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Lianthawirriyarra Sea Rangers, above from left:
Richard Dixon, Damien Pracy and Allan Charlie, and landowner Samuel
Evans on South West Island. The survey was undertaken
collaboratively with Aboriginal rangers and landowners
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Above: a northern brown bandicoot, from Centre
Island
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In their isolation, plants and animals on
Australia’s islands are protected from many harmful factors
that may affect their mainland relatives. A new collaborative
project has re-surveyed at-risk mammals on some of our northern
islands—and the results may help us understand threats facing
those on the mainland. The project team* reports
Fragility of the island
refuge | Sir Edward Pellew Islands |
Ocean defence breached | Island Ark program | Figure 1
| Figure 2 | More
information |
Australia’s islands are extremely important for
conservation. Largely because feral cats and foxes and other exotic
plants and animals have not reached them, many islands have served
as refuges for animals that have disappeared from extensive
mainland ranges.
While many of our native mammals have become totally extinct
over the last 200 years, at least nine more were saved from
extinction solely because they retained small populations on
offshore islands free of exotic predators such as cane toads, cats
and foxes.
Many additional species have maintained only a claw hold on
their mainland range, but persist still in good populations on one
or more islands. In the tropical savannas, one example is the
golden bandicoot Isoodon auratus . Just 200 years ago, this
small bandicoot had an almost continental range, including deserts
and tropical woodlands. Now it is present only on one island in the
Northern Territory (Marchinbar), two islands off the Kimberley
(Augustus and Bigge), Barrow Island (off the Pilbara), and a couple
of small areas of the rugged Kimberley mainland.
Islands can give a glimpse of what our land was like before the
advent of cats and foxes, pigs, cattle, horses and the myriad other
plants and animals we released onto the Australian mainland. But of
course, it is always a somewhat distorted glimpse, because each
island has its own peculiarities.
While the conservation value of many islands is high, experience
has shown that this value is easily destroyed. Dodos disappeared
rapidly from Mauritius Island; moas from New Zealand. Islands are
small, and support generally small numbers of individuals of any
species; and they generally offer no escape from newly introduced
threats.
Northern Australia has many islands, including (after Tasmania)
Australia’s second (Melville), fourth (Groote Eylandt) and
fifth (Bathurst) largest islands. The island groups from Torres
Strait to the Kimberley support some of the premier conservation
assets in northern Australia. These values have recently been
recognised through the NT’s Island Ark program (see box
).
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Figure 1,
above : Location of main survey sites during this survey
(crosses) and the 1988 survey (dots).
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Figure 2,
above: Relative trapping success for each island, and over all
islands combined, for 1966–67, 1988 and 2003 surveys. Note
Vanderlin Island was not sampled in 1966–67.
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Sir Edward Pellew Islands
One of those important island chains is the Sir Edward Pellew
group off Borroloola, in the Gulf of Carpentaria (Figure 1). These
Aboriginal-owned islands harbour important populations of some
mammals regarded as threatened in the Northern Territory. These
include the Carpentarian antechinus, which until recent discoveries
around Mount Isa was thought to occur only on the Pellew islands;
the canefield rat, a predominantly Queensland species known in the
Northern Territory only on the Pellews; and the brush-tailed
tree-rat, brush-tailed phascogale and northern quoll. We know these
last three species have declined on the Northern Territory
mainland, and to attempt to understand that decline, we have
started a study of the populations of these five mammals on the
Pellew Islands. Are these island populations also in decline? If
not, what factors that operate only on the mainland have affected
these mammals?
This is a collaborative project, involving the Tropical Savannas
CRC, Parks and Wildlife Service of the NT, the Threatened Species
Network, and the Aboriginal landowners and residents of these
islands, through the Lianthawirriyarra Sea Ranger Unit of Mabunji
Aboriginal Resource Association. In October 2003, we visited the
five main islands in the Pellew group, sampling mammals through
trap and release, and talking with the Islands’ residents. We
could compare our results with those of two similar previous
surveys, undertaken in 1966–67 and 1988.
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The Island Ark program was set up by the
Northern Territory Government to assist the conservation of native
fauna threatened by cane toads. The program includes projects
that:
** support captive breeding of selected
species at Territory Wildlife Park.
** translocate populations of selected threatened species to
islands.
** inform Aboriginal owners of the ecological value of their
islands and work with them to maintain these values in the
long-term.
** assist development of Indigenous Ranger Programs to manage these
areas for conservation.
** establish agreements with traditional landowners for long-term
conservation.
** assist with procedures for guaranteeing biosecurity of
islands.
** develop a cane toad awareness campaign for the general
public.
** work with partners to develop short-term local control
mechanisms and long-term control methods (e.g. biological
control).
** set up a national task force to coordinate and prioritise work
on controlling cane toads.
One success was the 2003 translocation of
northern quolls to Pobassoo and Astell islands (see Savanna
Links , Issue 26, p. 7). Follow-up trapping surveys have shown
that the quolls are thriving in their new habitat. They have
maintained their weight and condition, and have bred.
Contact: Rob Taylor, details below.
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Ocean defence breached
We found both good and bad results. The good is that we found
more Carpentarian antechinuses, and that northern quolls are still
present on the one island from which they were previously
known.
But the not-so-good news is that populations of most mammals
were down substantially from the two previous surveys (Figure 2).
We failed to record the canefield rat, brush-tailed phascogale and
brush-tailed tree-rat, but these were not recorded frequently in
the earlier surveys, so our lack of records may not necessarily
mean decline or loss.
We also found that cane toads had colonised all of the large
islands, having floated tens of kilometres out to sea on
floodwaters in the 2000–01 wet season (you really have to
admire their design!). Feral cats are now present on most of the
large islands, whereas they weren’t two decades ago. The
isolation of these islands has been breached and it is likely that
their previously protected native mammal fauna will decline. In
particular, we expect that the northern quoll will be lost from
these islands within the next two years, because this marsupial
predator is so susceptible to cane toad toxin.
Our work here will continue; and we hope to pin down the status
of all mammal species with further fieldwork over the next year. A
feature of the work is the collaboration of scientists with
Aboriginal traditional landowners and rangers, and the increasing
awareness amongst residents and visitors to these islands of their
conservation values, and of the shared responsibility and need to
manage and protect these values.
* Project team
John Woinarski, Biodiversity group, NT Department of
Infrastructure Planning and Environment
Rob Taylor, NT Parks and Wildlife Service
Allan Charlie, Richard Dixon, Damien Pracy and Felicity Chapman;
Lianthawirriyarra Sea Ranger Unit, Mabunji Aboriginal Resource
Association.