

Some cities are already responding. For instance, Paris has pledged to plant 170,000 trees in public spaces, and Marseille is depaving historic plazas and mapping shaded walking routes.

Other countries are also taking action by replacing standard pavement with cool surfaces and reflective road paint, rethinking building codes, and redesigning public spaces with passive cooling in mind. However, none of it touches the underlying problem. Europe is still largely powered by fossil fuels, and its food systems, housing and transport networks all carry a heavy carbon cost.

The EU’s greenhouse gas footprint amounts to around 9 tonnes of CO₂ equivalent per person per year, well above the global average of roughly 5 tonnes.

Progress is being made, but not fast enough. Train travel is still more expensive than flying on many routes, building codes still allow new construction that will soon be uninhabitable, and cooling centres, shaded public corridors, and proactive outreach to elderly people living alone remain the exception rather than the rule.

Heat action plans exist in some cities, but few are legally binding, and fewer still have the budgets to match their ambitions.

Individual action matters, but it cannot substitute for the systemic changes that only governments and institutions can deliver. Eating less meat or flying less makes a difference at scale, but the clock will not stop running unless emissions are cut at the source.

Adaptation and mitigation need to happen together, and neither can wait.

The window is narrowing

The EU is preparing a climate resilience strategy due at the end of 2026, which is expected to introduce legally binding rules and monitoring tools to coordinate action across member states. It is a step in the right direction. But as this week’s heatwave has made clear, the gap between what is being planned and what is already happening on the ground is widening fast.

The question is not just how to respond to the next heatwave, but how to govern, finance, and rebuild for a continent that is already living in a different future.


A weekly e-mail in English featuring expertise from scholars and researchers. It provides an introduction to the diversity of research coming out of the continent and considers some of the key issues facing European countries. Get the newsletter!The Conversation


Júlia de Freitas Sampaio, Postdoctoral researcher, University of Luxembourg

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

War‑induced fertilizer shortage may be reducing US soil and water pollution

A farmer in Michigan spreads liquid fertilizer on a field. Jim West/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Kimberly Van Meter, Penn State and Nandita Basu, University of Waterloo

American farmers are expected to plant several million fewer acres of corn in 2026 than they did in 2025, as the closure of the Strait of Hormuz throttles a key fertilizer trading corridor, along with the energy and raw materials needed to produce and transport fertilizer.

The closure is disrupting deliveries of about one-third of the world’s traded agricultural fertilizers. Fertilizer prices are rising, and farmers worldwide are cutting back on fertilizer use or shifting to less fertilizer-intensive crops.

Corn is one of the most fertilizer-intensive and widely grown crops in the United States, but the disruption extends far beyond a single crop or a single nation.

These changes are often discussed as a threat to global food supplies – and they are.

But as researchers who study agricultural nutrient cycles and nutrient pollution of our waterways, we suspect that the picture is more complicated, and in some ways more hopeful, than the headlines suggest.

That is because decades of farmers using more fertilizer than they needed have quietly built up large reserves of nutrients in the soil, which crops can draw on, even when farmers aren’t applying fertilizer. Indeed, research has shown that in highly intensive agricultural systems, fertilizer application can be cut substantially with little to no effect on crop yields.

A legacy of overuse

For decades, farmers in the United States and around the world have steadily increased the amount of fertilizer they use, seeking to produce enough crops to feed a growing population. Despite several years of encouragement to apply less, farmers consistently apply more nitrogen and phosphorus than their crops actually need, our research suggests.

The nutrients that are not taken up by plants accumulate in soils, providing large stores of nitrogen and phosphorus long after they were first applied. They also leach into groundwater or run off into rivers and lakes, driving dangerous algal blooms, coastal dead zones and greenhouse gas emissions.

But in the current crisis, they may also serve an unexpected purpose.

A slimy green mess floats on water near a marina with boats and docks.
Excess fertilizer that runs off farmland with rainfall can cause algae blooms, like this one in Lake Erie in 2017. AP Photo/Paul Sancya

Latent nutrients in the ground

As shortages and price hikes force farmers to use less fertilizer, crops may be able to draw on legacy nutrient reserves already in the ground.

Our analysis of phosphorus use across U.S. croplands found that in parts of the central Midwest and livestock-dominated regions in the East, soil phosphorus reserves are large enough to maintain crop production levels without as much new fertilizer.

In these nutrient-saturated systems, reductions in fertilizer applications can lower costs and reduce environmental losses without proportionately reducing production. Applying less also means fewer nutrients running off into rivers and streams.

Nutrient distribution

The current shortage may also help shift where farmers find fertilizer.

Livestock produce manure that is high in both nitrogen and phosphorus, which makes excellent fertilizer. It can even be processed into a slurry with an even richer mixture of nutrients in anaerobic digesters, which generate electricity as a byproduct of their chemical reactions.

Processing more manure in digesters, and delivering that slurry to crop farmers, could reduce the nation’s dependence on foreign fertilizer supplies.

How anaerobic digesters can convert manure into an energy source and nutrient-rich fertilizer.

The limits of resilience

The details are important. Not every farm or field has enough leftover nutrients to maintain yields with less fertilizer, and the buffers that do exist in some fields will not last indefinitely. In parts of the world where the soil is low in nutrients, such as regions of sub-Saharan Africa, improving access to fertilizers remains essential for increasing food production and supporting livelihoods.

In places where nutrients have accumulated over decades of intensive use, the soil may serve as a buffer against losses in yield, at least for some amount of time, though exactly how much will vary with each field. The current growing season may provide opportunities to discover how strong that buffer is, and whether reducing fertilizer applications improves downstream water quality.The Conversation

Kimberly Van Meter, Associate Professor of Geography, Penn State and Nandita Basu, Professor and Tier I Canada Research Chair of Global Water Sustainability and Ecohydrology, University of Waterloo

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

When your local reflecting pool or pond turns green with algae, don’t reach for chemicals – nature has better solutions

A National Park Service employee uses a vacuum to clean the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on June 20, 2026. AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein
Eric Palkovacs, University of California, Santa Cruz

When the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool turned green with algae just days after a US$15 million renovation, the U.S. government scrambled for chemicals and expensive technical solutions to fix the iconic landmark.

Trying to kill algae with chemicals is a common response when community ponds or other water features go green. But as a scientist who studies freshwater ecology, I can tell you there are better solutions that cost far less, last longer and carry less risk of harm to pets and wildlife.

Rather than battling against nature, these alternatives work with nature for long-term solutions.

What went wrong on the National Mall

The algal bloom that turned the Reflecting Pool a vibrant green shouldn’t have been a surprise.

The pool is big, more than a third of a mile long and around 165 feet wide. But it’s shallow, meaning it warms up quickly in the sun. When it was repainted “American flag blue” during the renovations in spring 2026, the new color darkened the pool, and darker colors absorb more heat.

On top of those conditions, the pool was refilled with water from the nutrient-rich tidal basin of the Potomac River. The combination of warm water and nutrients created prime conditions for algae to bloom, turning the water pea soup green.

A tube into the Reflecting Pool, with the Jefferson Memorial in the background, puts out white bubbles.
In addition to hydrogen peroxide and vacuums, the government ordered nanobubble ozone technology to break up the algae. The nanobubbler contract was for $1.7 million. AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

As the national conversation over the Reflecting Pool shifts to political finger-pointing, an important environmental question deserves careful scrutiny: What is the best approach to maintain water quality in a case like this, whether for a national monument or a community water feature or pond?

Trying to chemically or mechanically remove algae can damage the structure of a water feature and may harm species in the water that could actually help solve the problem.

Importantly, chemical and mechanical solutions are only temporary fixes. When the Reflecting Pool is drained and filled again, there’s a good chance that algae will bloom again.

Natural algae control

Limnologists – scientists like me who study inland water bodies – have spent many decades learning why lakes and ponds turn green and how to clear them up.

Often, nutrient-rich waters fueled by fertilizer runoff from farm fields or sewage from cities are the sources that stimulate algal growth.

However, natural ponds also host grazing zooplankton, which eat algae. For example, a type of zooplankton called Daphnia, known as water fleas because of the way these tiny crustaceans swim, can control algae by consuming it before it becomes a pea soup nuisance. Thus, a thriving Daphnia population can help maintain good water quality in a lake, pond or community water feature, even when nutrient levels spike.

A close-up image of a see-through water creature with eggs inside.
Daphnia are a genus of hundreds of species of tiny, see-through crustaceans that happen to be voracious algae eaters. A female Daphnia magna’s eggs are visible in this magnified image. Hajime Watanabe, PLoS Genetics, March 2011, CC BY

In addition to being highly effective grazers, Daphnia have another superpower – they can evolve rapidly. Urban waterbodies are often harsh environments with a variety of challenges, including high temperatures, low levels of dissolved oxygen, and pollutants. Daphnia can adapt to tough conditions, making these creatures an ideal source of algae control in many urban ponds.

Rooted aquatic plants are also useful for algae control in ponds because they absorb nutrients. Thus, shallow ponds with thick beds of aquatic plants can often resist algal blooms when nutrient levels rise.

Why draining might not be the best solution

One downside to draining and refilling a pond or urban water feature to try to clean it is that doing so resets the aquatic ecosystem, erasing the signature of any past evolution that has taken place.

Imagine Daphnia in a shallow pond that experiences periodic heat waves throughout the summer. Through repeated exposure to high temperatures, natural selection favors heat-resistant genotypes that can thrive in an urban pond.

Daphnia and other grazing zooplankton can also evolve resistance to some types of cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae, which produce compounds that are toxic to people and pets. Daphnia that evolve resistance to those toxins can help control harmful cyanobacterial blooms.

If a Daphnia population that evolved to tolerate warm temperatures, low oxygen levels or cyanotoxins is removed, the new population likely won’t be ready to handle those local challenges. This evolutionarily naive population will perform poorly in its new environment, reducing its effectiveness at controlling algal blooms.

As a result, traditional mechanical and chemical approaches may actually work against the goal of minimizing algae in ponds and other water features.

Nature-based solutions

The use of Daphnia to control algal blooms is just one example of solving environmental challenges with nature-based solutions.

Growing urban forests to provide cooling and improve air quality to help reduce the need for more energy-intensive air conditioning is another example. Maintaining urban wetlands can help reduce flooding, protect property and recharge groundwater more effectively and for less money than building and maintaining levees. Coastal marshes similarly reduce erosion, buffer storm surges and support fisheries.

All these urban ecosystems protect biodiversity and support human health and well-being.

From national landmarks to city parks and backyard ponds, projects of all sizes can take advantage of nature-based solutions. While each specific project is unique, some general principles apply.

Ecosystems are most resilient when they are diverse and connected. So, it is beneficial to use a variety of species and genotypes and provide corridors that support the movement of organisms and their beneficial genes.

Urban climates are changing rapidly, so it helps to use species and genotypes that will thrive under future conditions, including rising temperatures.

Not every solution has to be engineered

The hubbub over the Reflecting Pool holds a mirror up to assumptions about how to solve pressing environmental challenges. The idea of just engineering one’s way out of any environmental crisis has limits.

Understanding ecology and nature’s mechanisms of ecosystem resilience can achieve sustainable solutions that benefit both nature and people.The Conversation

Eric Palkovacs, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Farmers in a national park are turning down lights at night to help wildlife – it could be good for crops too

Some farms are looking at how best to use their lights at night. MillaF/Shutterstock
Jenny Hall, York St John University and Brendan Paddison, York St John University

Growing evidence suggests that excessive outdoor lighting at night may be harming wildlife.

For generations, rural communities worked to the rhythms of daylight and darkness. Today, the amount of harsh light switched on at nightime is having profound consequences for many living things.

Agricultural properties are often remote and vulnerable to equipment or livestock theft. In response, many landowners have now installed security floodlights, powerful halogen beams, and unshielded external LEDs to illuminate yards overnight.

The North York Moors National Park, an international dark sky reserve in the north of England, has been working with farmers to reduce the impact of artificial light on the natural environment.

The initiative is about ensuring that lighting is used in the right place, at the right time, and at the appropriate intensity. This might involve installing downward-facing fixtures, reducing glare through shielding, or switching to warmer-coloured lighting that is less disruptive to wildlife.

The best places to start trying to reduce bright nighttime lights are those rich in wildlife, and farms in the park are often in the darkest areas.

Since 2021, the national park has worked with more than twenty farms in key dark sky locations, with many more projects in development.

Carefully designed lighting systems can use shielded or motion-activated lighting, which reduce impact on wildlife.

Two agricultural buildings, on left more light is showing.
Before and after a North Yorkshire property worked with the national park’s advice on lighting. North York Moors National Park, CC BY

How does it affect the environment?

Over-illumination disrupts complex regional ecosystems, extending daylight artificially and changing the behaviour of animals that depend on natural darkness. Research suggests that light pollution caused by humans, harms ecosystems because of the critical role light has on the timing of biological systems, which artificial light disrupts.

The damage extends from the soil upward. Scientific research indicates that pressures on ecosystems due to habitat loss, pesticides, invasive species and light pollution could create a devastating decline in the insect population, with a knock-on effect on the food chain.

Benefits for farms?

There’s also evidence that suggests that changing lighting could help farms. This light disruption affects crucial agricultural allies. Moths, which serve as vital nocturnal pollinators, are heavily affected, alongside bats facing shrinking feeding grounds. Bats can help farmers control insect pests.

Artificial light exposure also alters vital plant cycles, for instance, and light at night can affect plant growth.

Small changes, such as switching to down-facing lights, can lead to significant environmental improvements.

Changing lighting around farms could also open up new tourism opportunities. Farms that also operate as B&Bs, for instance, can flag to tourists that they are part of a dark skies friendly community programme. This is an accreditation scheme for businesses that improve their lighting systems in accordance with international dark sky standards.

While UK national park authorities have powers to enforce planning restrictions on lighting, in places outside national parks, the UK lacks a comprehensive national regulatory framework to govern rural skyscapes.

The lesson in North Yorkshire and beyond is not that farms should switch off their lights. It is that lighting can be used responsibly to contribute to the stewardship of one of the countryside’s most valuable resources: the natural night sky.The Conversation

Jenny Hall, Associate Professor in Tourism and Events, York St John University and Brendan Paddison, Professor of Tourism Geographies, York St John University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Small forest fragments can protect more birds when the surrounding landscape is more helpful

Anderson Saldanha Bueno, Instituto Federal Farroupilha (IFFar); Carlos A. Peres, University of East Anglia, and Chase Mendenhall

Larger areas contain more species. This is one of the most ironclad laws of ecology, which explains why large natural areas usually receive higher priority in conservation strategies. In fragmented landscapes, this logic has also led small forest fragments to be seen as environments of lower value for biodiversity.

But would it be possible to increase the number of species in a forest fragment without increasing its size?

Our study, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shows that this is possible. When the surrounding landscape is favourable and more helpful, small forest fragments can support far more bird species than would be expected based solely on their size.

Fragmented forest landscapes

Forest landscapes modified by human activities are composed of forest fragments of different sizes surrounded by other types of environments. Collectively this is called the matrix. This matrix can be terrestrial, such as cattle pastures, crops and urban areas, or aquatic, such as hydroelectric reservoirs.

In addition to the matrix, the surroundings of the fragments may also include arborescent vegetation (a type of vegetation made up of scattered trees and/or tree-like shrubs and ferns), riparian (riverside) forests, and nearby fragments. Together, the matrix and the different types of vegetation form the surrounding landscape of forest fragments.

The contribution of the surrounding landscape

To understand the role of the surrounding landscape, we compiled data from nearly 2,000 bird species recorded in more than 1,000 tropical and subtropical forest remnants distributed across 50 landscapes in 17 countries in the Americas, Africa and Asia. The study compared forest fragments surrounded by terrestrial matrices modified by cattle ranching, agriculture and urbanisation with forest islands formed by hydroelectric reservoirs.

Reservoir islands represent an extreme fragmentation scenario due to the ecological hostility of the matrix. By comparing them with forest fragments surrounded by land-based matrices, we were able to measure how much changing the matrix (from water to land) can increase the number of bird species in forests of the same size.

Using satellite imagery, we also calculated the amount of tree-like vegetation surrounding forest remnants at different distances ranging from 50 to 2,000 metres. This allowed us to identify how far from the forest the increase in tree-like vegetation makes its greatest contribution to bird species.

Improving the surrounding, increasing biodiversity

Fragments surrounded by terrestrial matrices had more species than reservoir islands. This difference in species number increases as fragment area decreases. For example, a one-hectare forest fragment may contain more than twice as many species as islands of the same size.

The amount of tree-like vegetation surrounding forest remnants also matters. In both fragments and islands, more trees in the surrounding landscape — especially within a 300-metre radius — meant fewer local extinctions. The benefit is even greater for forest-dependent birds, which are the most sensitive to forest fragmentation.

How species perceive the environment

Birds living in forest fragments do not necessarily stay within these spaces. The greater the amount of tree-like vegetation in the surroundings, the more species can move between fragments and feed on resources available in the matrix, such as insects and flower nectar.

But the ability of birds to fly does not necessarily ensure free movement through the matrix and between neighbouring forest areas. Some species adapted to living under the shaded forest environment tend to avoid exposure to open environments. In addition, many species move through the forest interior without the need for long flights. Therefore, even dirt roads can limit bird movement between neighbouring fragments.

Bird movement across the landscape is important. If certain species become locally extinct in one forest fragment, they may one day arrive from another fragment. For this recolonisation process to occur, two conditions are necessary: species must be able to cross the matrix, and there must be nearby fragments or vegetation along the way, such as scattered trees and forests along riverbanks that facilitate movement between more distant fragments.

Surrounding landscape is more important for smaller fragments

In large fragments, species find enough food, shelter, and space to survive. In small fragments, however, space and resources may be insufficient to sustain several bird populations. But when birds can use resources outside the fragment and reach other forest areas, they begin to use an area larger than the fragment’s boundaries. This is why small fragments with a favourable surrounding landscape can support more species.

And most forest fragments are small. Fragmented forest landscapes in tropical and subtropical regions are overwhelmingly composed of small fragments. In the Atlantic forest of South America, 80% of forest fragments are smaller than 5 hectares. This means that biodiversity depends on a favourable surrounding landscape to ensure its survival in the small forests that remain.

Implications for conservation

Small increases in the number of trees and tree-like vegetation within a 300-metre radius of fragments can significantly reduce species loss. This means that local actions can generate real gains for biodiversity: planting trees, restoring riverside forests, recovering degraded areas, and expanding agroforestry systems — such as coffee and cocoa plantations — can make productive landscapes more favourable to wildlife.

In a world where natural habitats continue to shrink, this is a message of hope.

Protecting forests and other natural habitats is and will continue to be the central strategy for biodiversity conservation. However, our study shows that conservation does not need to stop at forest boundaries. By combining forest protection with improvements to the surrounding landscape, we can increase the conservation value of forest fragments, especially small ones, which are by far the most common in landscapes modified by human activities.

Size is crucial, but it is not everything: what lies outside the forest fragment also determines how many species live inside it.The Conversation

Anderson Saldanha Bueno, Professor, Instituto Federal Farroupilha (IFFar); Carlos A. Peres, Professor of Tropical Conservation Ecology, University of East Anglia, and Chase Mendenhall, Conservation Scientist

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Heat waves can leave homes dangerously hot – even for young, healthy adults

When temperature soar inside homes, being outside even on very hot days can feel less uncomfortable than being indoors. Brandon Bell/Getty Images
Zoltan Nagy, Eindhoven University of Technology

Most people know that heat waves can be dangerous. What they may not realize is that the heat indoors can be much worse than outdoors.

When the power goes out and air conditioning stops, a house starts to function like a greenhouse. Heat enters through windows and walls and has nowhere to go. Air stagnates.

Within hours, indoor temperatures can climb well above what the thermometer shows outside, especially on upper floors and in rooms with south-facing windows. Over longer periods, especially if temperatures don’t cool off overnight, conditions can become lethal.

Most heat-related deaths occur indoors. When a heat dome sent temperatures soaring in the Pacific Northwest in 2021, 98% of the more than 600 deaths in British Columbia happened inside homes. Washington and Oregon also saw high numbers of deaths in homes that lacked air conditioning.

In Europe, where only 1 in 10 households have air conditioning, heat waves killed an estimated 60,000 people in 2022 and 47,000 in 2023, largely inside buildings never designed for these temperatures.

People of all ages are at risk in heat waves like these. I spent eight years at the University of Texas at Austin studying how buildings respond to extreme heat. In a recent study, my team assessed the heat risk in every single-family home in Austin.

We found that even younger, healthy adults face far more risk than they realize.

How hot is too hot for a human body?

Your body maintains a core temperature of about 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit (37 degrees Celsius). To cool down, it pushes blood to the skin and sweats. But when air temperature is high, that convective cooling weakens. When humidity is also high, sweat cannot evaporate.

If the body has no way to release heat, core temperature rises. If the core temperature increases past about 104 F (40 C), the body’s thermoregulation starts to fail. Past 109 F (42.8 C), death becomes likely.

Four charts show heat and humidity risks for different ages and indoors vs outdoors.
Heat risk increases with humidity. This chart translates air temperature and relative humidity into general limits of survivability for six hours of exposure depending on whether a person is indoors or outdoors and their age. The black line is considered the edge of survivability. Zones 3-5 are considered not survivable for extended periods of time due to high humidity that prevents sweat from evaporating to release heat (Zone 3), limits on the body’s ability to sweat (Zone 4), or both (Zone 5). Tw is wet bulb temperature. A temperature of 35 C = 95 F; 50 C = 122 F. Jennifer Vanos, et al., 2023

What makes indoor heat especially dangerous is that it does not let up at night in homes that lack air conditioning. Outdoor temperatures typically drop after sunset, and someone outside can get a few hours of recovery. But a poorly insulated home that has been absorbing heat all day releases that heat slowly, keeping indoor temperatures elevated through the night. A person inside the home never gets a break.

After two or three nights of this, even healthy people start to be at serious risk for heat-related illnesses.

Why homes heat up more than people expect

People tend to underestimate indoor heat for a few reasons.

One is that the thermostat typically sits on one wall in one room. It does not tell what the temperature is in an upstairs bedroom or near a sun-facing window. In older, underinsulated homes, the actual felt temperature can exceed 90 F (32.2 C) even when a thermostat reads 75 F (23.9 C). The hot walls, ceilings and windows can radiate heat directly onto your body.

Another reason is that people assume all homes respond to heat the same way. However, a newer home with double-pane windows and good insulation acts like a thermos, keeping heat out for a longer time. An older home with single-pane windows and cracks in the walls heats up fast.

An illustration of a person sitting with their head in their hand in an older home with the ceiling temperature at 101 F, the windows 122 F and the walls and floor in the 90s F.
An illustration of how an older home in Arizona heats up on a hot day shows how underinsulated homes can feel much hotter inside than the air temperature and thermostat suggest. Jonathan Bean, CC BY-ND

Two houses on the same street, exposed to the same outdoor conditions, can have completely different temperatures inside. And in a blackout, where neither home has cooling, those differences can become a matter of life and death.

What we found in Austin

Our study combined two datasets. From Austin’s tax appraisal records, we pulled basic property information, such as the year the home was built, the size and the number of stories for each of the city’s 213,000 single-family homes. We then matched each home to the most similar energy simulation models in a U.S. Department of Energy database that contains thousands of detailed, physics-based building energy models representing the U.S. residential building stock.

Using those models, we simulated each building’s indoor temperatures over time during a three-day heat wave and power outage with outdoor temperatures above 110 F (43 C).

A map of homes in a neighborhood shows how low and high risk homes are mixed together
The average daily heat risk in a suburban Austin neighborhood, with dark red signifying higher risk and yellow lower risk, shows how risk can vary house to house. Calvin Lin

We found that 85% of homes got hot enough to pose a significant risk of death for an elderly occupant. But what surprised us was the risk to younger people.

Under today’s climate conditions in Austin, about 15% of homes already have the potential to get hot enough without air conditioning to pose serious heat risks to healthy adults. Under future warming scenarios, that number jumps to as high as 65% if average summer highs reach 104 F (40 C). Further, climate projections for Austin show that heat waves will double in frequency by the end of the century.

We found three types of buildings and accompanying risks:

  • Resilient homes, which are newer and well insulated, tended to have temperature and humidity conditions that would be survivable for an elderly occupant throughout the simulated heat wave with blackout.

  • Critical-risk buildings, which are mostly older homes, became dangerous almost immediately.

  • And then there was the middle group – homes where temperatures rose slowly during the simulated blackout, day by day, possibly giving occupants a false sense of security until it was too late.

Texas has already seen conditions like our case study’s – a heat wave paired with a power outage. In 2024, a derecho knocked out power for nearly 900,000 Houston households while the heat index climbed to 100 F (37.8 C). Seven weeks later, Hurricane Beryl cut power to 2.6 million homes, leaving them without power for over three days, with temperatures over 90 F (32.2 C).

What you can do to stay safe

If you can’t get cooling at home, there are steps you can take that can help.

Move to the lowest floor of your home, where it will be coolest. Close the blinds and curtains on sun-facing windows. Drink water constantly to stay hydrated, which is essential for regulating body temperature.

If you’re facing a blackout, be sure to also check on elderly neighbors, especially those living alone. You can also try to find a public cooling center; many cities now open them during heat emergencies.

Longer term, upgrades such as reflective window film, attic insulation and lighter-colored roofing can reduce how much a home heats up. After the 2021 heat dome, British Columbia’s coroner recommended updating building codes to address heat.

Our own findings point in the same direction: We propose that new homes should be required by building codes to maintain conditions in which at least light physical activity remains possible for all occupants for at least 72 hours during a power outage.

As summers get hotter with climate change and blackouts become more frequent, the risks of people suffering heat illnesses will only continue to rise.The Conversation

Zoltan Nagy, Professor of Building Services, Eindhoven University of Technology

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Summer’s silent killer: why the world’s heatwaves are a global health emergency

Studio Nut/Shutterstock
Ian Williams, University of Southampton

Heat is no longer a future climate risk. It is already here.

Across continents, high temperatures are being pushed higher by forces acting at once: human-caused warming, very warm oceans, dry soils, slow-moving high-pressure weather systems and El Niño conditions that have now developed in the tropical Pacific.

El Niño is a natural warming of part of the tropical Pacific that can shift weather patterns around the world. It is not the cause of climate change, but when it develops in a climate already warmed by greenhouse gas pollution, it can add another push to global temperatures and regional extremes.

The science is clear. Greenhouse gases have raised the baseline, so heatwaves now begin from a warmer starting point. Record ocean heat adds more energy to the climate system. Dry ground can intensify heat, because less of the sun’s energy goes into evaporating water from soil and plants, and more goes into heating the air.

Weather patterns decide where that heat lands. A “heat dome” happens when a high-pressure system settles over a region. Air sinks, clouds are suppressed and temperatures can climb for days. The danger grows when nights remain hot, because bodies, buildings and infrastructure get little chance to cool.

El Niño’s effects vary by region and season, so it will not explain every heatwave in 2026. But it is now being added to long-term warming, and that combination can raise the risk of more extreme heat, drought or heavy rainfall in some regions, including parts of Asia, Australia and the Americas.

In the UK, Kew Gardens reached 35.1°C in late May, provisionally breaking the national May temperature record for the second day in a row. The previous record, before the 2026 heat, was 32.8°C, reached in 1922 and 1944.

Elsewhere, the same pattern is visible. Spring 2026 was the hottest spring recorded in France since records began in 1900. In the United States, March 2026 was the warmest March on record for the contiguous US (the lower 48 states). India’s meteorological service issued an extended heatwave outlook into early July for parts of northern, central and eastern India, while China’s National Climate Center has forecast above-normal summer temperatures, especially in southern China and Xinjiang in the north west. In Australia, Tasmania, Victoria and New South Wales have just had one of their ten warmest autumns on record.

Heat kills

Heat often kills without leaving obvious damage behind: it pushes bodies past what they can tolerate.

High temperatures can cause dehydration, strain the heart, worsen kidney disease and aggravate respiratory illness. Heat can also affect mental health and increase distress. Older people, babies, people with chronic illness, outdoor workers and those living alone are among those at higher risk.

Hot nights make heatwaves more dangerous because the body has less chance to recover. Research has linked high nighttime temperatures with increased heat-related deaths. In an overheated bedroom, care home or hospital ward, strain can continue for hours.

The death toll from heat is large, but often underestimated because heat may worsen existing illness rather than appear as the sole cause of death. A 2025 European analysis estimated 62,775 heat-related deaths in Europe in 2024 alone. The Lancet Countdown reports that heat-related deaths among older people have risen sharply, and that hundreds of thousands of people now die globally each year from heat.

Heat also puts pressure on the systems people rely on. Hospitals fill faster. Care homes become harder to cool. Rail lines buckle. Roads soften. Rivers warm and water quality declines. Electricity demand rises as people use fans and air-conditioning, while low river flows can affect water quality and supply. A power cut can disrupt cooling, transport, water systems, shops, hospitals and communications.

What helps during a heatwave

People can reduce risk, especially if they act before they feel ill.

Cool the body early: drink water regularly, use shade, take cool showers and put wet cloths on the skin. People who have been told to restrict fluids because of heart failure, kidney disease or another medical condition should follow medical advice about how much to drink.

Avoid being outside in the hottest part of the day where possible. Outdoor workers, athletes and people who travel on foot need particular protection.

Keep homes cooler before they overheat. Close curtains or blinds during the day, especially on windows facing the sun. Open windows after sunset if it is cooler outside than inside. Sleep in the coolest room available.

Check on people at higher risk. Do they have water, shade, medication, a way to get help and somewhere cooler to go if home becomes unsafe?

Take official warnings seriously. Follow heat-health alerts, local weather warnings and public health advice. Have a simple plan for medicines, transport, pets, food, drinking water and somewhere cooler to go if needed.

Seek urgent medical help if someone becomes confused, faints, has a seizure, collapses, has very hot skin, has a very high temperature, or does not improve after being moved somewhere cooler and cooled down.

Inequality and infrastructure

Personal precautions save lives, but they cannot make unsafe housing safe, cool a badly ventilated care home or protect outdoor workers without changes to working conditions.

Heat risk is shaped by inequality. People without trees, insulation, ventilation, secure work, clean water or affordable energy are less able to avoid exposure, cool their homes or recover after extreme heat. The same pattern applies between countries: communities that have contributed least to climate change are often disproportionately affected, because they have fewer resources for adaptation, healthcare, infrastructure and disaster response.

Adapting to heat has to be collective: cooler housing, shaded streets, heat-resilient hospitals, reliable water systems, worker protections, public cooling spaces and early warning systems that reach the people who need them.

Heat and drought are increasingly linked emergencies. Heat increases demand for water and electricity. Drought can reduce supply. Together, they can create failures across health, transport, food, water and energy. Water, health, energy and climate planning need to be connected, because stress in one system can quickly spread to another.

The next heatwave will be reported as weather. It should also be understood as a test of housing, healthcare, infrastructure and public protection. A hotter world is already here. The question now is how many heat-related deaths and system failures governments are prepared to accept as normal.The Conversation

Ian Williams, Professor of Applied Environmental Science, University of Southampton

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The Caspian Sea has lost an area nearly the size of Sicily: human activities are a major reason why

Nima Shokri, United Nations University; Technical University of Hamburg and Amir AghaKouchak, University of California, Irvine

The Caspian Sea, the largest inland body of water on Earth, is shrinking. Not fluctuating, not entering another natural cycle, but shrinking.

For decades, scientists and policymakers treated changes in the Caspian as part of the basin’s natural variability. Water levels in the sea have always risen and fallen.

But our new study shows something far more troubling: the current decline is increasingly driven by human decisions to dam and divert rivers, and by fragmented decision-making across five countries that border this body of water.

Using satellite observations together with ground-based hydrological records from rivers across all five shoreline states (Iran, Russia, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan), we found that flow into the Caspian Sea has declined sharply over the past three decades.

The main reason is not declining rainfall. In fact, rain over the Volga Basin, which supplies roughly 80% of the Caspian’s inflow, has slightly increased. That finding matters because it overturns one of the most common assumptions surrounding the Caspian crisis. The common narrative has been straightforward: climate change increases evaporation, rainfall declines, and the sea shrinks.

Climate change certainly plays a role: our analysis confirms that evaporation across the Caspian has increased significantly as regional temperatures rise. But evaporation alone explains only about 40% of the observed water loss since the mid-1990s.

The remaining decline points overwhelmingly toward human activity. The Volga River has been heavily engineered for decades. Dams, reservoirs, use for irrigation, industrial consumption and navigation systems have fundamentally altered the hydrology of the basin).

Water that once flowed naturally into the Caspian is increasingly intercepted upstream. One critical but rarely discussed example is the Volga–Don canal system, which links the Caspian basin to the Black Sea through Russia’s internal waterways. Geopolitically and economically, the canal is strategically valuable. But it diverts water away from the Caspian system.

The cumulative effect is now visible from space. Since the mid-1990s, the Caspian Sea has lost roughly 24,000km² of surface area, an area approaching the size of Sicily. Water levels have fallen by about two metres.

The shallow northern Caspian, ecologically one of the most productive parts of the sea, is drying particularly rapidly. This matters because the northern Caspian is not empty water. It is a critical ecological zone supporting fisheries, wetlands, migratory birds and spawning grounds for sturgeon, the ancient fish species that produce most of the world’s caviar.

Threats to shipping

As water retreats, ecological stress intensifies. Our study also detected a long-term rise in chlorophyll-a concentrations in the northern Caspian, a key indicator of algal activity and declining water quality. In plain terms, the sea is becoming warmer, shallower and increasingly nutrient-rich: ideal conditions for harmful algal blooms.

This is not merely an environmental story. The Caspian region sits at the centre of major energy and trade corridors linking Europe and Asia). Russia’s north-south transport routes and China’s international development plan, the Belt and Road Initiative, plus offshore oil infrastructure and regional shipping networks all depend on the Caspian remaining navigable and stable.

Falling water levels threaten ports, shipping lanes and coastal infrastructure. Declining depths reduce cargo capacity and increase transport costs. What appears initially as an environmental issue gradually becomes an economic constraint.

The Caspian Sea region

A colour map of the Caspian Sea and surrounding countries.
Shutterstock

Political problems

Then there is the political dimension. Unlike oceans, inland seas cannot rely on global circulation to buffer local mismanagement. Their survival depends directly on the behaviour of neighbouring states. And the Caspian is surrounded by countries with competing strategic interests, uneven governance systems and limited transparency over their water use.

That fragmentation has become one of the greatest risks facing the sea. Although regional agreements exist, including the 2018 Aktau Convention (formally the Convention on the Legal Status of the Caspian Sea), there is still no comprehensive and enforceable system governing water allocation, hydrological monitoring or ecological protection across the basin. Data sharing remains limited. Water withdrawals are often opaque. Environmental management is fragmented.

This resembles a pattern seen repeatedly across modern environmental crises: governments prefer to discuss climate change because it externalises responsibility. It allows leaders to portray ecological decline as an unavoidable planetary process.

But the Caspian story is more uncomfortable than that. It is also a story about political choices. Rivers were dammed. Water was diverted. Wetlands were degraded. Pollution controls remained weak. Oil and gas development expanded while ecological safeguards lagged behind. Economic growth consistently outranked hydrological sustainability.

The danger is not simply that the Caspian shrinks, but that ecological thresholds may be crossed – beyond which, recovery becomes extraordinarily difficult.

The Aral Sea, the world’s fourth largest lake, demonstrated how quickly collapse can accelerate once a chain reaction begins. Exposed lakebeds generate dust storms. Fisheries collapse. Salinity rises. Biodiversity crashes. Local climates shift. Economic systems unravel around the drying basin.

The Caspian has not yet reached that stage – but the warning signs are becoming increasingly visible.

There is still time to slow the trajectory. However, doing so would require something historically rare in the region: long-term coordination that prioritises hydrological stability – safeguarding the sea’s natural water balance and keeping water levels from dropping past a dangerous point of ecological collapse – over short-term extraction and geopolitical competition.

This would mean transparent water accounting – the open tracking and sharing of data on exactly how much water each nation is pulling from the feeding rivers for agriculture and industry. It would mean negotiated environmental flow releases from upstream reservoirs, and recognition that the Caspian is not simply an energy corridor or a shipping route, but a fragile water system.

Nature eventually imposes consequences on societies that ignore those limits. The Caspian Sea is beginning to deliver that message.The Conversation

Nima Shokri, Executive Co-Director, Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH), United Nations University; Technical University of Hamburg and Amir AghaKouchak, Professor of Civil & Environmental Engineering and Earth System Science, University of California, Irvine

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

We found microplastics in hedgehogs – then we traced them back to pet food

Emily Thrift, University of Sussex

When colleagues and I found microplastics in hedgehog droppings, we wanted to know where they were coming from. One answer was surprisingly close to home: pet food.

The story began in 2021, when we collected 189 hedgehog faeces samples from residential gardens and rehabilitation centres across the UK. We found plastic in 19% of them. Despite being one of Britain’s best-loved wild animals, and now officially listed as “near threatened”, no one knew hedgehogs were ingesting microplastics.

To understand where these microplastics were coming from we decided to investigate their diet. Naturally, the European hedgehog eats invertebrates, including beetles, snails, slugs, earthworms, caterpillars and woodlice, so we started by looking at these. Colleagues and I analysed thousands of invertebrate and soil samples from 51 sites in Sussex, UK. We found plastics were widespread across different species and land types.

Next, we wanted to understand if pet foods fed to European hedgehogs in rehabilitation centres and residential gardens contained microplastics. In the UK, many rehabilitation centres treat a high number of sick or injured mammals each year.

Research suggests that food left out by people is the single biggest reason European hedgehogs visit residential gardens. Many hedgehogs have even become reliant on it, especially during the autumn and winter.

Often, this means commercially available cat, dog, or hedgehog food. To determine the levels of plastic contamination in pet foods colleagues and I selected 38 brands to test across different price categories, food types (wet and dry), and target animals (cat, dog, and wild hedgehog). We purchased six retail units of each product and took a random 1g sample from each tin, sachet, tray, or bag. Our study was recently published in the journal Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry.

We found microplastics in 29 of the 38 pet food products we tested. In 18 products, contamination appeared in more than one retail unit. Although plastic was found across the products tested, those in the “value” price category had more positive samples.

Dry food contained more plastic per gram, but animals typically eat much larger portions of wet food. As a result, wet food may lead to greater overall microplastic intake. For example, based on the average levels we found in wet dog food samples, a large dog such as a Labrador could ingest around 313 microplastic particles per day.

Hedgehog on lawn
Oi, humans, I’m hungry. Andy Willis / unsplash, CC BY-SA

Compared with studies of human food, we found that pet food had higher levels of microplastics. This is likely due to ingredient quality. For example, of the 21 products which contained animal derivatives, 19 had at least one plastic-positive sample, and 13 had at least two.

What does this mean for pets and wildlife?

All this suggests that pet foods may be an important source of microplastics for pets and wild hedgehogs (and other mammals).

We still know relatively little about the health effects of microplastics in pets and wildlife, and we did not test the health impacts in our research. However, there is a growing body of evidence from laboratory studies that it leads to issues with fertility, organ functionality, and overall health.

Given both this uncertainty and how common these particles were in the pet food we tested, reducing contamination at the manufacturing stage would be a good precaution.

That’s why the government should mandate microplastic testing for processed food manufacturers, bringing them under the same strict regulatory safety checks used for other chemical contaminants. As consumers, we should be able to purchase affordable food that is good for our pets and wild mammals, while not causing a detrimental effect on the environment.The Conversation

Emily Thrift, PhD Candidate and Doctoral Tutor in Ecology, University of Sussex

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Careel Head Road Shops and the Bangalley- Burrowong Creeks: Some History 
Careel Bay Marina Environs November 2024 - Spring Celebrations
Careel Bay Playing Fields History and Current
Careel Bay Steamer Wharf + Boatshed: some history 
Careel Creek 
Careel Creek - If you rebuild it they will come
Church Point Public Wharf - 1885 to 2025: Some History 
Clareville Beach
Clareville/Long Beach Reserve + some History
Clareville Public Wharf: 1885 to 1935 - Some History 
Coastal Stability Series: Cabbage Tree Bay To Barrenjoey To Observation Point by John Illingsworth, Pittwater Pathways, and Dr. Peter Mitchell OAM
Community Concerned Over the Increase of Plastic Products Being Used by the Northern Beaches Council for Installations in Pittwater's Environment
Cowan Track by Kevin Murray
Crown Reserves Improvement Fund Allocations 2021
Crown Reserves Improvement Fund 2022-23: $378,072 Allocated To Council For Weed Control - Governor Phillip Park Gets a Grant This Time: full details of all 11 sites
Crown Reserves Improvement Fund Allocations 2023-2024
Crown Reserves Grants 2025 Announced: Local focus on Weeds + Repairs to Long Reef Boardwalk + some pictures of council's recent works at Hitchcock Park - Careel Bay playing fields - CRIF 2025
Curl Curl To Freshwater Walk: October 2021 by Kevin Murray and Joe Mills
Currawong and Palm Beach Views - Winter 2018
Currawong-Mackerel-The Basin A Stroll In Early November 2021 - photos by Selena Griffith
Currawong State Park Currawong Beach +  Currawong Creek
Deep Creek To Warriewood Walk photos by Joe Mills
Microplastic assessment report 2026: Dee Why Lagoon Among Most Polluted in New South Wales - 56.55% of Manly Lagoon's plastic pollution is Artificial Turf - Pittwater Least Polluted
Milton Family Property History - Palm Beach By William (Bill) James Goddard II with photos courtesy of the Milton Family   - Snapperman to Sandy Point, Pittwater
Mona Vale Beach - A Stroll Along, Spring 2021 by Kevin Murray
Mona Vale Headland, Basin and Beach Restoration
Mona Vale Woolworths Front Entrance Gets Garden Upgrade: A Few Notes On The Site's History 
Mother Brushtail Killed On Barrenjoey Road: Baby Cried All Night - Powerful Owl Struck At Same Time At Careel Bay During Owlet Fledgling Season: calls for mitigation measures - The List of what you can do for those who ask 'What You I Do' as requested
Mount Murray Anderson Walking Track by Kevin Murray and Joe Mills
Mullet Creek
Muogamarra Nature Reserve in Cowan celebrates 90 years: a few insights into The Vision of John Duncan Tipper, Founder 
Muogamarra by Dr Peter Mitchell OAM and John Illingsworth
Narrabeen Creek
Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment: Past Notes Present Photos by Margaret Woods
Narrabeen Lagoon Entrance Clearing Works: September To October 2023  pictures by Joe Mills
North Narrabeen in 1911 - Panoramas taken for West's Lakeside Estate 
Out and About July 2020 - Storm swell
Out & About: July 2024 - Barrenjoey To Paradise Beach To Bayview To Narrabeen + Middle Creek - by John Illingsworth, Adriaan van der Wallen, Joe Mills, Suzanne Daly, Jacqui Marlowe and AJG
Palm Beach Headland Becomes Australia’s First Urban Night Sky Place: Barrenjoey High School Alumni Marnie Ogg's Hard Work
Palm Beach Public Wharf: Some History 
Paradise Beach Baths renewal Complete - Taylor's Point Public Wharf Rebuild Underway
Realises Long-Held Dream For Everyone
Paradise Beach Wharf + Taylor's Wharf renewal projects: October 2024 pictorial update - update pics of Paradise Wharf and Pool renewal, pre-renewal Taylors Point wharf + a few others of Pittwater on a Spring Saturday afternoon
Pictures From The Past: Views Of Early Narrabeen Bridges - 1860 To 1966
Pittwater Beach Reserves Have Been Dedicated For Public Use Since 1887 - No 1.: Avalon Beach Reserve- Bequeathed By John Therry 
Pittwater Reserves: The Green Ways; Bungan Beach and Bungan Head Reserves:  A Headland Garden 
Pittwater Reserves, The Green Ways: Clareville Wharf and Taylor's Point Jetty
Pittwater Reserves: The Green Ways; Hordern, Wilshire Parks, McKay Reserve: From Beach to Estuary 
Pittwater Reserves - The Green Ways: Mona Vale's Village Greens a Map of the Historic Crown Lands Ethos Realised in The Village, Kitchener and Beeby Parks 
Pittwater Reserves: The Green Ways Bilgola Beach - The Cabbage Tree Gardens and Camping Grounds - Includes Bilgola - The Story Of A Politician, A Pilot and An Epicure by Tony Dawson and Anne Spencer  
Pittwater spring: waterbirds return to Wetlands
Pittwater's Koalas Driven to Extinction: Some History
Pittwater's Lone Rangers - 120 Years of Ku-Ring-Gai Chase and the Men of Flowers Inspired by Eccleston Du Faur 
Pittwater's Great Outdoors: Spotted To The North, South, East + West- June 2023:  Palm Beach Boat House rebuild going well - First day of Winter Rainbow over Turimetta - what's Blooming in the bush? + more by Joe Mills, Selena Griffith and Pittwater Online
Scotland Island's Public Wharves: Some History 
Seagull Pair At Turimetta Beach: Spring Is In The Air!
Shark net removal trial cancelled for this year:  Shark Meshing (Bather Protection) Program 2024-25 Annual Performance Report Released
2023-2024 Shark Meshing Program statistics released: council's to decide on use or removal
Shark Meshing (Bather Protection) Program 2022/23 Annual Performance Report 
Shark Meshing (Bather Protection) Program 2021/22 Annual Performance Report - Data Shows Vulnerable, Endangered and Critically Endangered Species Being Found Dead In Nets Off Our Beaches 
Shark Meshing (Bather Protection) Program 2020/21 Annual Performance Report 
Shark Meshing 2019/20 Performance Report Released
DPI Shark Meshing 2018/19 Performance ReportLocal Nets Catch Turtles, a Few Sharks + Alternatives Being Tested + Historical Insights
Some late November Insects (2023)
Stapleton Reserve
Stapleton Park Reserve In Spring 2020: An Urban Ark Of Plants Found Nowhere Else
Stealing The Bush: Pittwater's Trees Changes - Some History 
Stokes Point To Taylor's Point: An Ideal Picnic, Camping & Bathing Place 
Stony Range Regional Botanical Garden: Some History On How A Reserve Became An Australian Plant Park
Taylor's Point Public Wharf 2013-2020 History
The Chiltern Track
The Chiltern Trail On The Verge Of Spring 2023 by Kevin Murray and Joe Mills
The 'Newport Loop': Some History 
The Resolute Beach Loop Track At West Head In Ku-Ring-Gai Chase National Park by Kevin Murray
The Top Predator by A Dad from A Pittwater Family of Dog Owners & Dog Lovers
Threatened Species Day 2025 + A few insights into Pittwater's Past + Present Threatened Species 
$378,072 Allocated To Council For Weed Control: Governor Phillip Park Gets a Grant This Time: full details of all 11 sites - Crown Reserves Improvement Fund (CRIF) March 2023
Topham Track Ku-Ring-Gai Chase NP,  August 2022 by Joe Mills and Kevin Murray
Towlers Bay Walking Track by Joe Mills
Trafalgar Square, Newport: A 'Commons' Park Dedicated By Private Landholders - The Green Heart Of This Community
Tranquil Turimetta Beach, April 2022 by Joe Mills
Tree Management Policy Passed
Trial to remove shark nets - NBC - Central Coast - Waverly approached to nominate a beach each
Turimetta Beach Reserve by Joe Mills, Bea Pierce and Lesley
Turimetta Beach Reserve: Old & New Images (by Kevin Murray) + Some History
Turimetta Headland
Turimetta Moods by Joe Mills: June 2023
Turimetta Moods (Week Ending June 23 2023) by Joe Mills
Turimetta Moods: June To July 2023 Pictures by Joe Mills
Turimetta Moods: July Becomes August 2023 by Joe Mills
Turimetta Moods: August Becomes September 2023 ; North Narrabeen - Turimetta - Warriewood - Mona Vale photographs by Joe Mills
Turimetta Moods August 2025 by Joe Mills
Turimetta Moods: Mid-September To Mid-October 2023 by Joe Mills
Turimetta Moods: Late Spring Becomes Summer 2023-2024 by Joe Mills
Turimetta Moods: Warriewood Wetlands Perimeter Walk October 2024 by Joe Mills
Turimetta Moods: November 2024 by Joe Mills

Pittwater's Birds

Attracting Insectivore Birds to Your Garden: DIY Natural Tick Control small bird insectivores, species like the Silvereye, Spotted Pardalote, Gerygone, Fairywren and Thornbill, feed on ticks. Attracting these birds back into your garden will provide not only a residence for tick eaters but also the delightful moments watching these tiny birds provides.
Aussie Backyard Bird Count 2017: Take part from 23 - 29 October - how many birds live here?
Aussie Backyard Bird Count 2018 - Our Annual 'What Bird Is That?' Week Is Here! This week the annual Aussie Backyard Bird Count runs from 22-28 October 2018. Pittwater is one of those places fortunate to have birds that thrive because of an Aquatic environment, a tall treed Bush environment and areas set aside for those that dwell closer to the ground, in a sand, scrub or earth environment. To take part all you need is 20 minutes and your favourite outdoor space. Head to the website and register as a Counter today! And if you're a teacher, check out BirdLife Australia's Bird Count curriculum-based lesson plans to get your students (or the whole school!) involved

Australian Predators of the Sky by Penny Olsen - published by National Library of Australia

Australian Raven  Australian Wood Duck Family at Newport

A Week In Pittwater Issue 128   A Week In Pittwater - June 2014 Issue 168

Baby Birds Spring 2015 - Rainbow Lorikeets in our Yard - for Children 

Baby Birds by Lynleigh Greig, Southern Cross Wildlife Care - what do if being chased by a nesting magpie or if you find a baby bird on the ground

Baby Kookaburras in our Backyard: Aussie Bird Count 2016 - October

Balloons Are The Number 1 Marine Debris Risk Of Mortality For Our Seabirds - Feb 2019 Study

Bangalley Mid-Winter   Barrenjoey Birds Bird Antics This Week: December 2016

Bird of the Month February 2019 by Michael Mannington

Birdland Above the Estuary - October 2012  Birds At Our Window   Birds at our Window - Winter 2014  Birdland June 2016

Birdsong Is a Lovesong at This time of The Year - Brown Falcon, Little Wattle Bird, Australian Pied cormorant, Mangrove or Striated Heron, Great Egret, Grey Butcherbird, White-faced Heron 

Bird Songs – poems about our birds by youngsters from yesterdays - for children Bird Week 2015: 19-25 October

Bird Songs For Spring 2016 For Children by Joanne Seve

Birds at Careel Creek this Week - November 2017: includes Bird Count 2017 for Local Birds - BirdLife Australia by postcode

Black Cockatoo photographed in the Narrabeen Catchment Reserves this week by Margaret G Woods - July 2019

Black-Necked Stork, Mycteria Australis, Now Endangered In NSW, Once Visited Pittwater: Breeding Pair shot in 1855

Black Swans on Narrabeen Lagoon - April 2013   Black Swans Pictorial

Blue-faced Honeyeaters Breeding In Pittwater

Brush Turkeys In Suburbia: There's An App For That - Citizen Scientists Called On To Spot Brush Turkeys In Their Backyards
Buff-banded Rail spotted at Careel Creek 22.12.2012: a breeding pair and a fluffy black chick

Cayley & Son - The life and Art of Neville Henry Cayley & Neville William Cayley by Penny Olsen - great new book on the art works on birds of these Australian gentlemen and a few insights from the author herself
Crimson Rosella - + Historical Articles on

Death By 775 Cuts: How Conservation Law Is Failing The Black-Throated Finch - new study 'How to Send a Finch Extinct' now published

Eastern Rosella - and a little more about our progression to protecting our birds instead of exporting them or decimating them.

Endangered Little Tern Fishing at Mona Vale Beach

‘Feather Map of Australia’: Citizen scientists can support the future of Australia's wetland birds: for Birdwatchers, school students and everyone who loves our estuarine and lagoon and wetland birds

First Week of Spring 2014

Fledging - Baby Birds coming to ground: Please try and Keep them close to Parent Birds - Please Put out shallow dishes of water in hot weather

Fledgling Common Koel Adopted by Red Wattlebird -Summer Bird fest 2013  Flegdlings of Summer - January 2012

Flocks of Colour by Penny Olsen - beautiful new Bird Book Celebrates the 'Land of the Parrots'

Friendly Goose at Palm Beach Wharf - Pittwater's Own Mother Goose

Front Page Issue 177  Front Page Issue 185 Front Page Issue 193 - Discarded Fishing Tackle killing shorebirds Front Page Issue 203 - Juvenile Brush Turkey  Front Page Issue 208 - Lyrebird by Marita Macrae Front Page Issue 219  Superb Fairy Wren Female  Front Page Issue 234National Bird Week October 19-25  and the 2015 the Aussie Back Yard Bird Count: Australia's First Bird Counts - a 115 Year Legacy - with a small insight into our first zoos Front Page Issue 236: Bird Week 2015 Front Page Issue 244: watebirds Front Page Issue 260: White-face Heron at Careel Creek Front Page Issue 283: Pittwater + more birds for Bird Week/Aussie Bird Count  Front Page Issue 284: Pittwater + more birds for Bird Week/Aussie Bird Count Front Page Issue 285: Bird Week 2016  Front Page Issue 331: Spring Visitor Birds Return

G . E. Archer Russell (1881-1960) and His Passion For Avifauna From Narrabeen To Newport 

Glossy Black-Cockatoo Returns To Pittwater by Paul Wheeler Glossy Cockatoos - 6 spotted at Careel Bay February 2018

Grey Butcher Birds of Pittwater

Harry Wolstenholme (June 21, 1868 - October 14, 1930) Ornithologist Of Palm Beach, Bird Man Of Wahroonga 

INGLESIDE LAND RELEASE ON AGAIN BUT MANY CHALLENGES  AHEAD by David Palmer

Issue 60 May 2012 Birdland - Smiles- Beamings -Early -Winter - Blooms

Jayden Walsh’s Northern Beaches Big Year - courtesy Pittwater Natural Heritage Association

John Gould's Extinct and Endangered Mammals of Australia  by Dr. Fred Ford - Between 1850 and 1950 as many mammals disappeared from the Australian continent as had disappeared from the rest of the world between 1600 and 2000! Zoologist Fred Ford provides fascinating, and often poignant, stories of European attitudes and behaviour towards Australia's native fauna and connects these to the animal's fate today in this beautiful new book - our interview with the author

July 2012 Pittwater Environment Snippets; Birds, Sea and Flowerings

Juvenile Sea Eagle at Church Point - for children

King Parrots in Our Front Yard  

Kookaburra Turf Kookaburra Fledglings Summer 2013  Kookaburra Nesting Season by Ray Chappelow  Kookaburra Nest – Babies at 1.5 and 2.5 weeks old by Ray Chappelow  Kookaburra Nest – Babies at 3 and 4 weeks old by Ray Chappelow  Kookaburra Nest – Babies at 5 weeks old by Ray Chappelow Kookaburra and Pittwater Fledglings February 2020 to April 2020

Lion Island's Little Penguins (Fairy Penguins) Get Fireproof Homes - thanks to NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service and the Fix it Sisters Shed

Long-Billed Corella

Lorikeet - Summer 2015 Nectar

Lyre Bird Sings in Local National Park - Flock of Black Cockatoos spotted - June 2019

Magpie's Melodic Melodies - For Children (includes 'The Magpie's Song' by F S Williamson)

Masked Lapwing (Plover) - Reflected

May 2012 Birdland Smiles Beamings Early Winter Blooms 

Mistletoebird At Bayview

Musk Lorikeets In Pittwater: Pittwater Spotted Gum Flower Feast - May 2020

Nankeen Kestrel Feasting at Newport: May 2016

National Bird Week 2014 - Get Involved in the Aussie Backyard Bird Count: National Bird Week 2014 will take place between Monday 20 October and Sunday 26 October, 2014. BirdLife Australia and the Birds in Backyards team have come together to launch this year’s national Bird Week event the Aussie Backyard Bird Count! This is one the whole family can do together and become citizen scientists...

National Bird Week October 19-25  and the 2015 the Aussie Back Yard Bird Count: Australia's First Bird Counts - a 115 Year Legacy - with a small insight into our first zoos

Native Duck Hunting Season Opens in Tasmania and Victoria March 2018: hundreds of thousands of endangered birds being killed - 'legally'!

Nature 2015 Review Earth Air Water Stone

New Family of Barking Owls Seen in Bayview - Church Point by Pittwater Council

Noisy Visitors by Marita Macrae of PNHA 

Pittwater Becalmed  Pittwater Birds in Careel Creek Spring 2018   Pittwater Waterbirds Spring 2011  Pittwater Waterbirds - A Celebration for World Oceans Day 2015

Pittwater's Little Penguin Colony: The Saving of the Fairies of Lion Island Commenced 65 Years Ago this Year - 2019

Pittwater's Mother Nature for Mother's Day 2019

Pittwater's Waterhens: Some Notes - Narrabeen Creek Bird Gathering: Curious Juvenile Swamp Hen On Warriewood Boardwalk + Dusky Moorhens + Buff Banded Rails In Careel Creek

Plastic in 99 percent of seabirds by 2050 by CSIRO

Plover Appreciation Day September 16th 2015

Powerful and Precious by Lynleigh Grieg

Red Wattlebird Song - November 2012

Restoring The Diamond: every single drop. A Reason to Keep Dogs and Cats in at Night. 

Return Of Australasian Figbird Pair: A Reason To Keep The Trees - Aussie Bird Count 2023 (16–22 October) You can get involved here: aussiebirdcount.org.au

Salt Air Creatures Feb.2013

Scaly-breasted Lorikeet

Sea Birds off the Pittwater Coast: Albatross, Gannet, Skau + Australian Poets 1849, 1898 and 1930, 1932

Sea Eagle Juvenile at Church Point

Seagulls at Narrabeen Lagoon

Seen but Not Heard: Lilian Medland's Birds - Christobel Mattingley - one of Australia's premier Ornithological illustrators was a Queenscliff lady - 53 of her previously unpublished works have now been made available through the auspices of the National Library of Australia in a beautiful new book

7 Little Ducklings: Just Keep Paddling - Australian Wood Duck family take over local pool by Peta Wise 

Shag on a North Avalon Rock -  Seabirds for World Oceans Day 2012

Short-tailed Shearwaters Spring Migration 2013 

South-West North-East Issue 176 Pictorial

Spring 2012 - Birds are Splashing - Bees are Buzzing

Spring Becomes Summer 2014- Royal Spoonbill Pair at Careel Creek

Spring Notes 2018 - Royal Spoonbill in Careel Creek

Station Beach Off Leash Dog Area Proposal Ignores Current Uses Of Area, Environment, Long-Term Fauna Residents, Lack Of Safe Parking and Clearly Stated Intentions Of Proponents have your say until February 28, 2019

Summer 2013 BirdFest - Brown Thornbill  Summer 2013 BirdFest- Canoodlers and getting Wet to Cool off  Summer 2013 Bird Fest - Little Black Cormorant   Summer 2013 BirdFest - Magpie Lark

Summer BirdFest 2026: Play antics of New Locals - Blue-faced Honeyeaters Breeding In Pittwater

The Mopoke or Tawny Frogmouth – For Children - A little bit about these birds, an Australian Mopoke Fairy Story from 91 years ago, some poems and more - photo by Adrian Boddy
Winter Bird Party by Joanne Seve

New Shorebirds WingThing  For Youngsters Available To Download

A Shorebirds WingThing educational brochure for kids (A5) helps children learn about shorebirds, their life and journey. The 2021 revised brochure version was published in February 2021 and is available now. You can download a file copy here.

If you would like a free print copy of this brochure, please send a self-addressed envelope with A$1.10 postage (or larger if you would like it unfolded) affixed to: BirdLife Australia, Shorebird WingThing Request, 2-05Shorebird WingThing/60 Leicester St, Carlton VIC 3053.


Shorebird Identification Booklet

The Migratory Shorebird Program has just released the third edition of its hugely popular Shorebird Identification Booklet. The team has thoroughly revised and updated this pocket-sized companion for all shorebird counters and interested birders, with lots of useful information on our most common shorebirds, key identification features, sighting distribution maps and short articles on some of BirdLife’s shorebird activities. 

The booklet can be downloaded here in PDF file format: http://www.birdlife.org.au/documents/Shorebird_ID_Booklet_V3.pdf

Paper copies can be ordered as well, see http://www.birdlife.org.au/projects/shorebirds-2020/counter-resources for details.

Download BirdLife Australia's children’s education kit to help them learn more about our wading birdlife

Shorebirds are a group of wading birds that can be found feeding on swamps, tidal mudflats, estuaries, beaches and open country. For many people, shorebirds are just those brown birds feeding a long way out on the mud but they are actually a remarkably diverse collection of birds including stilts, sandpipers, snipe, curlews, godwits, plovers and oystercatchers. Each species is superbly adapted to suit its preferred habitat.  The Red-necked Stint is as small as a sparrow, with relatively short legs and bill that it pecks food from the surface of the mud with, whereas the Eastern Curlew is over two feet long with a exceptionally long legs and a massively curved beak that it thrusts deep down into the mud to pull out crabs, worms and other creatures hidden below the surface.

Some shorebirds are fairly drab in plumage, especially when they are visiting Australia in their non-breeding season, but when they migrate to their Arctic nesting grounds, they develop a vibrant flush of bright colours to attract a mate. We have 37 types of shorebirds that annually migrate to Australia on some of the most lengthy and arduous journeys in the animal kingdom, but there are also 18 shorebirds that call Australia home all year round.

What all our shorebirds have in common—be they large or small, seasoned traveller or homebody, brightly coloured or in muted tones—is that each species needs adequate safe areas where they can successfully feed and breed.

The National Shorebird Monitoring Program is managed and supported by BirdLife Australia. 

This project is supported by Glenelg Hopkins Catchment Management Authority and Hunter Local Land Services through funding from the Australian Government’s National Landcare Program. Funding from Helen Macpherson Smith Trust and Port Phillip Bay Fund is acknowledged. 

The National Shorebird Monitoring Program is made possible with the help of over 1,600 volunteers working in coastal and inland habitats all over Australia. 

The National Shorebird Monitoring program (started as the Shorebirds 2020 project initiated to re-invigorate monitoring around Australia) is raising awareness of how incredible shorebirds are, and actively engaging the community to participate in gathering information needed to conserve shorebirds. 

In the short term, the destruction of tidal ecosystems will need to be stopped, and our program is designed to strengthen the case for protecting these important habitats. 

In the long term, there will be a need to mitigate against the likely effects of climate change on a species that travels across the entire range of latitudes where impacts are likely. 

The identification and protection of critical areas for shorebirds will need to continue in order to guard against the potential threats associated with habitats in close proximity to nearly half the human population. 

Here in Australia, the place where these birds grow up and spend most of their lives, continued monitoring is necessary to inform the best management practice to maintain shorebird populations. 

BirdLife Australia believe that we can help secure a brighter future for these remarkable birds by educating stakeholders, gathering information on how and why shorebird populations are changing, and working to grow the community of people who care about shorebirds.

To find out more visit: http://www.birdlife.org.au/projects/shorebirds-2020/shorebirds-2020-program

Surfers for Climate

A sea-roots movement dedicated to mobilising and empowering surfers for continuous and positive climate action.

Surfers for Climate are coming together in lineups around the world to be the change we want to see.

With roughly 35 million surfers across the globe, our united tribe has a powerful voice. 

Add yours to the conversation by signing up here.

Surfers for Climate will keep you informed, involved and active on both the local and global issues and solutions around the climate crisis via our allies hub. 

Help us prevent our favourite spots from becoming fading stories of waves we used to surf.

Together we can protect our oceans and keep them thriving for future generations to create lifelong memories of their own.

Visit:  http://www.surfersforclimate.org.au/

Create a Habitat Stepping Stone!

Over 50 Pittwater households have already pledged to make a difference for our local wildlife, and you can too! Create a habitat stepping stone to help our wildlife out. It’s easy - just add a few beautiful habitat elements to your backyard or balcony to create a valuable wildlife-friendly stopover.

How it works

1) Discover: Visit the website below to find dozens of beautiful plants, nest boxes and water elements you can add to your backyard or balcony to help our local wildlife.

2) Pledge: Select three or more elements to add to your place. You can even show you care by choosing to have a bird appear on our online map.

3) Share: Join the Habitat Stepping Stones Facebook community to find out what’s happening in the natural world, and share your pics, tips and stories.

What you get                                  

• Enjoy the wonders of nature, right outside your window. • Free and discounted plants for your garden. • A Habitat Stepping Stone plaque for your front fence. • Local wildlife news and tips. • Become part of the Pittwater Habitat Stepping Stones community.

Get the kids involved and excited about helping out! www.HabitatSteppingStones.org.au

No computer? No problem -Just write to the address below and we’ll mail you everything you need. Habitat Stepping Stones, Department of Environmental Sciences, Macquarie University NSW 2109. This project is assisted by the NSW Government through its Environmental Trust

Newport Community Gardens

Anyone interested in joining our community garden group please feel free to come and visit us on Sunday at 10am at the Woolcott Reserve in Newport!


Keep in Touch with what's happening on Newport Garden's Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/newportcg/

Avalon Preservation Association


The Avalon Preservation Association, also known as Avalon Preservation Trust. We are a not for profit volunteer community group incorporated under the NSW Associations Act, established 50 years ago. We are committed to protecting your interests – to keeping guard over our natural and built environment throughout the Avalon area.

Membership of the association is open to all those residents and/or ratepayers of Avalon Beach and adjacent areas who support the aims and objectives of our Association.

Report illegal dumping

NSW Government

The RIDonline website lets you report the types of waste being dumped and its GPS location. Photos of the waste can also be added to the report.

The Environment Protection Authority (EPA), councils and Regional Illegal Dumping (RID) squads will use this information to investigate and, if appropriate, issue a fine or clean-up notice. Penalties for illegal dumping can be up to $15,000 and potential jail time for anybody caught illegally dumping within five years of a prior illegal dumping conviction.

The Green Team

Profile
This Youth-run, volunteer-based environment initiative has been attracting high praise from the founders of Living Ocean as much as other local environment groups recently. 
Creating Beach Cleans events, starting their own, sustainability days - ‘action speaks louder than words’ ethos is at the core of this group. 

Australian Native Foods website: http://www.anfil.org.au/

Wildlife Carers and Organisations in Pittwater:

Sydney Wildlife rescues, rehabilitates and releases sick, injured and orphaned native wildlife. From penguins, to possums and parrots, native wildlife of all descriptions passes through the caring hands of Sydney Wildlife rescuers and carers on a daily basis. We provide a genuine 24 hour, 7 day per week emergency advice, rescue and care service.

As well as caring for sick, injured and orphaned native wildlife, Sydney Wildlife is also involved in educating the community about native wildlife and its habitat. We provide educational talks to a wide range of groups and audiences including kindergartens, scouts, guides, a wide range of special interest groups and retirement villages. Talks are tailored to meet the needs and requirements of each group. 

Profile

Found an injured native animal? We're here to help.

Keep the animal contained, warm, quiet and undisturbed. Do not offer any food or water. Call Sydney Wildlife immediately on 9413 4300, or take the animal to your nearest vet. Generally there is no charge. Find out more at: www.sydneywildlife.org.au

Southern Cross Wildlife Care was launched over 6 years ago. It is the brainchild of Dr Howard Ralph, the founder and chief veterinarian. SCWC was established solely for the purpose of treating injured, sick and orphaned wildlife. No wild creature in need that passes through our doors is ever rejected. 

Profile

People can assist SCWC by volunteering their skills ie: veterinary; medical; experienced wildlife carers; fundraising; "IT" skills; media; admin; website etc. We are always having to address the issue of finances as we are a non commercial veterinary service for wildlife in need, who obviously don't have cheque books in their pouches. It is a constant concern and struggle of ours when we are pre-occupied with the care and treatment of the escalating amount of wildlife that we have to deal with. Just becoming a member of SCWC for $45 a year would be a great help. Regular monthly donations however small, would be a wonderful gift and we could plan ahead knowing that we had x amount of funds that we could count on. Our small team of volunteers are all unpaid even our amazing vet Howard, so all funds raised go directly towards our precious wildlife. SCWC is TAX DEDUCTIBLE.

Find out more at: southerncrosswildlifecare.org.au/wp/

Avalon Community Garden

Community Gardens bring people together and enrich communities. They build a sense of place and shared connection.

Profile

Avalon Community Garden is a community led initiative to create accessible food gardens in public places throughout the Pittwater area. Our aim is to share skills and knowledge in creating fabulous local, organic food. But it's not just about great food. We also aim to foster community connection, stimulate creative ideas for community resilience and celebrate our abundance. Open to all ages and skills, our first garden is on the grounds of Barrenjoey High School (off Tasman Road)Become part of this exciting initiative to change the world locally. 

Avalon Community Garden
2 Tasman Road
North Avalon

Newport Community Garden: Working Bee Second Sunday of the month

Newport Community Gardens Inc. is a not for profit incorporated association. The garden is in Woolcott Reserve.

Objectives
Local Northern Beaches residents creating sustainable gardens in public spaces
Strengthening the local community, improving health and reconnecting with nature
To establish ecologically sustainable gardens for the production of vegetables, herbs, fruit and companion plants within Pittwater area 
To enjoy and forge friendships through shared gardening.
Membership is open to all Community members willing to participate in establishing gardens and growing sustainable food.
Subscription based paid membership.
We meet at the garden between 9am – 12 noon
New members welcome

For enquiries contact newportcommunitygardenau@gmail.com

Living Ocean


Living Ocean was born in Whale Beach, on the Northern Beaches of Sydney, surrounded by water and set in an area of incredible beauty.
Living Ocean is a charity that promotes the awareness of human impact on the ocean, through research, education, creative activity in the community, and support of others who sustain ocean health and integrity.

And always celebrating and honouring the natural environment and the lifestyle that the ocean offers us.

Our whale research program builds on research that has been conducted off our coastline by our experts over many years and our Centre for Marine Studies enables students and others to become directly involved.

Through partnerships with individuals and organizations, we conceive, create and coordinate campaigns that educate all layers of our community – from our ‘No Plastic Please’ campaign, which is delivered in partnership with local schools, to film nights and lectures, aimed at the wider community.

Additionally, we raise funds for ocean-oriented conservation groups such as Sea Shepherd.

Donations are tax-deductable 
Permaculture Northern Beaches

Want to know where your food is coming from? 

Do you like to enrich the earth as much as benefit from it?

Find out more here:

Profile

What Does PNHA do?

PROFILE

About Pittwater Natural Heritage Association (PNHA)
With urbanisation, there are continuing pressures that threaten the beautiful natural environment of the Pittwater area. Some impacts are immediate and apparent, others are more gradual and less obvious. The Pittwater Natural Heritage Association has been formed to act to protect and preserve the Pittwater areas major and most valuable asset - its natural heritage. PNHA is an incorporated association seeking broad based community membership and support to enable it to have an effective and authoritative voice speaking out for the preservation of Pittwater's natural heritage. Please contact us for further information.

Our Aims
  • To raise public awareness of the conservation value of the natural heritage of the Pittwater area: its landforms, watercourses, soils and local native vegetation and fauna.
  • To raise public awareness of the threats to the long-term sustainability of Pittwater's natural heritage.
  • To foster individual and community responsibility for caring for this natural heritage.
  • To encourage Council and the NSW Government to adopt and implement policies and works which will conserve, sustain and enhance the natural heritage of Pittwater.
Act to Preserve and Protect!
If you would like to join us, please fill out the Membership Application Form ($20.00 annually - $10 concession)

Email: pnhainfo@gmail.com Or click on Logo to visit website.

Think before you print ; A kilo of recycled paper creates around 1.8 kilograms of carbon emissions, without taking into account the emissions produced from transporting the paper. So, before you send a document to print, think about how many kilograms of carbon emissions you could save by reading it on screen.

Friends Of Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment Activities

Bush Regeneration - Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment  
This is a wonderful way to become connected to nature and contribute to the health of the environment.  Over the weeks and months you can see positive changes as you give native species a better chance to thrive.  Wildlife appreciate the improvement in their habitat.

Belrose area - Thursday mornings 
Belrose area - Weekend mornings by arrangement
Contact: Phone or text Conny Harris on 0432 643 295

Wheeler Creek - Wednesday mornings 9-11am
Contact: Phone or text Judith Bennett on 0402 974 105
Or email: Friends of Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment : email@narrabeenlagoon.org.au

Pittwater's Environmental Foundation

Pittwater Environmental Foundation was established in 2006 to conserve and enhance the natural environment of the Pittwater local government area through the application of tax deductible donations, gifts and bequests. The Directors were appointed by Pittwater Council. 

 Profile

About 33% (about 1600 ha excluding National Parks) of the original pre-European bushland in Pittwater remains in a reasonably natural or undisturbed condition. Of this, only about 400ha remains in public ownership. All remaining natural bushland is subject to encroachment, illegal clearing, weed invasion, feral animals, altered drainage, bushfire hazard reduction requirements and other edge effects. Within Pittwater 38 species of plants or animals are listed as endangered or threatened under the Threatened Species Act. There are two endangered populations (Koala and Squirrel Glider) and eight endangered ecological communities or types of bushland. To visit their site please click on logo above.

Avalon Boomerang Bags


Avalon Boomerang Bags was introduced to us by Surfrider Foundation and Living Ocean, they both helped organise with the support of Pittwater Council the Recreational room at Avalon Community Centre which we worked from each Tuesday. This is the Hub of what is a Community initiative to help free Avalon of single use plastic bags and to generally spread the word of the overuse of plastic. 

Find out more and get involved.

"I bind myself today to the power of Heaven, the light of the sun, the brightness of the moon, the splendour of fire, the flashing of lightning, the swiftness of wind, the depth of the sea, the stability of the earth, the compactness of rocks." -  from the Prayer of Saint Patrick