![]() The gang-gang was generally scorned as not worth wasting powder and shot on (presumably they tasted bad). Most earlier mentions of gang-gangs refer to shooting expeditions. ![]() So it’s interesting “gang-gang” (along with “boobook”) was accepted pretty much from the start. Most of the few bird names of Indigenous origin – currawong, budgerigar, kookaburra, corella, galah for instance – became established in English well into the 20 th century. Because Sturt already recognised the name, it’s presumably from a coastal language. We can be certain it’s from an Indigenous word, and reflects the bird’s croaky-creaky call, but we don’t know from which language.Ĭharles Sturt used the name “gangan” when reporting on gang-gangs he saw near Mittagong in 1833. But for gang-gangs, all he could do was plead for information readers might have.Įven the name is something of a mystery. When John Gould was producing his monumental work on Australian birds in the 1840s, he included detailed information on nearly all species. They are the second-smallest cockatoo (after cockatiels) – and there’s not a great deal more we can say with certainty. Gang-gangs are one of the best reasons to live in Canberra, and indeed this is the only city in the world where they can be seen readily and regularly throughout suburbia and even in the city centre. The mystery seems somehow appropriate because despite their familiarity, there is so much we don’t know about gang-gangs.Ī young male gang-gang, his head just in the process of turning from grey to red. We don’t know why it’s in such trouble, though the loss of incalculable numbers of old hollow breeding trees to fires in recent years and climate change are heavily implicated. The idea of a world, and a Canberra, without this delightful little ash-grey cocky with the red head and wispy clown’s hat (males only), is unimaginable. ![]() We should celebrate the gang-gang while retaining hope the plummeting numbers can be reversed. Extinction of a species happens only once, and is forever. This means it’s “facing a very high risk of extinction in the wild in the near future” – a terrible thing to contemplate. Its listing under ACT legislation will automatically follow. But for all the wrong reasons.īased on the recommendations of an eminent scientific committee, the glorious gang-gang cockatoo has shockingly been declared `Endangered’ at a national level. On 2 March one of Canberra’s favourite birds, and our territory emblem, received recognition. A male gang-gang, his gorgeous wispy headdress flopping in the breeze.
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