Gillingarra Important Bird Area

Gillingarra Important Bird Area is an 83 km2 tract of land in the wheatbelt region of Western Australia. It is located near Mogumber and Koogan on the former Midland Railway line.

The IBA is an important site for western yellow robins

It includes the nature reserves of Gillingarra and Koodjee with a large area of privately owned farmland. It has been identified by BirdLife International as an Important Bird Area (IBA) because it supports up to 20 breeding pairs of the endangered Carnaby's black-cockatoo which nest in marri trees and feed in native shrublands. It also supports populations of the western corella, red-capped parrot, western spinebill and western yellow robin.[1]

Description

The boundaries of the IBA are defined by areas of suitable nesting habitat and associated feeding habitat for the cockatoos. The site comprises isolated Marri paddock trees that provide nesting sites for the cockatoos with a large area of intact proteaceous heath that provide food sources for nesting birds. The area lies at an altitude of 205–240 m above sea level and has a Mediterranean climate.[2]

gollark: Also, I missed a sleep() in the inner indexing loop, but that's patched.
gollark: Basically, the issue with this specific setup is that printed pages have individual NBT, and recent versions will treat differently NBT'd items as separate for caching, so each one got getItemMeta'd individually. I still don't know why it got run several times though.
gollark: (not sure)
gollark: Vanilla turtlegistics does .getItemMeta on all slots, right?
gollark: It is *slower than Artist* (to boot, anyway, and probably during use as it's client-server and not as fancy) but *faster than (probably most) Turtlegisticses*.

References

  1. "IBA: Gillingarra". Birdata. Birds Australia. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  2. BirdLife International (2011) Important Bird Areas factsheet: Gillingarra. Downloaded from "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 10 July 2007. Retrieved 1 July 2011.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) on 24/06/2011.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.