The Borneo Post

First quolls born in Australian wild in half a century

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SYDNEY: The first eastern quolls in 50 years have been born in the wild on the Australian mainland, with the rice grain- sized pups offering hope to a species of marsupial devastated by foxes.

Eastern quolls – a furry carnivore that grows to about the size of a domestic cat – disappeare­d from the mainland in the 1960s but clung on in the island state of Tasmania.

Twenty of them were returned to their native environmen­t in the Booderee National Park, south of Sydney, in March to see if they could survive and thrive.

It is the first time in Australia that a carnivore extinct on the mainland has been re-introduced to the wild and followed a 15-year project to bring feral predators in the area under control.

Booderee National Park Natural Resource Manager Nick Dexter said yesterday babies had been confirmed in three of the females’ pouches.

“There remains challenges ahead to establish a sustainabl­e population, but to have 30 per cent of the female quolls produce pouch young from this pilot project is a move in the right direction,” he said.

Quoll babies stay sheltered in the pouch for around three months while they gain weight and grow fur.

“We’ve been tracking every animal in this project with a GPS collar, and unlike other translocat­ion projects we’ve been able to quickly discover and manage threats,” Dexter added.

Eastern quolls, which primarily eat insects, were present on the mainland for thousands of years. But large numbers were killed in the early 1900s by a mysterious epidemic, and their population was then devastated as foxes spread across south- eastern Australia. They were last regularly seen on the mainland in the 1960s in the Sydney region. — AFP

 ??  ?? Photo shows juvenile eastern quolls at the Devils @ Cradle conservati­on facility in Cradle Mountain, Tasmania. — AFP photo
Photo shows juvenile eastern quolls at the Devils @ Cradle conservati­on facility in Cradle Mountain, Tasmania. — AFP photo

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