If you own a good quality patch of Banksia Woodland on the Swan Coastal Plain or Eucalypt Woodland in the Wheatbelt and have Black Cockatoos that reside or feed there, we’d love to support you to protect it.

Historical wide-scale clearing of native vegetation for agriculture and housing in the Wheatbelt and on the Swan Coastal Plain has resulted in major loss and decline of Banksia Woodlands and Eucalypt Woodlands with only small fragmented good quality patches now remaining.  These patches are vital for endangered species such as Black Cockatoos that depend on these vegetation communities for food and to breed in.

Whilst some of these woodland areas are protected in nature reserves managed by State government departments, there are small parcels that still exist privately.  If you own a patch of Banksia Woodland on the Swan Coastal Plain, or a patch of Eucalypt Woodland in the Wheatbelt and you see Black Cockatoos regularly using the vegetation, please get in contact with us. The priority areas in the Wheatbelt are Wandering, Pingelly, Narrogin, Boddington, Cuballing, Williams and on the coast are Serpentine-Jarrahdale, Waroona, Mandurah, Murray and Harvey.

We would like to support you through funding to protect and/or restore your patch of bush so you can ensure its longevity as a food or nesting source well into the future.  We can assist with funding for artificial nests and water stations, planting cockatoo foods and removing weed species and pest animals. 

Ideally we are looking for bush patches that are greater than 2ha or above in good condition that qualify as threatened ecological communities. Banksia Woodlands will typically be dominant in Banksias and contain at least one of four main species Banksia attenuata (candlestick banksia); B. menziesii (firewood banksia); B. prionotes (acorn banksia) and B. ilicifolia (holly-leaved banksia).  They are an excellent food source for the Black Cockatoo and may contain old hollow bearing eucalypt species such as Marri and Tuart which the Black Cockatoos nest in.

Eucalypt Woodlands of the Wheatbelt generally contain single-stemmed eucalypts such as wandoo, river gums, flooded gum and York gum.  Some of these very old eucalypts (>150 years) have hollows large enough to support breeding cockatoos. If you think the Black Cockatoos are nesting in tree hollows in your patch, we can monitor these with a telescopic camera.

Please get in touch with Megan LeRoy at megan.leroy@peel-harvey.org.au or 6369 8800.

This project is supported by the PHCC through funding from the Australian Government’s Environmental Restoration Fund.

We acknowledge the Noongar people as Traditional Custodians of this land and pay our respects to all Elders past and present