Macarthur community and those living further afield, read with amazement, platypus had been found in Georges River. Many had dreamed, and some had thought they saw them in the upper reaches, and it was true. Sadly these iconic Australian natives were found trapped in yabby traps, dead.
Campbelltown-Macarthur Advertiser reporters, Robert Close and Megan Gorrey, report gruesome finds and outcomes in the paper (see below).
A local wildlife spotter found the drowned animal caught inside a yabby trap about 50 metres downstream from The Basin at Kentlyn.
Local koala expert, environmentalist and Advertiser columnist Robert Close was upset the animal was dead, but said the discovery of the fully grown, 48cm-long male platypus was still more proof of their presence in the river.
“It’s quite amazing we should have two sightings in two weeks when I’ve been looking for 20 years,” Dr Close said.
“The chance of having two incidents within two weeks is very slim.”
(Campbelltown Macarthur Advertiser 09/11/2011)
Robert Close said, “In addition to the articles on the recent deaths of platypuses in the Georges River due to yabby traps and fishing lines, it must be stressed that it is illegal to use yabby traps in freshwater streams east of the Newell Highway.
These traps may be used legally only in farm dams and estuaries and require a fishing licence.
Unfortunately, a platypus was found drowned a few months ago in a crab trap at Maroota near Richmond, which is in the upper reaches of the tidal section of the Hawkesbury River, where crab traps can be legally used.
Once caught in a trap, platypuses have only two minutes to escape before they drown.
So people wanting to catch yabbies, should use the old manual methods.
The platypus is the world’s most unique mammal and we have it in our local bushland; let’s not risk its survival for the sake of a few yabbies.”
(Campbelltown Macarthur Advertiser 23/11/2011)
Local NSW State member, Walt Secord raised the matter of platypus being trapped in State Parliament, asking whether the State Government would consider erecting signs warning fishermen against the use of traps in the region’s waterways.
“It is believed to be the first time in three decades that platypuses have been discovered in the Georges River near Campbelltown,” he said.
Georges River Environmental Alliance member Sharyn Cullis said the platypuses should prompt the Campbelltown council to pay more attention to local waterways.
“The discoveries make Campbelltown the double-whammy of wildlife really, to have koalas and platypuses.”
Campbelltown Council has announced it will install signs at main fishing spots along the Georges River to educate fishermen about responsible use of fishing line, tackle, plastic bait bags, nets and traps.
The council plans to erect the signs at key points along the Georges River and at Menangle River Reserve on the Nepean River.
It also plans to mount a public awareness campaign about the platypus and the need to protect its environment through information on the council’s website and the community newsletter.
(Campbelltown Macarthur Advertiser 30/11/2011)
In a later article, Robert Close reported, “The recent serendipitous discovery of two dead platypuses in the Georges River, after fruitless organised searches over several years, has focused attention on the potential of the Georges River bushland — with its koalas, wallaroos, swamp wallabies, gliders, possums and echidnas — to become a tourist attraction.
The mammal diversity is not the only feature; the vegetation and ruggedness of the Georges River Gorge, of course, are superb and much more accessible than the mammals.
Then there are the birds which are many and varied and which often visit our suburban backyards.
Pam Hindes, whose home adjoins Spring Creek, shares her garden with a Satin bower bird and its bower and has the pleasure of watching the deep blue-coloured male performing in the bower. Even though I live three kilometres from the bush, bower birds occasionally visit but none has found our garden suitable for constructing a bower.
To my great delight this week, however, we were visited by three Gang-gang cockatoos, two of which had the distinctive red head and wispy crest of the mature male. These quaint grey parrots, with their wheezy rattle of a call are remarkably tolerant of humans and my visitors didn’t fly away as I approached with my camera.
Usually in December they would nest in tree hollows of tall mountain forests. They usually visit drier, lower woodlands in winter so I hope nothing is amiss. Their conservation status in NSW is “vulnerable”.
Other unusual visitors to my garden this week were a King parrot and a trio of Channel-billed cuckoos. The former, also red-headed in the male but with a green body, is usually found in rainforests or wet sclerophyll forests. The latter are very large cuckoos with massive bills and a raucous call that sounds like a kookaburra’s introductory notes.
Unfortunately they sometimes call all night! They’ve just arrived from New Guinea to where they’ll return in March after laying their eggs in magpies’ and currawongs’ nests.”
(Campbelltown Macarthur Advertiser 14/12/2011)
Botany Bay and Catchment Alliance, reprints this information for members living beyond the Campbelltown Macarthur Advertiser circulation area, congratulating the editor and reporters, especially Robert Close for their quality reporting of environmental matters.
Online articles:
www.macarthuradvertiser.com.au/news/local/news/general/second-platypus-found/2351986.aspx
www.macarthuradvertiser.com.au/news/local/news/general/mac-koala-platypus-drowns-in-trap/2367083.aspx
www.macarthuradvertiser.com.au/news/local/news/general/platypus-sightings-spark-warnings-to-fishermen/2376111.aspx
www.macarthuradvertiser.com.au/news/local/news/general/mac-koala/gorgeous-georges-gorge/2391774.aspx
Platypus facts:
Understanding Opera House Yabbie Traps, illegal in Georges River. www.aabio.com.au/documents/TrappingYabbieswithOperaHouseTraps.pdf