Will they be able to kept in the Sanctuary?
Spotted-tailed Quolls are excellent climbers. With that in mind, it is highly unlikely that each of the animals we introduce will stay inside our Mulligans Sanctuary over the long-term. While we will do our best to retrieve any animals that climb over the fence, we recognise that we may not be able to retrieve every animal that escapes. We have a number of mitigation measures in place to reduce the likelihood of this occurring, including: sourcing of captive animals, castrating them before release, soft-release (a gradual release process), and an internal hotwire / floppy top. Monitoring will be conducted after the release of the new quolls. If it has been determined that the quolls are playing a useful role, we will likely need to keep sourcing individuals from captive holdings around the country.
Two males will be reintroduced initially, but we are aiming to have a total of six living within the Mulligans Flat Sanctuary areas. Males were chosen over females as although their home-ranges are bigger, they tend to overlap, whereas females defend their territory fiercely from other females. The introduced quolls will be fitted with GPS collars so we will be able to track, download and map their movements over time.
What we hope to learn?
This project has three key purposes:
1. Rebuilding endangered Box Gum woodland ecosystem functions. As a top-order predator, the STQ has a vital role in ecosystem function and may assist in controlling populations of arboreal mammals within the sanctuary.
2. Introducing predation pressure so that should further trials of species beyond the fence occur, the source populations have been pre-exposed to predation from an apex predator reducing prey naivete. This information will be useful for the ongoing management of MFWS and may be used to inform similar reintroductions of STQ to other fenced or otherwise fox-controlled sanctuaries in future.
3. Understanding of what prey is preferable to this species within a Box-gum Grassy-woodland ecosystem, and for how long they can be kept within our Sanctuary infrastructure.
Who is involved?
The Mulligans Flat partnership (Woodlands and Wetlands Trust, Australian National University and ACT Government) will be jointly running this project with help from WWT volunteers. The University of Sydney will be studying the behaviour of Mulligans animals pre- and post-reintroduction of the Spotty quolls. This research seeks to understand whether there are behavioural changes of a variety of species in the Sanctuary with the reintroduction of an apex predator.
The ACT Government Conservator of Flora and Fauna approved the translocation proposal to reintroduce this species into Mulligans Flat and the appropriate licenses have been secured. As this is a research project, ethics approval was also acquired through the University of Canberra Animal Ethics Committee.
How can you help?
- Donate
- Volunteer
- Report any sightings
- Keep dogs on leads and in secure backyards
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the Tasmanian Quoll Conservation Program and in particular Wade Anthony for helping secure us the animals that will be used in this project.
If you would like more information on Spotted-tailed Quolls in Australia, please visit: https://www.quollsa.org