This Local Blog was created to draw attention to a major problem Our Local Wildlife are facing due to the New Taringa Gateway Project's proposal. Please help save there lives
After reading this blog you will come to an understanding that Wildlife in Taringa are now facing a Developers bulldozer and without your help and that of Cr Jane Prentice & Ronan Lee these guys are in a lot of trouble.
Ive passed on all the information about the problem to
This is Miss Piggy. She is Fatso's grandmother and Great Grandmother to Gizmo. Look at there tails.. All White Tips, but Piggy & Gizmo are the only 2 with White Tips that long ive seen in over 130 possums who have lived here over the years.
Keep Watching this page. Ive got a big problem with the owners/developers and real estate are evicting myself from this house where ive looked after the local wildlife for over 5 years now.
They (owners/developers & real estate) do not have any plans to take care of all the animals ive featured in this blog and iam working on a solution so they don't die from the reckless practices Urban Developers are well known for.
The destruction of the premisis will endanger there existance and i will be getting someone from Ecology Sector/Ecologist/s to do an impact asessment on the protected wildlife who enbabit the land.
Here a 2 of my favourite pets! they are called Brushtail possums and very common in Australia. The Adult is Fatso, she is 3 and half years old. Little fella is not got a name yet.
Its Fatso's second baby and both born in my house now.. If you are from Overseas and not Australia they are known as Common Brush tail Possums
I got him by himself and he like the camera! haha. Click each image to get bigger views
Notice that white tip on the end of his tail? that is not normal with these breed. they do normally have mostly black but his is much more white.. So i think i will be calling him Gizmo!
World's most famous koala Sam reunited with bushfire rescuer
This is extremely heartbreaking to think not just the people who have passed on but over a million animals due to this Australia's worst natural disaster in history. Iam not sure how the species will hold up after this
MORE than a million native animals may have died in Victoria's fire inferno, a wildlife expert says.
The huge effort to rescue animals caught in the fire has begun with triage centres set up to assess injured wildlife at staging posts at Kilmore, Whittlesea and Redesdale near Bendigo.
The animals are then being treated and assessed by vets at nearby shelters, who make the agonising decision about which ones need to be put down.
Those animals still able to may wait several weeks before walking out of fire-affected forest, Gayle Chappell from the Hepburn Wildlife Shelter said.
Ms Chappell is among those working to rescue the animals and says the extent of the devastation may never be known.
"It (the animal death toll) will be in the hundreds of thousands, possibly millions," Ms Chappell said.
"We are not just talking the animals we are familiar with, there are gliders and all sorts of possums, antechinus (a mouse-like marsupial), bandicoots, birds -- there is so much wildlife.
"It is devastating, the actual size of the destruction is devastating to a number of wildlife populations."
It is feared endangered populations of gliders, owls and lizards may be among the dead.
For those that have survived, the recovery process will be long and slow.
"They have lost their homes too and they are not going to be rebuilt in a year or two years, it is a much longer-term picture," Ms Chappell said.
"You can't reconstruct a forest."
The fires also destroyed four wildlife shelters, including Stella Reid's Wildhaven shelter at Kinglake.
Ms Chappell said Ms Reid escaped with her life, but the animals were not so lucky.
"It has been a real blow for everybody, I think. That is what has really brought it home for everybody, hearing that Stella Reid's place was totalled and all her animals . . . they weren't able to get any animals out at all."
Wildlife Victoria volunteers have been at the site of the largest Grey Headed Flying Fox Colony Wednesday and Thursday of the heat wave and are heading back today, by the end of the first two days over 1000 GHFF's had died from the heat.
Volunteers spent hours spraying water onto the juvenile creche in an effort to rehydrate in situ. The GHFF's were happy for our efforts and readily drank the water either straight from the stream or from droplets on their wings and bodies. Many were saved but with another day of intense heat the prognosis does not look good.
Dozens of juveniles and some adults were taken into care by a licensed volunteer wildlife rehabilitator from Wildlife Vic. These are the fortunate ones, they will spend the next two days in the flying fox aviary at the carer's house which is situated in a cool part of her garden and has a fine mist spray from the sprinkler giving the bats constant relief from the overwhelming heat.
Today volunteers are gearing up for more of the same. They will weather the heat to bring relief to the colony in the hope of saving just a few more.
Ringtail possums have also suffered badly from the last week of heat and are coming in to shelters and vets in enormous numbers, many with burns to their feet from walking on the hot ground, something that is an anomoly for these animals who prefer to move from shrub to shrub without going to the ground.
If you would like to donate to help Wildlife Victoria click here
To help the wildlife in your area put out some bowls of water.
Fires threaten the state
Bushfires threaten Wildlife Survival – affected wildlife already in care
PLEASE DO NOT RING THE EMERGENCY NUMBER EXCEPT WITH INJURED WILDLIFE
Feb 2009
The current fire situation has left its devestation on our wildlife including the loss of at least two wildlife shelters to the fires. Wildlife Victoria are trying to assertain the safety of other shelters in the fire areas and to offer support and help with evacuation of animals already in their care if they need it. Donations desperately needed to help save the animals, to donate to the bush fire appeal click here.
Please donate now to Wildlife Victoria's Urgent Bushfire Appeal 2009 - click here.
You can donate using our secure webform here. Enter the amount you would like to donate in Australian dollars. Your credt card provider will convert from your local currency to the Australian dollar amount.
Alternatively, you can Donate online via paypal in $US.
Hundreds of thousands of wild animals are killed, injured and orphaned throughout Australia as a direct consequence of human activities. As government resources for wildlife management dwindle, much of the work of rescuing and caring for these animals falls on the shoulders of volunteer organisations such as Wildlife Victoria
This is an experience to be treasured. Not all Australians get to do or see this kind of thing. However, a lucky Victorian family have the plesure of these wonderful animals right in there back yard.
But if you ask me, Miss Piggy is still no 1
I put my Brush tail Possum up against your Koala any day. haha
I found this story on ninemsn today and thought it was funny. U see, Koala's don't normally drink water they get it from