Australian bushfires and wildlife survival

Please visit the new Page on this site The Bushland is Inhabited Too! for thoughts and updates on the impact of wildfires on Australian wildlife. Although the Priceless Princess is set in an imaginary land, the animals and birds in the story are all Australian creatures. Please spare a thought for them in these times of terrible crisis for our bushland and help in any way you can.

Peter the Koala
Peter the Koala being cared for at the Koala Hospital, Port Macquarie.

Generous support from some great photographers

green tree snake in blue phase

In putting together the section on Animals and Birds in the Priceless Princess I have had to request permission to use a number of images because they are not in the public domain. Reproducing a photograph or drawing after a Google search is very easy but it is illegal to use any images other than those already located in the public domain, as in Wiki Commons and some other sources. So, I want to thank the great photographers who have agreed already (I will give them full attribution in the section where their photographs appear on the site).  But I would also like to say how disappointing it is that Sydney’s premier zoo, Taronga Park Zoo in Mosman, Sydney, has refused permission to reproduce any of the photographs and images attributed to them and state that this is their  policy.

This seems very unhelpful for projects which are designed to help children understand more about Australia’s native animals and birds which support a commitment to environmental protection of often rare and endangered species (such as the bilby, which is so important in this story). So no thanks or acknowledgments to Taronga Park Zoo are due.

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Entrance to Taronga Park Zoo – wikimedia commons

Thinking about “wildlife”

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Eastern Grey Wallaby with joey in pouch

“Wildlife” is a word used to describe creatures – animals, birds, fish – who exist in their own right, in their own world, with their own rhythms and behaviours which have not been directed by human desires. Until around 8-10,000 years ago, all animal life was “wild” and we could say  human life was “wild” as well. The process of domestication took existing creatures and, in various ways, changed them to suit the needs of humans. Some species seem to have changed themselves – cats, for instance, seem to have chosen to live alongside and to exploit humans rather than the other way around. Although humans have bred all kinds of cats – cats with abundant long hair, cats with no hair at all, cats without tails, cats with certain markings (like Siamese), it is well known that any cat able to live and reproduce in the wild will over a few generations revert to something very close to its original form.

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Domestic cats readily become “wild”
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The Asian Golden Cat – still a wild species
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The Asian Fishing Cat – Thai people call it  “Suea Kin Plaa” – the “Cat-Tiger That Likes Fish”
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North American Bobcat

The wildlife of Australia is especially important and valuable, because Australia was isolated for so long from the rest of the world. Only in Australia were hundreds of marsupial species able to survive. They had been long ago wiped out by human settlement and other non-marsupial predators on other  continents. Creatures found in Australia by the first non-indigenous settlers seemed unbelievable: animals who carried their young around in pouches, fluffy bears who carried their babies on their backs and lived in the tree-tops, animals with bills like a duck which swam underwater.

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Koala and baby
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Platypus

Not one of the indigenous Australian animals has been successfully domesticated. They still live in the wild, following their own ancient patterns of feeding, communicating and breeding.

Quite apart from their intrinsic beauty they serve to remind us that planet Earth was not just designed for humans. Humanity is just one of the species once joined in a single natural world alongside other creatures with whom they co-existed. Australia is the last continent on earth where that relationship can still be glimpsed and understood. People in Australia who are committed to nature conservation struggle against rampant population growth, destruction of bushland and animal habitat, and the depredations of introduced species such as foxes, dogs and yes, cats.

There are many ways you can join in the fight to protect Australia’s natural world. More information will soon be coming to this site along with contact details and some ideas about how you can be part of the effort to keep Australia wild.

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Red kangaroo joey in the pouch

NOTE:  Except where specifically noted and credited,  images reproduced on this site are from Wikimedia Commons.

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