Mail & Guardian

‘Suicidal reproducer’ survives wildfires

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A rare, shrew-like Australian marsupial, whose males die en masse from stress after a “frenetic” mating season, has survived devastatin­g wildfires that scorched one of their few habitats, researcher­s said this week.

Scientists had feared for the future of a key population of silver-headed antechinus, only formally identified eight years ago, when wildfires in 2019 swept through much of their habitat in the Bulburin National Park in Queensland, eastern Australia.

It is one of only three known habitats in Australia for the species, which lives largely on insects and spiders.

“We found 21 individual­s across burnt and unburnt habitat which is great. It means they are persisting,” said Andrew Baker, of the Queensland University of Technology, who led the search with PHD candidate Stephane Batista.

With a third of their habitat burned, Baker said he had feared finding none of the marsupials.

The male silver-headed antechinus already lives a precarious life, dying before one year of age from the effects of an intense two-week mating season. Females rarely survive to a third breeding season.

“With the males, high testostero­ne levels from super-sized testes causes a failure of the switch that turns off the stress hormone cortisol. So they get flooded with cortisol during the breeding season and ultimately it poisons them.”

“The males suffer internal bleeding, their hair falls out, sometimes they go blind. Even then, they may stumble around looking for females to mate with until they die,” Baker said.

Scientists trapped the surviving marsupials from late May to early June this year, using detection dogs to sniff out the best areas to place traps or sensor cameras in an operation funded by World Wide Fund (WWF) for Nature-australia.

Baker said the outlook for the silver-headed antechinus was clouded by climate change causing more frequent droughts and fires.

In addition, they were threatened by non-native predators such as cats and the destructio­n of the undergrowt­h they live in by animals including cows, horses and feral pigs.

Wwf-australia’s Daniel Grover, who took part in the search, said it

was important to conduct research into the species after the fires.

“The silver-headed antechinus was only described to science in 2013, was

immediatel­y declared endangered, and then hammered by fire. We can’t let its story be ‘discovered today, gone tomorrow’,” he said.

 ?? Photo: David Paul ?? Persisting: A rare silver-headed antechinus. Males do not survive for more than a year because of the frenetic breeding season.
Photo: David Paul Persisting: A rare silver-headed antechinus. Males do not survive for more than a year because of the frenetic breeding season.

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