Victorian farmers and volunteers have planted 750,000 trees to restore habitat for a critically endangered bird. The Regent Honeyeater Project has brought together volunteers from all walks of life ...
A critically endangered regent honeyeater, released as part of a captive breeding program, has travelled a record 350 kilometres in only three months, delighting conservationists. Conservationists ...
Where once they roamed in vast flocks, today there are fewer than 350 in the wild. Now when it sings for a mate across a vast canyon, its lovelorn call is met by silence The second saddest sound I’ve ...
A regent honeyeater at the Taronga Zoo in Sydney, Australia, which is one of the study sites where the critically endangered birds are being bred Jss367 via Wikimedia Commons under CC-BY-4.0 Less than ...
Regent Honeyeater, which was formerly a common occurrence throughout south-eastern Australia, has fallen into extremely bad trouble. These beautiful black-and-yellow birds are not more than 300 in the ...
Taronga Zoo hopes first steps towards recovery for ‘flagship’ species will attract funding for similar breeding programs for swift parrots and squirrel gliders The wild population of Regent ...
New research shows unless conservation actions are urgently stepped up, one of our most beautiful songbirds, the regent honeyeater, will be extinct within 20 years. New research from The Australian ...
Bird song is passed from one generation to the next, but what happens when a bird is on the brink of extinction? Just as humans learn languages, animals learn behaviours crucial for survival and ...
The regent honeyeater, once abundant in south-eastern Australia, is now listed as critically endangered; just 300 individuals remain in the world. "They don't get the chance to hang around with other ...
The Regent Honeyeater (Anthochaera phrygia) is a spectacular, black, white and gold, medium-sized honeyeater. It has a bare, corrugated pale face, giving rise to its earlier name of Warty-faced ...
A rare bird in Australia has become so threatened that some young ones are failing to learn how to sing their own song. Scientists say the regent honeyeater, which once had a large population, is now ...