Tuesday, July 24, 2018

LASALETTE'S FRIGHTFUL SHOWERS: Hundreds of Galah birds mysteriously fall from the sky in Burra, Australia

LASALETTE'S FRIGHTFUL SHOWERS: Hundreds of Galah birds mysteriously fall from the sky in Burra, Australia

About 200 galahs have been found dead in the South Australian town of Burra, prompting investigations by the state’s Department for Environment and Water and the local council. Dead birds started turning up in the historic Mid North town last Wednesday, with numbers increasing to about 200 by Monday, according to Animal Rescue and Care co-ordinator Ruth Norris. The birds otherwise looked healthy and weren’t “grain gorging”.


 
Animal Rescue and Care co-ordinator Ruth Norris said the birds otherwise looked healthy and it was not obvious how they had died.
We’re wondering whether someone has put some poison down inadvertently — a fertiliser, poison, or whether it was an actual purposeful poisoning, I don’t know. We’re hoping to send some off to PIRSA [Primary Industries and Regions SA] or a lab to get tested. Apart from that, they all appear adult and healthy.

Mysterious death

They were all found in a small area around the old courthouse and police house lockup, on Sancreed Street, in North Burra — an area where galahs tend to congregate.
Ms Norris said this meant it was unlikely they had died from gorging on germinating seeds from local farms. In that case, dead birds would have been found in a much larger area.
A necropsy revealed very little grain in their stomachs.They’ve got good body condition so it’s not a weather event, it’s not a disease, it appears to be a very unusual event or even suspicious,” she said. Cats and dogs which had touched the galahs had not become sick, she said.
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A ‘normal ‘juvenile Galah in suburban Sydney, Australia. By Toby Hudson via Wikipedia

Authorities are investigating the strange die-off

A Department for Environment and Water spokeswoman said staff were “looking into the circumstances” of the deaths following the Facebook post and media enquiries, however no official report had been made.
Galahs are not a protected species in South Australia, however they can only be killed by shooting.
Regional Council of Goyder chief executive David Stevenson said the council had sent off some of the dead birds to the Natural Resources office in Clare for investigation.
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Hundreds of galah birds mysteriously found dead in Burra, South Australia. via Facebook
While galahs were common in the grain-farming area, he said it was concerning to find so many dead in suspicious circumstances:
We’re very concerned, particularly that we don’t know what has caused this. It seems that it’s only affected galahs. I guess the jury’s out until we hear from the experts.

 

SOURCE