News & Events

April 16, 2021

Roosting is not relaxing

Andreas Kim has sent through some Victorian sightings from Korea

This is the best high tide roost these godwit could find on April 3 when they arrived in Korea

The first two Bar-tailed Godwit with an orange flag were seen on Aphae Island on April 2nd and 3rd, 1B and ACC, both now seen already for the seventh year at the site. Other ones like HZX and CKX have also returned to the site as well as CY, now seen for the eighth year.

But there were also HVY, P1 and YS which were seen at the site for the first time, but only on one day and they were most likely just making a short stop on their way further north into the Yellow Sea.

Also seen for the first time was an individual with a plain flag on the right tibia and the metal band upside down on the left tibia. Two digits can be seen but a search in the database gave no result. Maybe someone can remember having banded this bird and it is possible to id it – wouldn’t that be great?

Do you know this godwit?

In addition two more, one female one male, with just a plain flag were seen – some older folks still fit for the long migration trips.

Over the years a few broken flags have been seen, but this year on Godwit showed a broken flag with very sharp edged contours that one wonders how this could happen and how the bird does not get injured.

Godwit with a broken flag

March 31, 2021

AGL gas terminal proposal in Western Port rejected

It was with a great feeling of joy that I heard the announcement that the government had rejected AGL’s plan to build a floating gas terminal at Crib Point. It is very pleasing that environmental issues have at last taken precedence over dubious economic ones. Western Port Bay is a Ramsar site, and it would have been extremely disappointing to see government ignoring their obligations under this treaty. This refusal is a tribute to the many thousands of people and organisations that have worked tirelessly over 3 years to ensure this decision. Another risk to the Eastern Curlew has been defeated!

You can read more at:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-03-30/crib-point-agl-floating-gas-terminal-rejected/100036926

Prue Wright. VWSG Conservation Officer

March 10, 2021

Vale Ken Rogers

My father, Ken Rogers, died in his sleep on 18th February. He was 81.

Dad made a very substantial contribution to Australian shorebird studies over the years. He was a regular participant in the VWSG field program in the 1980’s (along with the rest of the Rogers family). From 2003 to 2006 he was editor of Stilt, his period at the helm culminating in Stilt 50, a bumper edition (325 pages) which provided a broad (and sobering) overview of shorebird status throughout the flyway. It is still a very useful publication, and it played a role in the increasing emphasis on international shorebird conservation by the AWSG.

Dad’s greatest contribution was less visible. He was a statistical modeller in his working life, and he brought these skills to the Australasian shorebird scene at a time when shorebirds were not a focus of Australian academia. Analysing and publishing the already enormous datasets of the AWSG fell on the shoulders of amateurs, and it was a serious challenge in those days. Dad’s ability to design and carry out rigorous analyses made a huge difference. Moreover, he was very generous with his time, and great fun to work with. He wrote or co-authored quite a lot of papers in the 1990s and 2000’s. There were many more papers in which Dad’s work was done behind the scenes, helping others to get their work to publication standard.

Danny Rogers

February 26, 2021

Report on VWSG Cannon Netting Training Day

Our first ever VWSG training day was held at Yallock Creek on Sunday 21 February. The plan was to have small groups and give everyone some hands-on experience with every aspect of net setting with plenty of time to ask questions. We had nine willing participants and seven trainers.

The topics covered were:

  1. Deciding where to set the net – last tide wrack line, weather predictions, high or low pressure and wave action, slope of beach, and presence of rocks;
  2. Laying out the net – jump ropes, furling, pulling in the corners, markers, jiggler;
  3. Cannons – loading cartridges, loading cannons, placing the cannons and setting the angle;
  4. Wiring in – checking the circuit, checking the firing box, solving problems with the circuit;
  5. Post-firing – setting up keeping cages, runners, shade cloth, bird bags, differences between small and large mesh nets, wet catches, etc.

Although the training took longer than expected everyone seemed to enjoy the day and felt they had learned a lot. We plan to run another session for less experienced members in the future.

Please contact the Chair if you are interested in future training sessions.

Robyn Atkinson.

February 22, 2021

BirdMark is live!

The new BirdMark portal, which is specially designed to submit your resightings of colour marked waders along our flyway has gone live. This new site will significantly advance the capability for managing and reporting on leg flag sightings from around the flyway. Check it out!

February 22, 2021

The Overwintering Project: Westernport and the Wall of Wings!

The duo of Overwintering Project exhibitions, The Overwintering Project: Westernport and the Wall of Wings, will run concurrently at the Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery and Oak Hill Gallery respectively, both on Melbourne’s beautiful Mornington Peninsula.

Both exhibitions begin on Saturday March 6 2021. The Overwintering Project: Westernport focusses on Melbourne’s Westernport Bay as internationally significant migratory shorebird habitat. The exhibition features 20 curated artists, 13 of whom have produced new work in a variety of media inspired by the local Westernport environment. Their work will be shown in conjunction with the Overwintering Project Print Portfolio, a growing collection of 300+ original prints made by artists from Australia and New Zealand in response to the unique nature of their local migratory shorebird habitat.

Only an hour from Melbourne, Westernport is a unique and internationally significant wetland with incredibly rich biodiversity. Westernport’s uniqueness is recognized through its cultural identity as the land of the Bunurong / BoonWurrung people, the traditional custodians of these lands and waters, and its designation as a Ramsar site (or internationally significant wetland), a UN Biosphere and a BirdLife Australia Key Biodiversity Area. It is also party to three international migratory bird agreements, with Japan, the Republic of Korea and China.

December 09, 2020

Ruddy Turnstone wanderings

Maureen Christie and her intrepid team made a catch of Ruddy Turnstones in late October 2020 in which they retrieved 2 geolocators near Carpenter Rocks in South Australia.

The great news from these geolocators is that we have now retrieved six northward migration tracks from turnstone VAZ/ATZ – which had its first geo put on with the assistance of Newbery Park Primary School November 2013.

The second bird YUV has provided 5 northward migration tracks now which is almost as impressive as VAZ/ATZ! The geolocator light data from YUV also shows signs of incubation.

This is a remarkable effort for both the birds and banding team!

These are 2 fascinating and useful results in that they provide more information to assist in our longitudinal studies of an individual’s strategies over sequential years. To have these data for 5 and 6 years from these two birds is a great result. Thanks to the ongoing work of Maureen and the dedicated SE SA team for their efforts.

Juvenile Ruddy Turnstone WVC. Photo Sarah Campbell

November 18, 2020

On the Wings of a Godwit

You are invited to musical meditation to the ends of the earth and back…

Melbourne Fringe Festival event!

Performances: 11am, 1pm, 3pm & 6pm, November 18, 19, 21, 22, 25, 26, 28 29.
Suggested Price: $15, tickets available here
Duration: 20mins

‘On the Wings of a Godwit’ is a 20-minute, immersive, online guided meditation of music, birdsong and spoken word that takes the listener on a journey from the continental shores of Australasia to the tundra of Siberia. We invite you, the listener, to become a migratory bird, overwintering between your summer homes, following a flyway path that has been travelled for thousands of years. 

Stop, listen, breathe, and take flight on this journey created by renowned Australian artist Kate Gorringe-Smith, creator of the Overwintering Project, and award-winning musicians and soundscape designers the Bowerbird Collective, Simone Slattery (violin) and Anthony Albrecht (cello). Further information available at www.bowerbird.productions/godwit


Supporting the East Asian-Australasian Flyway Partnership and BirdLife Australia.

November 18, 2020

Bird migration and colour marking webinar November 21

The Bombay Natural History Society in Mumbai is running a webinar on ‘Bird Migration and Colour Marking -Decoding Tagged Bird Sightings‘. Chris Hassell will be joining other shorebirds researchers to speak on how colour marking has been instrumental in understanding certain aspects of bird ecology and migration. You can find out more about flagging in the Central Asian Flyway and hear how to contribute to global studies on bird migration.   

Date and time: Saturday, Nov 21, 2020, 11:30 AM – 01:00 PM, IST

Register: https://forms.gle/L7AQm2b8USsSqmdJ8

November 12, 2020

EAAFSSM wrap up of VWSG talks

Between November 3 and 5, the first East Asian-Australasian Flyway Shorebird Science Meeting was held online, hosted by the National Institute of Ecology, Seocheon-gun, Republic of Korea.

The meeting had a fantastic array of speakers from different parts of the flyway, and a huge amount of new and exciting research and information was shared among participants.

A number of VWSG and AWSG members presented during this conference, about many great findings and achievements. There was also a fabulous plenary from Kate Gorringe-Smith on using art to engage, educate and inspire people about shorebirds.

Michelle Wille provided a excellent plenary speech on viruses in shorebirds. If you didn’t understand viruses before this talk, you would definitely know all about them after hearing this presentation!

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Grace Maglio talked about the results of the oriental pratincole satellite tracking.

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Amanda Lilleyman talked about the migration routes and non-breeding distribution of eastern curlew.

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Ken Gosbell shared insights from a decade of turnstone geolocator studies.

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Birgita Hansen provided new information about staging sites for Latham’s Snipe in Papua New Guinea.

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Marcel Klaassen discussed the challenges of undertaking survival analyses on 40 years of banding data.

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And Danny Rogers highlighted the importance of Melbourne’s Western Treatment Plant for shorebirds.

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