Beautiful rare night bird thought to be extinct is rediscovered after 100 years
The night parrot is a small green-and-yellow-coloured species, officially known as pezoporus occidentalis, which has not been seen in its native home of Australia since long. The rare Night Parrots were uncovered in their natural environment. The elusive night parrot, a small green-and-yellow bird officially known as pezoporus occidentalis, has been spotted in Australia for the first time in over a century. This nocturnal breed is notoriously difficult to monitor and protect due to its nocturnal habits. Elusive birds can be hard to protect, especially when they move under cover of darkness and lie low in thick desert grass by day. That’s the challenge with the night parrot, a small green-and-yellow species long considered near-mythical across Australia’s interior. A focused effort on Ngururrpa Country set out to answer three practical questions: where these parrots are living, what threatens them there and what people can do now to keep them alive. The approach was hands-on and methodical. Instead of waiting for chance sightings, the team paired local knowledge with tools which worked while people sleep. The goal was simple: build a clear picture of the night parrot’s daily needs and the pressures nibbling at its edges, find them then save them.
Bird enthusiasts embarked on a mission to discover where these parrots reside. From 2020 to 2023, rangers and scientists deployed an array of equipment across numerous sites in the region, determined to locate the elusive bird. They used a special device called a 'songmeter' to record the birds communicating through sound. In 2024, it was announced that their search had been successful. They didn't just find one bird, but what is believed to be the largest population of the species in the world. They discovered at least 50 of the rare species living there, having only ever detected the occasional individual in the past. Indigenous rangers and scientists deployed rugged, weatherproof audio recorders across dozens of sites. Night parrots have distinctive calls, so detections on these devices acted like pins on a map. When recordings confirmed parrots at a location, camera traps followed to learn which predators showed up nearby. The team also collected predator scat to identify what those hunters had been eating, then added decades of satellite imagery to track how often fires rolled through the landscape. Nick Leseberg, an ecologist at the University of Queensland and a co-author of the study, helped explain the soundscape these devices captured. “One of the night parrot’s diverse array of calls sounded like “didly dip, didly dip,” like a telephone, explains Leseberg. Another sounded like “dink dink,” resembling a bell.”
These rare species are so endangered they've been placed on the IUCN Red List, indicating a high risk of total extinction. The International Union for Conservation of Nature estimated their numbers in 2022, with the BBC reporting that there could be as few as 40 to 500 left in the wild. Cameras frequently recorded dingoes near parrot habitat. At face value, a wild dog near a small bird sounds like trouble. But scat analysis told a different story: cat remains showed up often. Feral cats hunt stealthily at night and can wipe out inexperienced fledglings. Dingoes appear to keep cat numbers in check, either by direct predation or by making key areas less comfortable for cats. This balance matters. Push down dingo presence and cats may surge; keep dingoes on the scene and cat pressure may fall. For a species which nests and roosts on the ground, fewer cats near those roosts can mean more chicks making it through their earliest weeks. The hunt for these elusive creatures was no walk in the park and required a team of dedicated professionals armed with weatherproof audio recorders. The eight parrots have unique calls which can be picked up by these devices, and once one was confirmed to be in an area, camera traps were used to gather more information. These cameras allowed the team to see what predators were attracted by the presence of the rare birds. They also collected predator droppings to help identify them and compared this with old images to understand how often they typically move through the landscape.
Monitors detected night parrots at more than half of the surveyed sites, stretched across a wide slice of desert. The pattern points to a real population, not a stray bird passing through. Follow-up work located the birds’ daytime roosts inside dense, older clumps of spinifex grass. In this region the key plant is bull spinifex, also known as Triodia longiceps, which forms tough, dome-like shelters where a parrot can stay cool and hidden. These shelters aren’t interchangeable. Younger, sparse spinifex doesn’t offer the same cover. Night parrots depend on mature, tightly packed clumps which take time to form. When those clumps are lost, there’s no quick substitute. The Great Sandy Desert sees lightning strikes and long, dry spells which can set off fast-moving fires. When blazes return too often, older spinifex doesn’t get the years it needs to grow into protective domes. The study found that country around roosts tends to burn on a cycle of several years, which is quick in plant terms and risks keeping the habitat stuck in a youthful, thinner stage. There’s a practical fix within reach. Cooler, well-planned burns at the right times can create a patchwork of fuel breaks. The mosaic reduces the odds that one high-intensity wildfire will sweep across the sandplains and erase parrot shelter in one go.
Nick Leseberg, an ecologist at the University of Queensland who co-authored the groundbreaking study, explained how these methods worked. Based on where birds were heard and how many called at once, the team estimates there could be about 50 night parrots in the protected area. For a species with very few confirmed individuals across Australia, this figure carries weight. It points to Ngururrpa Country as an important stronghold. A stronghold isn’t guaranteed safety. A single rough fire season could knock back the habitat. Predator control programs which harm dingoes could open the door for more cats. Fresh disturbances, vehicle tracks, new weeds which change fire behavior, or grazing stock, could tilt the system in the wrong direction. The research revealed that dingoes were often heard near the rare parrot's habitat. Despite appearing mostly harmless, cats also continued to appear, posing a threat as predators due to their stealthy nocturnal hunting.
Fire management should lean on the rangers’ deep local knowledge and use modern mapping to guide cooler-season burns. Those burns can cut fuel, set natural breaks and lower the odds of summer wildfires racing across roosting country. Predator control should avoid harming dingoes, since dingoes may be doing important work by suppressing cats. The night parrot needs old, dense spinifex for daytime cover, a fire rhythm which lets the grass mature, and a predator community where cats don’t run the show. Keeping the landscape relatively quiet, limiting disturbances and keeping grazing stock out, will help the vegetation hold its form. The team also pointed to tools which can sharpen future counts and maps. Genetic methods, such as DNA recovered from feathers, could give more precise estimates. Tiny tracking tags could show how far these parrots travel at night to feed and which patches matter most during the dry months. The rediscovery of the elusive night parrot has demonstrated the effectiveness of dedicated rangers and scientists working together for a significant environmental cause. The complete study, providing further details about the species and their behaviours, is available for guidance. This work shows what happens when Indigenous rangers and scientists align methods with the land. With careful burns, smart predator management, and steady watchfulness, Ngururrpa Country can keep those needs on the table and give this shy bird a fair shot to survive.
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