It started in the early 2010s on the eastern slopes of the Great Dividing Range, where the Brisbane-Sydney rail line cuts through a remnant patch of eucalyptus forest. Koalas in this region—already stressed by habitat fragmentation and chlamydia—faced a new, silent predator: the 8:15 AM express train. Collisions were rising. A koala, when startled on the ground, doesn't run. It climbs. And the nearest vertical structure was often a steel rail signal post.
A young wildlife ecologist named Dr. Maya Lin was tasked with monitoring the corridor. She placed heat-motion cameras on five signal posts. Over three months, she recorded 147 koala approaches. 119 ended with the koala climbing the post. 12 of those koalas were later struck by trains after descending onto the tracks. koala windows
This is the story of how a problem became a solution, and how a solution changed the way a country thought about its roads. It started in the early 2010s on the
Reyes replied: "So we didn't build a crossing. We built a lesson." A koala, when startled on the ground, doesn't run