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An estimated 2 million shorebirds migrate annually to the coastal areas of Australia from their arctic breeding grounds in Asia and Alaska. More than half of these are experiencing a drop in population numbers.

Some species fly for days without food or rest and travel tens of thousands of kilometres to reach Australia. They arrive exhausted and spend September to April resting and feeding.

They gather in large numbers on the sandbanks and mudflats of the lower Maroochy River and Pumicestone Passage, as well as on rocky headlands such as Point Cartwright, Caloundra headland, and Point Arkwright.

As a coastal community, the Sunshine Coast provides important habitat for migratory shorebirds and is also home to resident shorebirds, that live here all year long.

Threats to shorebirds

Shorebirds need space, food, and rest to recover from their long flights and prepare for their return journey.

Shorebirds are easily disturbed by people, dogs, vehicles and watercrafts getting too close and causing them to fly away.

Share our coast with the shorebirds

You can help protect our shorebirds by:

  • observing from a distance using binoculars
  • not running at flocks of shorebirds
  • choosing a location away from the birds for your activities
  • keeping your dogs under control
  • taking your rubbish home.

Learn more about our resident and migratory shorebirds.

Give shorebirds space to rest

Migratory shorebirds can travel at total of 20,000–30,000 km each year to spend the summer on the Sunshine Coast to feed and rest before flying back to their breeding grounds in the northern hemisphere.

On the Sunshine Coast, shorebird resting and feeding areas often overlap with recreational use areas. We can help the birds by giving them space and avoid disturbing them to ensure our summer visitors have enough energy for their long journey back.

Any disturbance to the birds during this time limits their ability to gain essential weight and energy. Even short disturbances add up and impact on their return journey, breeding success, and survival.

Off-leash dogs cause harm to shorebirds

Shorebirds view dogs as dangerous predators. Queensland Government best practice guidelines specify a 300 metre buffer between shorebird habitat and a dog off-leash area. This is based on research looking at which distances birds take flight, start raising alarm or become agitated when disturbed. It also considers research that shows shorebirds react earlier to a human with a dog than just a human alone.

By keeping dogs on leads near shorebirds, disturbance to shorebirds is reduced. In this way, we can give the shorebirds the space they need to rest and recover.

Find dog parks and off-leash areas away from shorebirds here.