Birds of a feather: Energy, environment and climate change minister Lily D’Ambrosio, Moonlit Sanctuary founder and director Michael Johnson, EPA chief Nial Finegan, and Moonlit’s life sciences manager Lisa Tuthill at the awards.

MOONLIT Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park has won the Premier’s Sustainability Award for Environmental Protection 2017 for its orange-bellied parrot Breeding for Recovery program.

Park director and founder Michael Johnson said he was “thrilled and honoured to win”. He said the sanctuary, in Tyabb-Tooradin Rd, Pearcedale, would continue to breed the parrots “until there is a viable wild population again saved from extinction”.

“We have committed to run our program for at least the next 10 years,” he said.

The first release of three birds from Moonlit Sanctuary and five from Zoos Victoria was held on Tuesday 24 October and two other releases were held over the past fortnight. The releases centre around a sustainable captive breeding program of 400 birds to help future-proof the species.

Based on learnings from a trial block of five aviaries, Moonlit Sanctuary designed a 20-aviary complex for up to 40 breeding birds and 100 offspring. With support from Zoos Victoria they opened a parrot breeding facility in time for last year’s breeding season. Twenty-five offspring came from 12 pairs which were supplied to Tasmanian breeding grounds and Werribee Open Range Zoo.

Details: visit sustainabilityawards.vic.gov.au

First published in the Western Port News – 31 October 2017

Share.

Comments are closed.

Exit mobile version