logo
Sad reason six rare Aussie animals were placed in backpacks and flown 570km to secure location

Sad reason six rare Aussie animals were placed in backpacks and flown 570km to secure location

Yahoo4 days ago
Australia has the worst record in the world for mammalian extinction. So in a bid to stop history repeating, six rare wallabies have been taken from their rocky stronghold and flown 570km across the country to help bolster an important insurance population.
Fewer than 100 southern brush-tailed rock-wallabies remain in the wild, primarily due to habitat destruction and predation by invasive European foxes. But there are an additional 300 to 400 living at the Mount Rothwell sanctuary, west of Melbourne, which is run by environmental charity the Odonata Foundation.
Its chief operating officer Matt Singleton explained the wallabies are a curious creature that scales high rocky cliffs, watching people as they walk past. 'They stand up there almost like meerkats. When you sit still and watch them... they mind their own business, but they're always keeping a watchful eye over you,' he said.
Related: Rare colour footage of extinct wallaby seen again after 90 years
With most of the brush-tailed rock-wallabies at this one location, just north of the You Yangs, the species was deemed susceptible to threats like bushfire. So work is being done to spread the genetics around to improve the health of two smaller populations at faraway predator-proof sanctuaries.
Wallabies placed inside backpacks to keep them calm
When populations get too small, there's a danger they can become inbred. On Friday morning, three males and three females with healthy genetics were selected to be sent to Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve in the ACT where a population of 20 live. At the same time, two will be taken from Tidbinbilla to Central Victoria, to help set up a population there.
Tidbinbilla is well known for its work in helping save threatened species, and it is one of the last remaining places on Earth where the critically endangered Canberra grassland earless dragon survives.
Brush-tailed rock-wallabies are well known for their ability to help the landscape by nibbling between long tussock grasses, potentially improving the landscape for dragons, which require open spaces. They also spread mycorrhizal fungi, which attach to tree roots to help them communicate.
As Singleton spoke to Yahoo on Friday afternoon, the wallabies were mid-flight. Each was placed inside a backpack so they'd feel comfortable.
'They feel like they're in a pouch, and it reduces stress on the animals. A lot of macropods like rock wallabies have stress toxins build up in their bodies and they can be fatal to them,' he said.
After the wallabies are picked up at Canberra Airport, they'll be placed inside one to two-hectare pens to keep them quarantined from the established Tidbinbilla while they adjust.
🚨 Alarm raised after strange backyard frog phenomenon worsens
🎞️ Incredible Australian footage reveals native predator killing city rats
☠️ Warning 'nowhere is safe' as Australia's 500km toxic problem spreads
While the Odonata Foundation has been successful in breeding up numbers, Singleton said the Southern Brush-Tailed Rock-Wallaby Recovery Team's work has been a collaborative effort.
'I think it's a great example of how people can work together to achieve really great outcomes to recover a species. And from Odonata's perspective, our work couldn't be done without the support of Amazon's Right Now Climate Fund,' he said in reference to the tech giant's $100 million nature investment fund to help conserve natural landscapes and build climate resilience around the world.
The project was also supported by the ACT Government and Cesar Australia.
Love Australia's weird and wonderful environment? 🐊🦘😳 Get our new newsletter showcasing the week's best stories.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Caravan family witness 'lucky moment' off Aussie coast: 'Pretty incredible'
Caravan family witness 'lucky moment' off Aussie coast: 'Pretty incredible'

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Caravan family witness 'lucky moment' off Aussie coast: 'Pretty incredible'

A family travelling the country in their caravan were treated to an incredible display off the Australian coast right from their campsite. Renee Pike and her husband David, who have spent the past several months camping in Western Australia's Ningaloo region with their two children, aged 6 and 3, couldn't believe their eyes when reviewing drone footage of a reef manta ray cruising right by their home on wheels. Mum Renee, who witnessed the incredible moment at Winderabandi Point in June, told Yahoo News the encounter was "pretty incredible". "We saw the manta cruise past our camp," she explained, adding they decided to throw up their drone to get a closer look. The stunning creature was gliding through the water before it suddenly breached the surface and "did a backflip" in the water. "I've never seen that before," Renee said. She added that the manta captured in the footage is the "biggest" they've spotted during their extensive travels. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Australia's Coral Coast (@australiascoralcoast) Why do manta rays do backflips? Ningaloo is well known for its remarkable marine megafauna, including manta rays, whale sharks, humpback whales, turtles, and even the elusive dugong. Despite countless daily encounters on the reef, Dr Amelia Armstrong, principal researcher at the Ningaloo Manta Project, described what Renee and David saw as a very "lucky moment". While breaches themselves aren't rare, she said catching one on film is "less common". Dr Armstrong said that because the manta's cephalic lobes, the lobes near her mouth, are rolled up, it suggests she wasn't feeding. "With no other animals visible nearby, I think it's likely she was trying to shake off a remora (sucker fish), which often cling to large marine animals and can irritate the skin," she said. Even more amazingly, Dr Armstrong was able to identify the animal in Renee and David's footage as a manta nicknamed The Hoff. The stunning creature was first photographed in Coral Bay in 2005, and has been spotted more than 50 times around the region since then. The belly markings of a manta ray remain unchanged throughout its lifetime, as a useful and unique 'fingerprint' for identification. The Ningaloo Manta Project's citizen science has collected thousands of photos over the years, helping scientists keep track of the rays that call the Ningaloo home. "Every sighting adds a valuable piece to the puzzle of understanding these animals and their mysterious lives along our coastline," Dr Armstrong said. "It's fantastic to see people sharing their footage and stories as it helps us learn more to better protect these beautiful animals, and can inspire others to care." Local residents amazed by incredibly rare sight off Aussie coast Tourists 'totally outraged' by fishing crew's confronting act at sea Incredible event 'triggered by full moon' off famous Aussie coast Family's incredible caravan adventure around Australia Renee and her family, originally from the Gold Coast, have been traveling full-time since March 2023 and show no signs of stopping. While the West Coast holds a special place in their heart for its rugged terrain and incredible reef wildlife, spending two months in Tasmania was another highlight. Renee runs her consulting agency, helping female-founded businesses while on the road. David, previously a construction worker, enjoys quality time with the kids. Travelling around the country has been fantastic for "unplugging from the grind" and realising that "there is another way to do life" for Renee and her family. "It's a really cool way of life," she said, adding that meeting like-minded families has been a highlight of their travels. "It takes a lot to leap, but it kind of shakes you up a bit and makes you realise what's important," she said. Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@ You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube.

Cockatoos can bust a move: Australian research
Cockatoos can bust a move: Australian research

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Cockatoos can bust a move: Australian research

Cockatoo birds are renowned in Australia for their raucous singing, but researchers said Thursday they also boast an impressive array of dance moves. Many Australians regard cockatoos as something of a nuisance, a reputation owed in part to the parrots' cacophonous, screeching cries. But when they are not using their sharp beaks to rifle through rubbish, a new study found many cockatoo species seemed to enjoy shaking their tail feathers. Charles Sturt University researcher Natasha Lubke documented 30 different dance moves while studying various species of cockatoo -- from headbanging to body rolls. "I showed that dancing behaviour is more common in cockatoos than previously thought, and was seen in 10 of the 21 cockatoo species," said Lubke. Lubke scrolled through YouTube videos to document the dancing behaviours of pet cockatoos around the world, as well as observing the birds at Australia's Wagga Wagga Zoo. The research suggested that cockatoos "can experience pleasure and enjoy dancing", she said. Animal behaviour expert Raf Freire, who supervised the research, said it was a sign of "well-developed cognitive and emotional processes in parrots". The study was published in peer-reviewed journal PLOS One. Once dubbed "Australia's naughtiest bird", the sometimes irksome behaviour of sulphur-crested cockatoos is a source of constant fascination to scientists. Researchers earlier this year documented how a flock of cockatoos in urban Sydney had figured out how to use drinking fountains. The Australian government in 2017 spent US$50,000 (Aus$80,000) repairing damage to high-speed internet cables stripped and chewed by cockatoos. sft/djw

Great Barrier Reef records largest annual coral loss in 39 years
Great Barrier Reef records largest annual coral loss in 39 years

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Great Barrier Reef records largest annual coral loss in 39 years

Australia Great Barrier Reef MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — The Great Barrier Reef has experienced its greatest annual loss of live coral across most of its expanse in four decades of record-keeping, Australian authorities say. But due to increasing coral cover since 2017, the coral deaths — caused mainly by bleaching last year associated with climate change — have left the area of living coral across the iconic reef system close to its long-term average, the Australian Institute of Marine Science said in its annual survey on Wednesday. The change underscores a new level of volatility on the UNESCO World Heritage Site, the report said. Mike Emslie, who heads the tropical marine research agency's long-term monitoring program, said the live coral cover measured in 2024 was the largest recorded in 39 years of surveys. The losses from such a high base of coral cover had partially cushioned the serious climate impacts on the world's largest reef ecosystem, which covers 344,000 square kilometers (133,000 square miles) off the northeast Australian coast, he said. 'These are substantial impacts and evidence that the increasing frequency of coral bleaching is really starting to have detrimental effects on the Great Barrier Reef,' Emslie said on Thursday. 'While there's still a lot of coral cover out there, these are record declines that we have seen in any one year of monitoring,' he added. Emslie's agency divides the Great Barrier Reef, which extends 1,500 kilometers (900 miles) along the Queensland state coast, into three similarly-sized regions: northern, central and southern. Living coral cover shrunk by almost a third in the south in a year, a quarter in the north and by 14% in the central region, the report said. Because of record global heat in 2023 and 2024, the world is still going through its biggest — and fourth ever recorded — mass coral bleaching event on record, with heat stress hurting nearly 84% of the world's coral reef area, including the Great Barrier Reef, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's coral reef watch. So far at least 83 countries have been impacted. This bleaching event started in January 2023 and was declared a global crisis in April 2024. It easily eclipsed the previous biggest global coral bleaching event, from 2014 to 2017, when 68.2% had bleaching from heat stress. Large areas around Australia — but not the Great Barrier Reef — hit the maximum or near maximum of bleaching alert status during this latest event. Australia in March this year started aerial surveys of 281 reefs across the Torres Strait and the entire northern Great Barrier Reef and found widespread coral bleaching. Of the 281 reefs, 78 were more than 30% bleached. Coral has a hard time thriving and at times even surviving in prolonged hot water. They can survive short bursts, but once certain thresholds of weeks and high temperatures are passed, the coral is bleached, which means it turns white because it expels the algae that live in the tissue and give them their colors. Bleached corals are not dead, but they are weaker and more vulnerable to disease. Coral reefs often bounce back from these mass global bleaching events, but often they are not as strong as they were before. Coral reefs are considered a 'unique and threatened system' due to climate change and are especially vulnerable to global warming beyond 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change proclaimed in 2018. The world has now warmed 1.3 degrees Celsius since pre-industrial times. That report said 'tropical corals may be even more vulnerable to climate change than indicated in assessments made in 2014.' The report said back-to-back big bleaching events at the Great Barrier Reef in the mid 2010s 'suggest that the research community may have underestimated climate risks for coral reefs.' 'Warm water (tropical) coral reefs are projected to reach a very high risk of impact at 1.2°C, with most available evidence suggesting that coral-dominated ecosystems will be non-existent at this temperature or higher. At this point, coral abundance will be near zero at many locations,' the report said. ____ Associated Press Science Writer Seth Borenstein in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store