“These promising hollows are already showing signs of life with 75 per cent use recorded within two months of installation and evidence of gliders taking up residence – proving that nature can bounce back with a helping hand,” Ms Sharrad added. The 100 nest boxes installed are in addition to 25 that were installed by Habitat Innovation and Management and IFAW last year. READ ALSO Volunteers to conduct brumby count So much recovery work is needed, and it will take time, but it is uplifting to see nature get a helping hand and life start to return to the sanctuary,” Mr Fitzgerald said. ![]() ![]() Two Thumbs Wildlife Trust Sanctuary owner James Fitzgerald said thousands of hollow trees were destroyed on the property during the bushfires. Other activities included carving out 20 tree hollows to provide more homes for small hollow-dependent animals, seed dispersal to enhance biodiversity, and important soil erosion control and fencing work to aid landscape recovery. The nest box installation was part of a week-long restoration blitz which included the planting of 2000 native grasses and trees to encourage birds including the glossy black cockatoo (vulnerable under NSW and Australian legislation) back to the sanctuary. It’s no good to encourage a possum and breeding parrots to use the same box as the eggs and chicks of the parrots will end up a hearty meal for the possum!” Habitat Innovation and Management Director Mick Callan added, “We were also careful to ensure the design houses non-competing species. Our field research has shown us that it is common for many different species to use a tree hollow, so we mimicked this by configuring our Habitech nest box to accommodate different species at the same time, which to our knowledge is a first,” Habitat Innovation and Management Director Carl Tippler said. “We were literally thinking inside the box when we came up with the idea of this multi-chambered design. These Habitech nest boxes provide an immediate ready-to-move-in home for animals. Natural hollows for smaller animals take up to 100 years to develop in a eucalypt tree while hollows for larger animals such as greater gliders take up to 200 years or more to form. We are hopeful that after such a tragedy, these revolutionary two-bedroom nest boxes will provide a lifeline that is so desperately needed to bring this sanctuary back to life,” IFAW Wildlife Campaign Manager Josey Sharrad said. “Many animals which survived the fires were literally on life support – struggling to survive in a charred landscape. In a world-first initiative, 20 nest boxes designed to house different species in two chambers (such as birds and microbats) were installed to accelerate the return of hollow-dwelling wildlife. READ ALSO Cash splash set to spruce up Adaminaby’s Big Trout as icon turns 50Cash splash set to spruce up Adaminaby’s Big Trout as icon turns 50 ![]() However, now the two groups are encouraging native wildlife to return to the 724-hectare property by installing 100 innovative Habitech nest boxes which mimic natural hollows found in trees. Two Thumbs Sanctuary was badly affected by the fires and was the location of the air tanker crash which killed three American firefighters, who were trying to save the area, in January 2020. The intensity of the fires left the landscape in southern NSW struggling to bounce back and hundreds of tree hollow-dependent animals homeless. The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) has been working with Habitat Innovation and Management to restore Two Thumbs Wildlife Trust Sanctuary to the wildlife haven it was before the 2019-2020 bushfires. ![]() Hundreds of animals are expected to move into revolutionary multi-species nest boxes - the animal equivalent of two-bedroom homes - at a bushfire-ravaged wildlife sanctuary near Numeralla, NSW. One of the new nest boxes which have been installed at Two Thumbs Wildlife Sanctuary near Numeralla, NSW.
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