Cabbage Tree Island

Cabbage Tree Island, also known as the John Gould Nature Reserve, is a protected nature reserve and uninhabited continental island lying 1.4 km (0.87 mi) off the mouth of Port Stephens on the coast of New South Wales, Australia.[1] The 30 ha (74-acre) reserve and island is named for the Cabbage-tree Palms in the two gullies on the island's western side which are the nesting site of Goulds petrel. It is the principal breeding site of the nominate subspecies of the threatened Gould's petrel and, with the nearby Boondelbah Island where there is also a small colony, has been classified by BirdLife International as an Important Bird Area.[2]

John Gould Nature Reserve
New South Wales
IUCN category IV (habitat/species management area)
John Gould Nature Reserve
Nearest town or cityShoal Bay
Coordinates32°40′54″S 152°14′04″E
Area30 ha (74 acres)
Managing authoritiesNSW National Parks and Wildlife Service
See alsoProtected areas of
New South Wales

Description

Cabbage Tree Island is a small and rugged island, about 1 km (1 mi) long, on a north-south alignment, by 480 m (1,570 ft) wide. It rises abruptly to a height of 123 m (404 ft). The tree vegetation includes, as well as the cabbage-tree palms, deciduous and sandpaper figs, native plums, and bird-lime trees.[3]

History

In 1911, a penguin chick was captured on Cabbage Tree Island and taken to Maitland where an attempt was made to raise it as a pet.[4] Attitudes towards nature evolved during the 20th century, and the island's importance for conservation was formally recognised.

Conservation

Both Cabbage Tree and Boondelbah Islands are gazetted nature reserves under the New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Act, so protecting the island's habitat from land uses incompatible with nature conservation. Access is only permitted for scientific and conservation purposes.[3]

Cabbage Tree Island, NSW, west side

Gould's petrel conservation management

Gould's petrel in flight

The petrels nest mainly in natural rock crevices among the rock scree of two gullies on the western side of the island, but also in hollow fallen palm trunks, beneath mats of fallen palm fronds and in cavities among fig tree buttresses. They breed in colonies with the nests often less than 1 m (3 ft) apart. Before significant active management of the island commenced, the breeding population was in decline. One major contributing factor was the presence of rabbits which largely destroyed the understorey vegetation of the island and prevented its regeneration.[3]

The removal of the sheltering understorey vegetation by rabbits led to increased exposure of the ground-nesting petrels and predation by pied currawongs and Australian ravens. It also led to increased mortality following entanglement of the birds with the sticky fruits of the bird-lime trees which fell to the ground rather than being caught in the understorey.[3] By 1992 there were fewer than 250 breeding pairs of Gould's petrel nesting on the Island, fewer than 20% of the pairs were producing fledglings, fewer than 50 young were being produced each year, and adult mortality exceeded 50 birds each year.[3]

Remedial management from 1992 onwards has included the eradication of rabbits on the island in 1997/98 and the removal of bird-lime trees from petrel nesting habitat, as well as the culling of currawongs and ravens. After a few pairs of Gould's petrels were discovered on Boondelbah Island in 1995, 1.5 km (1 mi) to the south, a translocation program was implemented to supplement the new breeding site with fledglings from Cabbage Tree. By 2004/05 it was estimated that the breeding colony on Cabbage Tree Island had increased to 2,500 individuals comprising 1,000 breeding pairs, that an average of 300 fledglings are produced annually, that 50% of pairs are producing fledged young, and average adult mortality is less than ten birds a year.[3][5]

See also

References

  1. "Cabbage Tree Island". Geographical Names Register (GNR) of NSW. Geographical Names Board of New South Wales. Retrieved 10 June 2011.
  2. "IBA: Cabbage Tree and Boondelbah Islands". Birdata. Birds Australia. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 8 June 2011.
  3. Gould's Petrel (Pterodroma leucoptera leucoptera) Recovery Plan (PDF). Department of Environment and Conservation (PDF). Sydney: Government of New South Wales. 2006. pp. 3–4, 15, App. 2, App. 4. ISBN 978-1-74137-784-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 March 2011. Retrieved 9 June 2011.
  4. "A Baby Penguin". Maitland Daily Mercury (NSW : 1894 - 1939). 12 October 1911. p. 4. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
  5. "Gould's Petrel", Ockham's Razor
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