A) Norfolk boobook owl B) Anguilla Reinhardtii C) Cyathea brownii D) Norfolk parakeet
A) Climate change B) Pollution C) Habitat destruction D) Feral cats and rats
A) Captain Cook monument B) Norfolk Island National Park C) Phillip Island D) Mount Pitt
A) For breeding purposes B) To prevent them from flying back to Norfolk Island C) To study their behavior D) To introduce new predators
A) Tourist donations B) Government grants C) Private sponsorships D) Through a crowdfunding system
A) A$100,000 B) A$90,000 C) A$77,000 D) A$50,000
A) Replanting plants for green parrots and predator eradication B) Expanding the park area C) Creating a new bird sanctuary D) Building new aviaries
A) 7 out of 15 B) 10 out of 15 C) 5 out of 15 D) 12 out of 15
A) 22 °C (71 °F) B) 25 °C (77 °F) C) 17 °C (62 °F) D) 30 °C (86 °F)
A) June B) July C) February D) January
A) 15 °C (59 °F) B) 17 °C (62 °F) C) 22 °C (71 °F) D) 25 °C (77 °F)
A) Green parrot B) Anguilla Reinhardtii C) Cyathea brownii D) Norfolk boobook owl
A) Skiing B) Birdwatching C) Mountain climbing D) Scuba diving
A) Five B) Two C) None D) Ten
A) Bass and catfish B) Salmon and trout C) Carp and tilapia D) Speckled longfin eel and short-finned eel
A) The founding of Norfolk Island National Park B) The discovery of Cyathea brownii C) Captain James Cook's statement about the island being a 'paradise' D) The first landing of European settlers
A) Phillip Island and Cyathea brownii B) Captain Cook monument and Botanical Garden C) Norfolk boobook owl and green parrot D) Mount Pitt and Mount Bates
A) 1975 B) 1990 C) 1984 D) 2003
A) 250 B) 150 C) 182 D) 200
A) Chloris truncata B) Araucaria heterophylla C) Lagunaria patersonia D) Clematis dubia
A) White oak (Lagunaria patersonia) B) Norfolk Island pine (Araucaria heterophylla) C) Chloris truncata D) Clematis dubia
A) Norfolk Island parakeet B) Lord Howe Island gecko C) Gould’s wattled bat (Chalinolobus gouldii) D) White-chested white-eye |