More and more things like that are being photographed with camera traps (e.g. A tiger quoll in the Grampians recently). Hopefully it means conditions are improving there for those species, but it might just be that we’ve found a way to record individuals of increasingly rare species. At least it gives us a way to find out. Peter Shute Sent from my iPad > On 25 Nov 2013, at 10:02 pm, “Steve Potter” <steve@frontier.org.au> wrote: > > Hi folks, > Not sure about rediscovered but this may be of some interest. > goto: > https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=426894304078117&set=a.193167560784127.30491.187380558029494&type=1&theater > > Cheers > > Steve Potter > p: 0407398234 > e: steve@frontier.org.au > > > > > =============================== > > To unsubscribe from this mailing list, > send the message: > unsubscribe > (in the body of the message, with no Subject line) > to: birding-aus-request@vicnet.net.au > > http://birding-aus.org > =============================== =============================== To unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message: unsubscribe (in the body of the message, with no Subject line) to: birding-aus-request@vicnet.net.au http://birding-aus.org ===============================