PHOTO: Western Plains locals are encouraged to get involved in the project to bring back the Glossy Black-Cockatoo.
Glossy Black-Cockatoos are being encouraged back into the local region, thanks to the planned installation of 35 nest boxes on public and private land.
Local Land Services, in collaboration with Charles Sturt University and Habitat Innovation & Management have been instrumental in the “Bringing back the Glossy-Black” project, after a successful application to WIRES.
Central Inland NSW is home to a significant, distinctive but declining Glossy Black-Cockatoo population concentrated in forest and woodland areas stretching from Parkes to Narrabri…

