Member Log In
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • NEWS
  • RESOURCES
  • CONTACT
  • JOIN
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • NEWS
  • RESOURCES
  • CONTACT
  • JOIN
KOALATRACKER BLOG 


KoalaTracker is Australia's national koala map and database, mapping the location of koala populations, points of impact and causes of death and injury for the public record. KoalaTracker empowers localised advocacy, enables more effective risk mitigation, adds to research and engages the community to save the koala. This blog discusses the knowledge gained through member submissions, koala mapping and location intelligence, scientific research and government action. Please join the conversation.

Citizen Science KoalaTracker Blog
Alex Harris - Thursday, July 19, 2012

The federal government’s Atlas of Living Australia has more than 27,000 koala sighting reports, but with only 64 since the start of 2010, the Atlas, as it pertains to koalas, is an historic rather than living record.

This is in stark contrast to the data captured by our crowdsourced KoalaTracker database. Your reports of sightings and observations of behaviour are now critical to a body of research to-date untapped and more often treated with scepticism by researchers.

As government agencies start to realise the value in the observations of koalas in the wild by citizens, crowdsourcing of data across a broad spectrum of science (not limited to koalas) is destined to become part of public policy, and the norm.

You are leading the way.

In the more than two years since the launch of this website, it has become increasingly obvious that what we think we know about the koala is insufficient and in some cases patently wrong.

Reports from members of KoalaTracker.com.au prove koalas do drink water and not just in droughts. Koalas have been observed swimming (in the ocean) and living in family groups (with sometimes up to five koalas in a single tree). We have photos suggesting koalas eat flowers, and photos of wild koalas embracing human rescuers and proactively seeking human help, having never had human contact.

New Research

In February 2011, NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service confirmed that koalas eat bark. 

This discovery was first documented by citizens.  NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service reported in February 2011:

“Koala Scientist, Chris Allen, said today that using remote movement sensitive video and camera equipment in bushland southeast of Bredbo several Koalas were caught on camera.

“It was the owners of a nearby property who documented and reported widespread and extensive chewing of eucalypts and suggested that Koalas were responsible,” Mr Allen said.

“Although koalas are known to eat bark, there is no record of such systematic feeding on eucalypt bark recorded in the scientific literature and their reports were initially received with scepticism.

“We placed our cameras adjacent to heavily chewed trees and we now have some wonderful footage of Koalas, including some that are chewing into the trunk of the tree.

“We are very grateful to the owners of the neighbouring property who provided such detailed evidence and persisted with efforts to establish that it was the koala that was responsible.” See video.

This behaviour is considered to be unique to a population on the Monaro Tablelands south of Canberra, yet Port Macquarie Koala Hospital also has evidence of koalas eating bark. Port Macquarie is a long way from south of Canberra…it is a different tree... 

Do your trees have odd markings?  What have you seen koalas do that may not be widely known? Report those sightings and describe the activity on KoalaTracker.com.au today! 

Over the coming years, I am anticipating behavioural research that will prove an intelligence and capacity for communication that will dispel the myth of a sleepy, solitary, and unadaptable animal.

Much of that new research will come from you, the citizen scientists (including rescuers and carers) who encounter and observe koalas in the urban wild, and report those observations to KoalaTracker.com.au.

Already, KoalaTracker is invaluable to conservation advocacy, with its map proving indispensable to community groups fighting to protect tracts of land, re-establish wildlife corridors, and change public policy for more effective risk mitigation, and to councils and utilities in urban and infrastructure planning. 

What value KoalaTracker can be in the future depends entirely upon the quality and quantity of data that continues to be added as time goes by.  We need significantly more data from NSW, VIC, central and northern QLD.  There is no room for complacency.  Please encourage your local rescue groups and carers to join and report their sightings directly to KoalaTracker.com.au.  Given the now regular use of KoalaTracker.com.au by environmental consultants, council staff, utilities, developers and state government departments, YOUR information is critical to protecting what koalas we have left.  Please do not put this aside. Do something today.

You are a part of the solution. Report every sighting, every death and injury. Tell your friends to do the same. 







CONNECT ON TWITTER
Tweets by @koalatracker
Recent Posts

  • KoalaTracker TEDx Talk
  • We're talking; they're dying
  • Queensland rolling back environmental protection
  • Wild koalas: slow life in the fast lane
  • We don't know what we don't know
  • KoalaTracker Totally Wild!
  • Killer cows
  • Koalas are water guzzlers!
  • The rise of ecotourism
  • Nobody should be allowed to hunt endangered wildlife
  • Speaking at Spatial@Gov
  • Support
  • Citizen Science
  • How to find koalas in the wild
  • New on KoalaTracker: SHOPPING!
  • Going, going, gone...
  • A big day for koalas
  • An extraordinary situation
  • Koala orphans - Guest Post by Anika Lehmann, Moreton Bay Koala Rescue
  • The Problem with Disease is that it Spreads
  • People v Powerlink
  • Why Bother? Australian wildlife are simply pests
  • Tracking Koalas with KoalaTracker.com.au


TAGS

koala conservation wildlife koalas koala research koala mapping koala sustainability australian queensland koalas koala disease tourism sick koalas Koala map find koalas in the wild animal cruelty intellectual property koalas drinking water koalas eating apples koalas eating termites koala's economic contribution kyogle cows kill koalas koaladiaries ecotourism killer cows violence what do koalas eat? kangaroos

Copyright Alex Harris © 2009-2016. All rights reserved. Designed by KoalaTracker Creator Alex Harris | Disclaimer 
Photos available under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 2.5 Australia License. Attribution: www.koalatracker.com.au member photo.


koalatracker koala tracker k-tracker koalatracker koala tracker koala tracker koala tracking koala tracking koala mapping mapping koalas koala map national koala tracker national koala mapping national koala database national koalatrakcer koala tracker k-tracker koalatracker koala tracker koala tracking koala tracking koala tracker tracking koalas mapping koalas scientific research tracking koalas mapping koalas ktracker ktracker koala tracker koala tracker
koalatracker koala tracker k-tracker koalatracker koala tracker koala tracker koala tracking koala tracking koala mapping mapping koalas koala map national koala tracker national koala mapping national koala database national koalatrakcer koala tracker k-tracker koalatracker koala tracker koala tracking koala tracking koala tracker tracking koalas mapping koalas scientific research tracking koalas mapping koalas ktracker ktracker koala tracker koala tracker