Project overview
The Save Our Scarlet Robin project aims to help farmers and other land managers to protect and restore critical habitat for small birds.
This will also have a positive effect on farm productivity by:
- stabilising soils
- reducing impacts from storms
- providing shade and shelter for livestock.

Save Our Scarlet Robin
South East Local Land Services has received financial support from the NSW Government via the Environmental Trust, Saving Our Species and Catchment Action NSW Programs to...
The scarlet robin and its equally beautiful relative the flame robin spend the warmer seasons feeding and breeding in the higher altitude forests and woodlands along the Great Dividing Range and other mountain systems.
Scarlet and flame robins typically arrive on the lower parts of the Southern Tablelands and ACT in early March. General observations have recorded the arrival of the first red robins occurring later than normal this year.
Robin numbers have also been down in the last two years, possibly as a result of the devastating drought and bushfires of 2019-20 when significant areas of their habitat were temporarily destroyed.
Small migratory birds like the robins need enough native vegetation, ground litter and fallen timber in the landscape to allow them safe passage from predators.
Project objectives
This project aims to:
- manage remnant patches of woodland for conservation
- improve habitat and landscape connectivity
- reduce the number of exotic berry-bearing trees and shrubs.
Project delivery
Local Land Services will run capacity building events and provide funding for:
- revegetation of native scarlet robin habitat
- fencing of revegetation sites
- pest animal control and management.
Project timeline
2016-2021:
- Events run related to improving skills in:
- bird identification
- revegetation
- pest control.
2021-2026:
- Maintenance and monitoring of project sites with a continued focus on building the profile of the scarlet robin and other species in the community.
Work underway
Local Land Services are currently maintaining and monitoring existing project sites.
How to get involved
Your actions can contribute to woodland and species recovery. You can reverse this trend by protecting, replanting and connecting our woodlands. Use this guide to designing and implementing woodland bird habitat on your property.
The golden rule for conservation of birds and all native plants and animals is “the bigger the better” but a minimum patch or corridor of 2ha has been shown to support small bird habitat. Viable patches can be smaller if there are larger patches of remnant vegetation nearby.
- Corridors or windbreaks should be a minimum of 30m wide, but wider will always help deter undesirable birds like noisy miners that exclude the smaller birds we are trying to help.
- All plantings should aim for a minimum of 60% shrubs and maximum of 40% trees.
- Shrubs are so important as protective nesting and foraging sites for small birds but can also provide benefits to soil health and occasional stock fodder depending on the species.
- If your property is small, you can consider creating stepping-stone plantings (min 400m2) that will help small birds move between larger patches of habitat.
- Stepping-stones should be located no more than 100m from another patch of vegetation as small birds are more vulnerable to predation and the larger aggressive birds will exclude them when they move over large distances without cover. It also takes a lot more energy to fly long distances to safety.
Easy! Wattles and shrubs are the real powerhouse of small bird habitat. You can infill plant with wattles and shrubs and the structural diversity you provide will help support a range of small birds.
Contact Landcare or your nearest Local Land Services office for a suitable species list to avoid putting the wrong plant species into an established vegetation community. And remember the 60:40 rule of thumb, shrubs to trees!
My existing planting sites are mostly eucalypts, should I do anything?
If they are planted closely together (closer than 5m apart) don’t be afraid to thin them out as they can eventually become stunted as they compete for resources (seek advice from Local Land Services before undertaking thinning).
- Use minimum 40% shrubs rule to work out how many need to go and how many replacements of wattle and shrubs you need.
- If the eucalypts are well-spaced, start to incorporate wattles and other native shrubs in the gaps.
- If the existing site is a funded planting contact the funding organisation for advice.
Farm production and biodiversity conservation are not necessarily mutually exclusive. There’s a large body of research that supports the fact that land managers can actually make productivity gains through increasing biodiversity on-farm. The benefits of incorporating biodiversity into agriculture include:
- enhancing stock and soil health
- stock shelter
- biological pest control
- nutrient cycling
- erosion management
- greater resilience against weed invasion
- reduced fertiliser use
- greater retention and infiltration of water into the soil
- slowing down of runoff across paddocks.
Many of us still use wood burning heaters and often collect firewood from our own properties. If doing so, remember that leaving parts of your property a bit ‘messy’, and leaving dead standing and fallen timber is very important in supporting local biodiversity.
As discussed above, this biodiversity can provide enormous benefits to your property and livestock. Consider planting a firewood patch of fast-growing black wattle. It will support bird life whilst it grows, provides hot burning wood and can replenish itself given the right management.
Fencing areas and revegetating can put a stop to most erosion on your property. Include the right mix of native plant species to support our woodland birds. Local Land Services can help with advice to ensure you get the most out of both your erosion control and your revegetation efforts.
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Outcomes
Local Land Services (LLS) has:
- developed 76 landholder projects covering approximately 500ha
- protected 345ha of remnant native vegetation
- planted approximately 38,000 native plants
- installing 63km of stock exclusion fencing.
LLS and project partners collectively ran 57 training and awareness raising events attracting about 1300 people.
Funding and partnerships
NSW Government via the Environmental Trust, Saving Our Species and Catchment Action NSW Programs.
Partners include:
- NSW Environmental Trust
- Department of Planning, Industry and Environment (DPIE) Threatened species team
- Queanbeyan Palerang Regional Council
- Upper Shoalhaven Landcare Council
- Upper Murrumbidgee Landcare Committee
- Australian National Botanic Gardens
- Molonglo Conservation Group
- Kosciusko 2 Coast
- landholders.
For more information contact Senior Natural Resource Management Advisor, Andy Taylor, on 0427 750 891 or andy.taylor@lls.nsw.gov.au.
Contact Local Land Services NSW
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