Oman Daily Observer

‘Mini kangaroos’ hop back in South Australia

- THE BRUSH-TAILED BETTONG

—a rare, very cute marsupial resembling a rabbit-sized kangaroo — is bouncing back on the South Australian mainland, more than 100 years after disappeari­ng from the region.

Bettongs, which leap with their hindlegs much like a full-sized kangaroo, populated over 60 per cent of Australia before falling victim to cats, foxes and land-clearing after European settlement more than two centuries ago.

Now they are making a comeback in South Australia’s Yorke Peninsula, after wildlife scientists released 120 of the animals over a two-year period to see if they could survive outside of predator-proof enclosures or islands.

New monitoring shows they are thriving, researcher­s said on Friday.

Scientists said they had trapped 85 brush-tailed bettongs, finding that 40 per cent of them were new animals born in the peninsula and 42 of the 45 females had young in their pouches.

“It’s fantastic to see so many new animals in the population,” said Derek Sandow, ecologist for the Northern and Yorke Landscape Board.

The furry creatures — their numbers down from tens of millions precolonis­ation to an estimated 12,000 to 18,000 now — have clung to existence on Australian islands, in protected enclosures, and in a few pockets of

Western Australia.

Their comeback in South Australia was helped by an intensive cat and fox control programme, Sandow said, as well as a “leaky” fence to reduce — without entirely excluding — the predators from the southern part of the peninsula.

The little animals play a big role in Australia’s environmen­t, he told AFP.

“They’re a little, ankle-sized kangaroo, a mini kangaroo on steroids if you like. They’ve got really powerful hind legs, they carry their young in their pouch, like a kangaroo does, but they’re only a kilo and a half (three pounds),” Sandow explained.

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