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Invasive species undergoes mysterious change as it dominates Australia
Invasive species undergoes mysterious change as it dominates Australia

Yahoo

time09-07-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

Invasive species undergoes mysterious change as it dominates Australia

Almost two centuries after rabbits were set free across Australia's fragile landscape, scientists are working to understand a mysterious change that has occurred in their physical nature. Oddly, the rabbits released from 1859 onwards have grown bigger than their European counterparts. The difference was noted in new research led by the University of Adelaide's Associate Professor Emma Sherratt, which studied the body sizes of 912 rabbits from around the world. 'We found Australian feral rabbits are quite a lot larger than European rabbits. We intend to find out why,' she said. It's hypothesised the changes could be due to "relaxed functional demands" on rabbits in Australia, because they face fewer threats from large predators. Physical developments have been observed in other feral animals released in Australia which give them an ecological advantage over native wildlife. In 2023, the Invasive Species Council noted that cane toads are changing in size and appearance as they adapt to different regions in Australia. As they expand west through Kakadu and into the Kimberly, cane toads at the edge of the "invasion front" have longer legs than those following them, allowing them to conquer new territory quickly. When you exclude the direct impact of humans, feral animals are responsible for more extinctions than anything else in Australia. Researchers are desperately working to give native species an edge by either genetically engineering them to avoid disease, or protecting them within dedicated sanctuaries. Native marsupials like the greater bilby once occupied up to 80 per cent of Australia's mainland. For thousands of years, throughout the night people would have seen the land teeming with the tiny creatures. Since European settlement, small marsupial numbers have dwindled, and conservationists have turned to protecting them inside fenced reserves. At the same time, feral rabbit numbers have exploded from an estimated 13 in 1859, to 200 million today, and scars from their warrens can be seen across the landscape. Meanwhile fewer than 10,000 greater bilbies survive. The researchers also examined rabbit skull shapes because changes in appearance indicate how they interact with their environment and what they feed on. 'Understanding how animals change when they become feral and invade new habitats helps us to predict what effect other invasive animals will have on our environment, and how we may mitigate their success,' Sherratt said. The work also included comparing the physical differences between rabbits that were raised for meat and fur, with wild animals. They found domesticated rabbit populations often didn't revert to their wild form after they were released into the environment. New detailed images released in fight to protect Australia from invasive pests Urgent plea to drivers after shocking dashcam footage emerges Call to stay vigilant as 'super' biosecurity threat spotted spreading over border 'While you might expect that a feral animal would revert to body types seen in wild populations, we found that feral rabbits' body size and skull-shape range is somewhere between wild and domestic rabbits, but also overlaps with them in large parts,' Sherratt said. 'Because the range is so variable and sometimes like neither wild nor domestic, feralisation in rabbits is not morphologically predictable if extrapolated from the wild or the domestic stock.' The research was published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society. Love Australia's weird and wonderful environment? 🐊🦘😳 Get our new newsletter showcasing the week's best stories.

Feral donkey concern after herd spotted in Victoria's Big Desert State Forest
Feral donkey concern after herd spotted in Victoria's Big Desert State Forest

ABC News

time04-07-2025

  • Science
  • ABC News

Feral donkey concern after herd spotted in Victoria's Big Desert State Forest

A pack of donkeys has been tracked to a state park in Victoria's north-west, sparking concerns about the pests establishing a feral population in the state. The animals were seen in Big Desert State Forest by a dingo research group last week. The group tracked at least six donkeys more than 13 kilometres into the park. Deakin University ecologist Euan Ritchie said there were large populations of feral donkeys in other parts of Australia, but not in Victoria. Donkeys were first brought to Australia as a hardy pack animal in 1866. Once recognised for their prized resilience and adaptability, it is estimated there are now up to five million feral donkeys across the country. They are considered a pest as they cause ongoing ecological problems in western and central Australian areas in particular. "Feral donkeys have the ability to breed up in quite high numbers and eat a lot of the vegetation," Mr Ritchie said. The ABC contacted the Victorian Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action regarding the donkeys. A spokesperson said there was "no established feral donkey population within Big Desert State Forest". But the spokesperson did say the department was aware that a small number of donkeys had escaped from a neighbouring property into the park. The department said it had contacted the landowner. "[The department informed] them the donkeys are roaming beyond their property and to request they take measures to address the issue," the spokesperson said. Dr Ritchie said the Big Desert region is already under pressure from drought and he was concerned about water access for other animals if donkeys were there. "Other wildlife that relies on that water may potentially have to compete with donkeys for access to water," he said. "So along with the sort of the impacts of grazing and potentially spreading weeds, donkeys could have a whole range of impacts on the ecosystem."

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