Search for Corella eumyota returned 203 results.

  1. Biodiversity Science project: Big City Birds

    We humans are capable of dramatically altering the landscape. Cities are a familiar and extreme example of this change. Intriguingly, some animals can adapt to these changed environments by flexibly changing their behaviour. Big City Birds aims to learn more about some of these species and their behavioural adaptations. The project focuses on five bird species: Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, Australian Brush-turkey, Australian White Ibis, Little Corella, and Long-billed Corella...

  2. Biodiversity Science project: Where? Where? Wedgie!

    Get your family and friends outdoors across Tasmania in May, to help track numbers of Tasmanian wedge-tailed eagles — and also those of Tasmania’s other birds of prey, and white cockatoos and corellas. Each year, our surveys mobilise people of all ages and levels of experience, within schools, clubs, companies, governmental and non-governmental organisations and more widely across the community, to get a measure of these birds’ population numbers across Tasmania...

  3. Site Page: ALA-cited publications – Atlas of Living Australia

    Have you used the ALA in your published (or soon-to-be published) research? Please let us know about it via this form. We’re interested in all types of research that the ALA supports including research publications in scientific journals, reports, book chapters, theses, as well as websites and apps. Online bibliography This bibliography provides a list of known publications that have utilised data in the ALA or ALA infrastructure to support their research...