Burrowing Bettongs Reintroduced to Australian Outback After Near Extinction
Auf einen Blick
- After being decimated by feral cats and foxes, the burrowing bettong, a football-sized marsupial, has been reintroduced to Sturt National Park in New South Wales.
- Ecologists are monitoring the animals, equipped with radio collars, as they adapt to a 'wild training zone' designed to control predators.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
The burrowing bettong, a unique marsupial once widespread in Australia's interior, was nearly driven to extinction by introduced predators like feral cats and foxes within a century of European settlement. This project aims to counteract Australia's high mammal extinction rate.
A football-sized relative of kangaroos, the burrowing bettong once thrived across much of Australia's arid and semi-arid interior.
Then, within a century of European settlement, the marsupials vanished from most of the mainland.
Like many native animals, the population was decimated by feral cats and foxes.
But now, after two years of breeding behind pest-free exclosures in the far north-west corner of New South Wales, a team of ecologists has released a handful of bettongs beyond the fences.
Bettongs have a pouch, hop like roos, dig warrens like rabbits and per animal, shift about 3 tonnes of soil a year.
Combine this with the clicking and fart noises they use to communicate, the marsupials are considered one of the country's most unique native species.
Wild Deserts principal ecologist Rebecca West said it was exciting to see these "ecosystem engineers" released decades after extinction in Sturt National Park near Cameron Corner.
"They dig their homes and they dig their warrens and they're constantly picking their new places and moving on, but they're digging every night for their food."
Australia has the world's highest mammal extinction rate, something this project is trying to counteract.
Protection from predators
Over the past few weeks, bettongs were released into a 100 square kilometre "wild training zone" inside Sturt National Park, about 100 kilometres west of the outback town of Tibooburra.
Inside the exclosure, the number of feral predators such as cats can be monitored, controlled, and kept at a low density through shooting and trapping.
Each of the bettongs has been equipped with a radio collar, so the team can intensively monitor them.
"We know that animals can live in a fence where there's no predators and nothing to worry them," Wild Deserts conservation field officer David Damschke said.
"But, getting them beyond the fence and back into the landscape where they can continue on their natural function and the ecological role, that would be the key part."
Feral cats kill more than 1.5 billion native animals every year in Australia, according to the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water.
By living alongside a low density of feral predators, ecologists in South Australia have observed behavioural changes in the bettongs.
Dr West is hopeful they will see similar shifts with these recently released species.
"They're going to be learning to listen when they're feeding, to look around them to make sure that they've got really good safety and that they're not moving too far from their warrens," she said.
"Cats have different hunting strategies [to native predators], they smell different, they actually travel differently within the landscape."
The bettongs are the fifth native species to be successfully bred up and reintroduced by the Wild Deserts team.
These newly released bettongs join bilbies, golden bandicoots and western quolls, as well as crest-tailed mulgaras beyond the fences.
Over the past 18 months, 400 bilbies have also been released into the wild training zone.
"We're seeing dispersal across the whole area that we've released them into," Dr West said.
"We're seeing really good signs of breeding and so that's fantastic news for us."
It is not just bilbies breeding, according to Dr West, they have found evidence other species are also reproducing despite the threat of predators.
Navigating a new habitat
The Wild Deserts team are hopeful the bettongs can successfully navigate their new environment.
Wild Deserts project leader Richard Kingsford said it was important staff monitored the bettongs as they navigated their new home.
"They don't really know their way around so we need to go out there every day and track them, where they're located," Professor Kingsford said.
"If we find one that's been killed, we've got an opportunity to work out what happened to it.
"We can take genetic swabs and get them analysed to see if it was a cat, so all of those things are important and allow us to learn."
Offene Fragen
- Will bettongs successfully adapt to predator presence?
- What are the long-term survival rates?
- How will bettongs impact the existing ecosystem?


