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Boulia Shire Council 13 Jun 2020

A chance find of a dead bird beside a Queensland road has revealed Australia’s elusive night parrot could actually have trouble seeing in the dark.

The night parrot is one of only two nocturnal parrot species in the world, is endangered and lives in small numbers across outback Australia.

In 1990 scientists discovered the mummified body of one on the side of the road near Boulia, in western Queensland.

It took another 23 years for the first verified live sightings in the state.

That bird, with its skull intact, provided a vital clue behind the species’ struggle to survive.

Researchers used 3D reconstruction to study the night parrot’s vision and discovered a problem with its eyesight.

“We found that the night parrot has similar eye size to other parrots, with smaller optic nerves,” a researcher, Dr Vera Weisbecker, of Flinders University, said.

“It also has smaller optic lobes, which are visual processing areas in the brain.

“This suggests that the night parrot may not be great at seeing in the dark.

“Its vision is likely sensitive, but with poor resolution, so that it might not be good at distinguishing obstacles like wire fences or even predators in dark conditions.”

It means night parrots are not as well-adapted to life in the dark compared with other nocturnal species, such as owls with enlarged eyes.

The findings raise questions about the critically endangered species’ ability to survive in low numbers.

Being nocturnal, night parrots need to navigate in the dark, often flying at high speeds.

While necessary to control stock, fencing, particularly barbed wire, can pose a lethal obstacle for birds.

The study, published in Scientific Reports, a Nature Research Journal, suggests unused fences should be removed in areas where the night parrots have been discovered.