Explore CSIRO

About CSIRO

The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation is Australia's national science agency and one of the largest and most diverse research agencies in the world.

CSIRO's core areas of impact

Contact Enquiries: Phone - 1300 363 400 | Email - Enquiries@csiro.au | Contact Us

Media Release

 
 printer friendly view
 
Cassowary appears out of rainforest at Daintree Beach.
Cassowary appears out of rainforest at Daintree Beach.
Photo by: Robert South, England

DNA in dung to reveal first true cassowary count

Reference: 09/15
In a world first, CSIRO scientists will use an innovative DNA technique to deliver reliable data about north Queensland’s Cassowary population and by doing so develop a greater understanding of this endangered species.
30 January 2009

In a collaborative study developed by the CSIRO, Environment Protection Agency (EPA) and the Australian Rainforest Foundation (ARF), DNA from Cassowary dung is analysed to identify characteristics that represent individual animals, family groups and range.

“The development of this innovative DNA technique will for the first time in history lead to more accurate population estimates in the Southern Cassowaries remaining habitat,” says CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems senior research scientist Dr David Westcott.

“Combining the DNA results with other field data, will give us a whole heap of new clues about the birds’ movements, breeding patterns, and numbers.

“The development of this innovative DNA technique will for the first time in history lead to more accurate population estimates in the Southern Cassowaries remaining habitat,”
says CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems senior research scientist Dr David Westcott.

“Once we’ve collected enough genetic data from the DNA fingerprinting, we’ll be able to create a model of how cassowaries use habitat, and how their populations are structured, which will inform future conservation strategies.”

Wet Tropics Management Authority (WTMA) executive director Andrew Maclean said the Authority strongly supports cassowary conservation and is pleased to have contributed $50,000 to the cassowary DNA project.

“The endangered cassowary is a key rainforest species,” says Mr Maclean.

“Involvement of the community in collecting cassowary DNA in scats will help us monitor the numbers and distribution of cassowary populations in the Mission Beach area and in turn give us an insight into the health of rainforest ecosystems throughout the Wet Tropics.”

CSIRO, Wet Tropics Management Authority, Australian Rainforest Foundation, Environment Protection Agency and Reef and Rainforest Research Council (RRRC) have all supported the project to date and back the new DNA technique that will finally lead to the first accurate counts of the Cassowary.

Download image at: DNA in dung to reveal first true cassowary count.

Read more media releases in our Media section.

Wet Tropics Management Authority logo
 
 

Fast facts

  • In a world first, CSIRO scientists will use an innovative DNA technique to deliver reliable data about north Queensland’s Cassowary population and by doing so develop a greater understanding of this endangered species
  • In a collaborative study developed by the CSIRO, Environment Protection Agency (EPA) and the Australian Rainforest Foundation (ARF), DNA from Cassowary dung is analysed to identify characteristics that represent individual animals, family groups and range
  • The development of this innovative DNA technique will for the first time in history lead to more accurate population estimates in the Southern Cassowaries remaining habitat

Contact Information

Primary Contacts

Dr David Westcott
Principal Research Scientist, Tropical Landscapes Program
Sustainable Ecosystems
Phone: 61 7 4091 8827 
Fax: 61 7 4091 8888 
Mr Andrew Mclean
Executive Director
Wet Tropics Management Authority
Phone: 61 4 1705 2495 
Mr Clive Cooper
Queensland Parks and Wildlife
Phone: 61 7 3227 6001 

media Contact

Ms Larissa Cordner (BSc)
Communication Officer
Sustainable Ecosystems
Phone: 61 7 3214 2505 
Alt Phone: 61 0 433 681 445