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BURDENED BY BEAUTY
Australian Geographic Magazine
|September-October 2024
Northern Australia's Gouldian finch survives in huge numbers in cages around the world, but its wild population continues to struggle.

Records suggest large flocks of Gouldian finch (Erythrura gouldiae) including many hundreds – possibly thousands – of individual birds, were common across northern Australia’s savannah grasslands in the late 1800s, before pastoralism and collecting the species began having an impact. Little than a century later, this exquisite species – arguably the world’s most beautiful bird – was en route to disappearing forever from the wild.
“It was probably on a trajectory to extinction by the 1980s,” says Dr Alexander Watson, a regional ecologist at Australian Wildlife Conservancy (AWC). “In the late ’90s and early 2000s, people became very concerned about losing the Gouldian finch from the wild forever.” At the time, the species faced several significant threats, including a respiratory parasite that had become prevalent in Gouldians kept in aviaries and had spread to the wild population.


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