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AAP
AAP
Keira Jenkins

Indigenous knowledge helps uncover hidden 'koala city'

A large koala colony has been found on the fringes of one of Australia's biggest regional cities. (HANDOUT/UNIVERSITY OF NEWCASTLE)

When Daryn McKenny spotted a koala in the state conservation area he has considered his "backyard" for decades, he knew it was an important find.

It was the summer of 2019-2020 when catastrophic bushfires hit Australia's east coast and Mr McKenny spotted a koala on a trail camera he'd set up at Sugarloaf State Conservation Area, inland of Newcastle. 

"I grew up near Sugarloaf. This was my backyard as a kid ... I'd never seen a koala there before," the Gamilaraay and Wiradjuri man told AAP.

When Mr McKenny called the University of Newcastle about his find, they told him they weren't aware of a koala population at Sugarloaf. 

A koala with her baby at Sugarloaf State Conservation Area
The koala population at Sugarloaf is being studied as part of a statewide review into the species. (HANDOUT/UNIVERSITY OF NEWCASTLE)

Armed with a head torch and his knowledge of the Country he grew up exploring, Mr McKenny spent the next few years gathering hundreds of videos and photos of the marsupial.

"I'd go out at 8 o'clock at night with a head lamp on and a bottle of water and I'd walk until two or three in the morning, just looking for koalas," he said.

"Western ecologists will tell you you look for white eyes. I don't look for white eyes. I look for tree stars - their eyes are bright - we'd see blinking stars in the trees, that's when I knew I was seeing a koala."

University of Newcastle researchers worked alongside Mr McKenny to survey the koala population at Sugarloaf as part of a statewide study on the species. 

Using spotlighting methods and thermal drone searches, they found a significant population of more than 290 koalas. 

"We didn't determine that we have a colony of koalas living on the fringe of a city - we actually have a city of koalas living on the fringe of an urban population," Mr McKenny said.

Ryan Witt and Daryn McKenny
Ryan Witt (left) and Daryn McKenny have joined force to survey the Sugarloaf koalas. (HANDOUT/UNIVERSITY OF NEWCASTLE)

University of Newcastle conservation scientist and study co-author Ryan Witt said Mr McKenny had a huge amount of knowledge of the land and koalas at Sugarloaf, which was helpful during the survey.

 "We were grateful to learn from him and share methods to find these cryptic animals," Dr Witt said.

The statewide survey estimated a total population of more than 4000 koalas across 67,300 hectares of bushland. 

Of the seven national parks surveyed, Maria National Park had the greatest density of koalas with 521 predicted in 3350 hectares.

Areas affected by the 2019-2020 bushfires had fewer koalas in comparison to the national parks which weren't impacted. 

"What's important to understand is it's not just where koalas are, but where they're not, and understanding why koalas aren't in certain areas, particularly if there's high-quality habitat there," lead researcher Shelby Ryan said.

"That can help inform us about current koala populations and their threats and their likelihood of decline or localised extinction."

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