Following bush fires, land clearing and poaching, the glossy black-cockatoo is fighting for survival

According to BirdLife Australia, the Glossy Black Cockatoo population has plummeted. Once numbering in the tens of thousands, it is estimated there are now fewer than 8,000 birds remaining in the wild across the country.

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CHRL is the delivery partner for Jaliigirr Biodiversity Alliance’s (JBA) Glossy Black-Cockatoo Conservation project funded through the Coffs Council Environmental Levy Community grants program. Our project aims to identify key feeding trees and foraging habitat of the GBC in the Coffs Harbour LGA and carry out on-ground recovery works to protect these important areas. Click here for further information on the Glossy Black Conservation Project.