MAY 15,
2019
by
Isabelle Dubach, University
of New South Wales
Bilbies
vs. feral cats—a Hunger Games-style experiment conducted in a South Australian
desert has produced fascinating results with important implications for the
conservation of our endangered species.
Exposing vulnerable species like
the bilby to an environment with predators before releasing them into the wild
could help improve the species'
ultimate survival, new research by UNSW ecologists has shown.
In their
study—published today in the Journal of Applied Ecology—the ecologists
compared the behaviour and subsequent survival of two groups of bilbies from
different scenarios: a group that had been deliberately exposed to feral cats, and a
group that had not come into contact with predators before.
The study
is the first experimental test of predator exposure that shows how the fate of
animals that are introduced into a predator‐rich environment could be improved
by prior experience living with predators.
"Deliberately
exposing threatened species to feral cats in a wild setting is risky but our
research suggests that it leads to a significant improvement in anti-predator
behaviour and survival," says Dr. Katherine Moseby, who initiated the
project.
The
team—from UNSW, Arid Recovery and UCLA—conducted the experiment in the Arid
Recovery Reserve—a 123 km2network of fenced exclosures in arid South Australia.
Several locally extinct species have recently been re‐introduced into the
Reserve, including the vulnerable greater bilby. In 2016, the Reserve had a
population of about 500 bilbies.
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