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Only 1,000 Numbats Left In The Wild

Discussion in 'Australia' started by snowleopard, 22 Jul 2009.

  1. snowleopard

    snowleopard Well-Known Member 15+ year member Premium Member

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  2. reduakari

    reduakari Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    When I visited Cleland this past Fall, there was one numbat on exhibit. I had no idea how rare they were--in zoos and certainly in the wild. Very cool animal.
     
  3. Pygathrix

    Pygathrix Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    Considering the amount of work that has gone on in the past couple of decades the news that numbat numbers have fallen is very depressing. During that time operation Western Shield has been fairly successful in eradicating foxes over a wide area, and in situ and ex situ work has led to successful introductions into a number of new sites. Perhaps the drop is numbers is related to reduced rainfall in recent years. The numbers of woylies in the same area has fallen after populations had had many years of growth and no-one is sure why this is.

    The zoo population has not grown in this time as the animals bred at Perth Zoo are used for reintroductions. Perth is the only zoo to keep and breed them apart from the odd collection every so often such as Cleland. I don't know why other major Australian zoos don't display them - perhaps there is a zoochatter who knows the answer to this.
     
  4. tetrapod

    tetrapod Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    Alice Springs desert park is/was the only other collection to house them (probably not an ISIS member, largely because many of their species aren't uploaded into the species list!).

    It is true that the numbers at Perth do fluctuate due to the release program. The slow increase in numbers is probably due to the relative high mortality of the species. Basically it is at the unfortunate size to be eaten by virtually every available medium and large-sized predator (wedge-tail eagle, goannas, pythons, quolls, foxes, cats). That and the fact they don't live for many seasons, I think 5 years is doing exceptionally well.

    Pygathrix - you are probably correct that the sustained drought conditions are having an impact on the population. Much of the numbat's natural habitat is/was arid bush which has in the past been turned into what the locals refer to as 'the Wheatbelt'. Occasional long-term droughts and poor water useage has turned productive areas into salty deserts, which are difficult to reverse. I'm sure this has a cumulative effect even on those areas that haven't been farmed. The feral foxes and cats only added insult to the problem. While Western Shield has been very successful, again it is labour intensive managing the baiting program.

    Perth has the breeding and rearing husbandry down pat, but it is exceptionally labour-intensive. Staff need to harvest local species of termites, raiding the exposed top of a mound (think half a football - soccerball, not aussie rules). The termites can be kept for a period, but obviously without queens, they do not breed and need replacing. Numbats can be managed on a specially balanced custard mixture, but will not breed without a high percentage of termites in the diet. This kind of explains why the other zoos in Australia are unable to join in on the program.

    Why don't other zoos display numbats? Although they are an endangered, diurnal and pretty species, most zoos (or visitors) aren't going to go ga-ga over a small orangey striped squirrel that eats ants. Well to the largely uninformed... It works okay at Perth because they are native to that part of the world.
     
  5. jay

    jay Well-Known Member 20+ year member

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    I don't know, people go ga-ga over species that have similar descriptions, think red panda, meerkats and asian otters. However the difficulty of keeping the species may be deciding factor.
     
  6. tetrapod

    tetrapod Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    Meerkats and otters may be small but they are both group living and very active, even interacting with the public. I consider both 'classic zoo animals'. No problems with husbandry either.

    Red pandas are a bit trickier then the previous two with diet (just require a heathy bamboo planting), not so gregarious and do sleep alot in trees, so as a species not so perfect. I guess their appeal is that they aren't quite so small and do look like a cross between a teddy bear and a tabby. All round winner for the public.

    Don't get me wrong I enjoy seeing numbats when I visit Perth. Probably for this forum I am unique in having worked with them too, so I do know how difficult it is to keep them too.
     
  7. Hix

    Hix Wildlife Enthusiast and Lover of Islands 15+ year member Premium Member

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    Taronga had numbats many many years ago - in fact the current Tassie Devil cage was constructed for them. I remember being told by a keeper they were pretty delicate little things. Also susceptible to toxoplasmosis.

    :(

    Hix
     
  8. tetrapod

    tetrapod Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    I think 60s or 70s. Only a pair, no breeding, as far as I know. I am pretty sure that most marsupials are prone to toxo, particularly macropods and possums.
     
  9. Hix

    Hix Wildlife Enthusiast and Lover of Islands 15+ year member Premium Member

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    I first saw numbats in a little round concrete structure in 1975, in the midle of the zoo, just down from the giraffes. The enclosure built for them near the rainforest aviary was either constructed in the very late 70's or early 80's.

    Yeah, a lot of marsupials can get toxo, i just remember hearing a paper where they said the feral cats didn't need to even see or come in contact with a numbat, but could still be responsible for it's death.

    Like we needed another reason to hate the ferals....

    :(

    Hix
     
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