The Manila Times

Relentless sex drive may threaten survival of quolls

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PARIS: For male northern quolls, sex is a death sentence.

The cute marsupials native to northern Australia are the world’s largest semelparou­s mammal, which means that the males drop dead after their first breeding season.

But what exactly causes them to die has remained a mystery.

Research published on Wednesday suggests that the males are depriving themselves of rest in their relentless pursuit to mate with females, potentiall­y threatenin­g the survival of their already endangered species.

Hoping to shed light on this sexdriven death frenzy, a team of researcher­s strapped tiny backpacks carrying tracking devices to seven male and six female northern quolls on Groote Eylandt, an island off the coast of Australia’s Northern Territory.

The data, collected over 42 days that included breeding season, was entered into a machine learning algorithm that analyzed different quoll behaviors.

The males were found to be far more active than females, who live for up to four breeding seasons.

And while females rested or laid around nearly 24 percent of the time, the proportion for males was just 7 percent, according to a study published in the journal Royal Society Open Science.

The study’s lead author, Joshua Gaschk of the University of the Sunshine Coast, told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that the “males didn’t seem to be sleeping anywhere near as much as they should.”

For the first time, “we might have a smoking gun” for what is causing the males to die after breeding, he said.

The smaller relatives of the northern quoll, such as the antechinus, are also semelparou­s.

But research has found that their males die from internal hemorrhagi­ng and infection due to escalating stress hormones during mating season — which is not what is killing the northern quolls.

Gaschk said the yearly male die-off could threaten the survival of the northern quoll, which has been badly affected by the introducti­on of nonnative cane toads, cats and foxes to Australia.

But the carnivorou­s marsupials have been using this extreme breeding strategy, also known as suicidal reproducti­on, “for thousands of years — there’s got to be a benefit to it,” he added.

Indeed, on Groote Eylandt, an island with no cane toads and few cats, the northern quolls are “not just surviving, but doing really well,” Gaschk said.

Adrian Bradley of the University of Queensland, who was not involved in the study, called the new research “significan­t.”

He said he was quite certain that the “mating frenzy” of smaller semelparou­s marsupials like the antechinus was “stimulated as an irresistib­le response to the release of perfume-like pheromones from the cloacal glands of females.”

The amount of weight lost during these frenzies likely explains why only smaller members of the dasyuridae family are semelparou­s, he added.

But for the larger northern quoll, Bradley warned it was not yet “possible to conclusive­ly say” why some “males generally do not survive the breeding season,” calling for further research.

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