Gang-gang Cockatoos are adversely affected by land clearing and the removal of mature trees (potential breeding hollow sites). In some cases, 'crèches' will be formed - where several pairs have nested close together, their young will roost together in the same tree while their parents are foraging. Parents feed their young for a further four to six weeks after fledging and family groups will be seen feeding together during the breeding season. Both sexes incubate the eggs and care for the young. The female chooses a nest hollow in a suitable tree and both sexes prepare the nest for egg-laying, lining it with wood-chips and dust by chewing at the sides of the hollow. Gang-gang Cockatoos form close, monogamous pairs. Gang-gang Cockatoos almost always use their left foot to hold food when eating.
Gang-gangs feed in flocks of up to 60 birds outside the breeding season they feed in pairs or small family groups during the breeding season. They are mainly arboreal (found in trees), coming to the ground only to drink and to forage among fallen fruits or pine cones. They will also eat berries, fruits, nuts and insects and their larvae. Gang-gang Cockatoos feed mainly on seeds of native and introduced trees and shrubs, with a preference for eucalypts, wattles and introduced hawthorns. They undergo seasonal altitudinal migration from high forests to lower areas during winter. They require tall trees for nest hollows. At this time, they may be seen by roadsides and in parks and gardens of urban areas. In winter, Gang-gangs will move to lower altitudes into drier, more open forests and woodlands. Has also been introduced to Kangaroo Island in South Australia.ĭuring summer, the Gang-gang Cockatoo is found in tall mountain forests and woodlands, with dense shrubby understoreys. Formerly found on King Island until the mid-1960s but now considered extinct on the island. A disjunct (cut off) population is found in the western half of Victoria from the Otway region to the South Australian border. They are widespread in eastern New South Wales from the central slopes and tablelands to the south coast, down through Victoria's north-eastern regions to Seymour, with some records in east Melbourne, Mornington Peninsula and south-western Gippsland.
Gang-gang Cockatoos are endemic to south-eastern Australia. The Gang-gang Cockatoo is generally unmistakable, but in flight may resemble a Galah in shape. Gang-gangs are gregarious but relatively quiet cockatoos, and may usually be located in food trees by the sounds of feeding and falling debris. Young birds are similar to the adult female, with young males differing by having a red crown and forehead and a shorter, less twisted red crest. In both sexes, the feathers of the upperparts and wings are faintly edged pale-grey, giving a barred appearance, with females having additional yellow edging to their feathers that increases this barred effect.
The adult female has a dark grey head and crest, with the feathers of the underparts edged pink and yellow. The adult male has a distinctive scarlet red head and crest, with the rest of the body slate-grey. The Gang-gang Cockatoo, or Gang Gang for short, is a small, stocky cockatoo with a wispy crest, large, broad wings and a short tail.