 My name is Renata Alves, I'm doing my PhD on the 40-spotted pardalots and we are trying to understand a little bit of their threats and trying to come up with ways that we can mitigate some of those threats. So there's a 40-spot up there, well, Florina, anyway. So they are tiny little birds that live on the canopy of white gums. A previous PhD student studying the 40-spotted pardalot, she ended up discovering a parasitic fly. This fly goes into the nest and lay the eggs inside. So once the larvae hatch, they feed on the pardalots causing severe mortality. We came up with this idea to build these feathers dispensers. So it's basically putting feathers for them to use as nesting material and spray those feathers with insecticides. So pardalots could do the hard work of carrying the nesting material into their nests rather than us climbing a tree to do that. The results of this experiment was really good. Pardalots are able to carry that insecticide really inside the nest and pardalots can learn pretty quickly to use those feather dispensers. So we hope that now wildlife managers can use that as a management practice in areas where we know the fly is an issue.