The incessant trilling of the baby barking owls heralds we are close to
their nest. “These are my ‘bombproof’ owls, the ones least disturbed by
human presence,” says Natasha Schedvin as we make our way quietly though a
forest of black cypress pine and red and long leaf box trees.
Natasha is a PhD student at Charles Sturt University’s School of
Environmental and Information Sciences at the Thurgoona campus in NSW and
a member of the Johnstone Centre for Research in Natural Resources and
Society. For the past three years she has been researching barking owls,
an endangered species in Victoria. Over that period, she has tracked 13
owls for 130 nights in and around Chiltern-Pilot National Park, in the
North East. Up until the 2002 bushfires this area had one of the densest
populations in south-east Australia.

This particular breeding pair, who reside in the Woolshed Valley, is the
most successful of the 23 pairs Natasha has studied. Over the past four
years they have raised three chicks (the maximum number for barking owls)
annually. A male owl, large and unperturbed, is perched on a low branch.
As we approach he just bothers to open his distinctive yellow eyes. Later,
the female swoops from tree to tree, issuing a warning call that explains
why these owls have earned the name the “screaming woman” owl. The female
owl is the smaller of the two, weighing around 600 grams, compared to the
male’s 800 grams.
There are three chicks in the nest in the hollow of a dead tree but only
two make an appearance. Fortunately the pair’s nesting tree (and the pair)
was spared in last year’s bushfires which burnt much of the barking owls’
natural habitat and destroyed six of the nesting sites Natasha had been
observing.
“The situation last breeding season was very, very poor,” says Natasha.
“My population of 23 pairs is now down to nine, and of those pairs, only
two successfully produced young. We don’t have owls nesting in the burnt
areas any more.” One of the reasons the bushfires were so devastating was
owls are very territorial and don’t move to new locations easily. Breeding
pairs seem to stay and defend their patch at all cost. “With the
coincidence of drought and the fires they’ve been a double whammy,” says
Natasha. “As any landholder knows the impact of a drought is felt for some
time after it finishes. I would expect the combination of the two has
resulted in a lack of abundant food sources required when owls are
breeding. It’s been very sad.”
One of the key contributing factors to the previously abundant barking owl
population is the large connected blocks of box-ironbark woodland present
in Chiltern-Pilot National Park and its surrounds. “It’s one of the forest
types we’ve lost a lot of in Australia,” says Natasha whose research is
looking at the owls’ habitat requirements with a view to further refining
conservation management practices.

The southern sub-species of barking owl was once widespread across the
east coast of Australia and the south west corner of Western Australia. It
is a woodland bird found in the foothills of the Australian Alps and in
the river red gum forests along the Murray. “They seem to be declining but
we don’t know why yet,” says Natasha. “The northern sub-species is doing
quite well but it’s a different case down south.”
Barking owls are listed as endangered in NSW and Victoria and as rare in
South Australia. Owls are at the top of the food chain and eat lots of
creatures like bats, possums and parrots and even other endangered species
like squirrel gliders. “Given this broad and varied diet, you would expect
them to do well in all sorts of environments so the question is why aren’t
they?” she says. “They seem to like the edges of woodlands that abut
pastures, the more fertile sites and strips along the drainage lines. This
country is productive and provides more prey for them to live on. I am
hoping my analysis will highlight the extent of what it is about the
species habitat’s characteristics that impact on their survival.”
Barking owls use large old trees as nesting hollows (as does much of the
wildlife they prey on) which in many areas are a limited resource. “We
don’t know much about our large forest owls,” says Natasha. “In fact we
don’t know much about our owls full-stop.” Natasha has spoken to and
worked with members of various Landcare groups in the region in the
Wooragee, Indigo Valley, Chiltern, and Springhurst/Byawatha areas. She is
known as “the barking owl lady”, especially among the 80 or so landholders
who allowed her to access their properties. “Many of them have been very
hospitable and interested and some have helped me trap owls,” says Natasha
who, as a thankyou, organised a barbeque with donated supplies of barking
owl wine from Millbrook Winery in Western Australia.
Meanwhile, barking owls remain listed as endangered in Victoria,
threatened in NSW, and as rare in South Australia.