100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Saving Sunshine Coast Koalas project to get underway: key groups link for research

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Town centre outage forces shops to close

A pole-top fire has caused a major power outage in Nambour's town centre today, leaving businesses without electricity and forcing some to close. The incident More

Missing woman located deceased

The 57-year-old woman who was reported missing from Diddillibah on June 13 has been found deceased. Police said her death was not being treated as More

Preliminary works begin for major transport project

Preliminary works are underway on the southern end of the Sunshine Coast as activity ramps up on one of the region's most significant transport More

$400m investment renews key wastewater link

A key wastewater pipe serving thousands of Sunshine Coast residents has been renewed as part of Unitywater's $400 million infrastructure replacement and renewal program, More

‘Inspired generations’: locals recognised for community efforts

Two Sunshine Coast residents have received state honours for their contributions to emergency services. Russell Ward and Natalie Jarrott claimed Count on a Queenslander gongs More

Seven-day mental health support hub opens

A new crisis support space at a major Coast hospital is changing the way people in distress access urgent mental health care. Nambour General Hospital’s More

Cutting-edge science is set to provide valuable insight into the Sunshine Coast koala population, in a bid to protect the threatened Aussie icon.

Five local groups, bolstered by an almost $200,000 grant from the federal government, will learn more about the relatively secret lives of koalas in the area.

Sunshine Coast Council, First Nations Peoples, University of Sunshine Coast Detection Dogs for Conservation, Brush Turkey Enterprises and Mooloolah River Landcare will work together in the Saving Sunshine Coast Koalas project.

They will use artificial intelligence, koala bellow recognition programs, drone-mounted thermal imagery, detection dogs and next-generation scat genetic analyses to get a better understanding of the local koala population, including where they live, numbers, state of their health and what they eat.

On-ground surveys in the region’s relatively inaccessible habitat will look for koalas that need care, and trees will be planted to extend and connect existing koala habitat.

Sunshine Coast Councillor Maria Suarez said that with a united approach, people could help the threatened species survive.

“While we do know a little about the koalas in some small pockets of the Sunshine Coast, this project will give us a region-wide view and understanding of the local population,” she said.

Picture: Shutterstock

“Council is proud to partner with our community and be part of the Australia-wide effort to protect these iconic Australian animals and deliver on the Sunshine Coast Koala Conservation Plan.”

The UniSC Detection Dogs for Conservation research group will work on the ground to provide a big-picture view of where koalas live across the region.

“This project will build new knowledge for targeted on-ground conservation efforts, habitat restoration and treatment of chlamydial disease,” Dr Romane Cristescu said.

“In addition to informing and enabling koala threat abatement, it will contribute valuable koala density data – which is critical to validating and refining current koala habitat modelling and contributing to the National Koala Monitoring Program.”

Brush Turkey Enterprises will extend the existing Howells Knob Koala Restoration Project by an extra two hectares and host a local landholder koala habitat workshop day with neighbouring properties in Reesville.

Mooloolah Landcare’s Spencer Shaw said his group would grow and supply 3500 koala food trees and hold a koala community planting day for landowners in the Mooloolah catchment.

“Thanks to this project, the future is looking brighter for the koalas of Reesville, with habitat extension and connection, and, perhaps more importantly, education and engagement with residents about the amazing country we share with koalas,” he said.

The threatened species management plans have been designed to protect and enhance  natural landscapes and its inhabitants and deliver on the Strategic Pathways of the Environment and Liveability Strategy.

The project is funded by the Australian Government’s Saving Koalas Fund.

Like stories that inform, connect and celebrate the Sunshine Coast? So do we. Join an independent local news revolution by subscribing to our FREE daily news feed at the bottom of this article.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share