Darebin Parklands Nest Box Program

(Darebin Creek Management Committee)

 

About the Nest Box Program

For 16 years, Rangers and volunteers have been installing, maintaining, monitoring and researching nest boxes around the 32ha Darebin Parklands. The Management Committee currently have ~150 boxes and 11 chainsaw hollows that are monitored every three weeks using a nest box camera.

Updated results can be found via social media (Instagram: darebin_parklands) and Darebin Parklands Committee website

Various species of wildlife are targeted and many animals use the boxes throughout the year.  

How it all started

Senior Ranger Peter Wiltshire noticed an Eastern Rosella trying to get inside a power pole slot to nest. By observing and realising what the bird was trying to do, a quick nest box was made and installed. Soon after, Eastern Rosellas were observed successfully nesting inside the box, and the program kicked off! The park as it’s known now is still fairly young (50 years old) hence the lack of mature trees with hollows. Nest boxes installed are targeted at hollow-dwelling species found in the park. There are some target species that are yet to successfully use boxes (e.g Red-rumped parrots, Musk lorikeets)

Darebin Parklands nest box project

Left: power pole slot Eastern Rosella attempted to nest in. Middle: Rosella investigating new nest box Right: Eastern Rosella chicks.

 

Darebin Parklands

Darebin Creek Parklands

Darebin Parklands is situated on the Darebin Creek approximately 7 km north-west of the Melbourne CBD. The Parklands are surrounded by urban development and now form an important habitat refuge and part of a bioink along the Darebin Creek and Yarra River.

 

Darebin Parklands has been dramatically altered from a farm and quarry in the 1800’s to a tip site and wasteland in the 1960’s and has now been revived as an urban bushland park for wildlife and enjoyed by the community. The Darebin Creek runs through the center of the park which divides it ecologically and geologically. Due to past clearing and major disturbance, most of the vegetation in the park is young and there has been a lack of tree hollows for decades.

Nest box monitoring  

Data collected helps the management committee understand:

Darebin Parklands monitoring with species records
Location of nest boxes installed around Darebin Parklands and some of the findings in nest boxes.

Overall, there has been a 52% occupancy in the nest boxes.

 

Main species found in nest boxes
 
 
Darebin Parklands nest box with possum and rainbow lorekeet chicks

A Common Ringtail Possum & two Rainbow Lorikeet chicks were found sharing a box numerous times. Lorikeet parents were observed flying in and out while the possum was also in there. The chicks survived and fledged. This has only occurred once in the parklands to our knowledge.

Please contact the committee if you know whether it has been observed anywhere else?  Contact form.

 

 

Nest box research

Years of trials and research has been undertaken to improve how the boxes are made, erected and used.

Indian Myna & Starling exclusion

Morre information on Indian Myna webinar Peter Wiltshire presented to Yarra Ranges Council

Nest Box Design

Studies have shown that lighter coloured nest boxes keep cooler if direct sun falls on them so we use a white-based light green, water-based paint. On the very hot days, nest boxes will heat up to the ambient temperature.

Darebin Parklands nest box with kookaburra
Nest box now home to a Kookaburra.

 

More information


Other nest box related projects featured on SWIFFT

Brush-tailed Phascogale Nest Box project – Bendigo

Turquoise Parrot Nest Box project - Goulburn Broken, north-east Vic.

Campaspe Squirrel Glider project – Echuca area

Brisbane Ranges, Brush-tailed Phascogale project – near Geelong

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