Brushtail Possums enjoy snacking on eggs, nestlings and even adult birds if they can catch them. Our property has an unusually high population density of Brushtail Possums, because a Wildcare neighbour has soft-released numerous possums over the years and they have not ventured far. I estimated that here are probably about 20 Brushtail Possums on our 5 acre property. Our nesting birds don’t stand a chance! So I must possum-protect all but the for-possum nest boxes to prevent them from being raided.
Through a discovery process of trialing different possum guard and nest box placement methods, monitoring by wildlife camera, plus frequently checking inside the nest boxes myself, I have discovered just how agile Brushtail Possums are. Unless a tree is completely solitary, with no part of the nest box tree canopy close to the canopy of a nearby tree, a Brushtail Possum can easily climb down a tree to access a nest box after crossing from the canopy of a nearby tree.
This means that possum guards both above and below nest boxes are essential. This also means that even if there is a very small dangling small twiggy branch next to a nest box on a tree with possum guards, a possum can simply use this twiggy branch to access the nest box directly.
Guards as close to the nest box as possible reduces the risk of a possum accessing the tree via a close branch that you may not have noticed (it happens!), and reduces the area that a glider can land on from a nearby tree. My successful nest boxes are on straight, solitary trees, with no (or trimmed to 1.5-2m away) nearby branches, no matter how small and insignificant they look!
This is my next problem to work on, as small birds vulnerable to predation need to nest in places obscured by leaves and branches. No doubt the first flight of any nestlings will be much safer, with close branches to land on and recover, than having to launch to a far-away tree. Mum and dad are at risk too, when feeding hungry youngsters. Mmm the perfect Currawong snack…a fledgling’s first flight.
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