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OUR PROJECTS
Land Aquisition
Plants & Wildlife
 

Land Mammals
Koala
Platypus
Bridled Nail-tail Wallaby
Brush-tailed Rock-wallaby
Yellow-footed Rock-wallaby
Swamp Wallaby
Rufous Rat-kangaroo
Tiger Quoll
Long-footed Potoroo
Long-nosed Bandicoot
Southern Brown Bandicoot
Mountain Pygmy-possum
Western Pygmy-possum
Brush-tailed Phascogale
Grey-headed Flying Fox
Hastings River Mouse
Marine Mammals
Humpback Whale
Bottle-nosed Dolphin
Amphibians & Reptiles

Frog conservation
Corroborree Frog
Green Tree Frog
Wallum Froglet
Green and Golden Bell Frog
Invertebrates
Mitchell's Rainforest Snail
Lord Howe Island Land Snail
Birds
Lord Howe Island Woodhen
Lord Howe Island Currawong
Gould's Petrel
Little Tern
Sooty Oystercatcher
Little (Fairy) Penguin
Rufous Scrub-bird
Mallee Fowl
Regent Parrot
Superb Parrot
Falcon
Osprey
Bush Stone-Curlew
Plants
Allocasuarina portuensis

Greenhood Orchid

Grevillea caleyi
Wollemi Pine

Habitat Conservation
Cultural Heritage
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Masters student Lisa Kingsley with a Bridled Nail-tail wallaby at Avocet Nature Refuge.
Bridled Nail-tail wallaby Onychogalea fraenata Photo Max Herford

 

Bridled Nail-tail wallaby Onychogalea fraenata

The endangered Bridled Nail-tail Wallaby was once common in inland Australia from Victoria to Queensland.

In the early 1900s the wallabies were hunted for their fur but also because it was considered a pest. Habitat loss, foxes and possibly competition from rabbits and sheep added to the pressure on the species.

By 1960 the Bridled Nail-tail Wallaby was thought to be extinct.

Following the sensational discovery of a population in 1973 in central Queensland near Dingo, the Foundation for National Parks & Wildlife funded an expedition to search for the wallabies in NSW. The last animal in the state was seen near Manilla in 1924.

The expedition failed to find the species, and today there are only 400 - 500 Bridled Nail-tail wallabies left in the world.

Two wild populations remain in Queensland national parks, and both are in decline. Suitable habitat in national parks is rare and translocating some of the remaining animals may be nessessary to save the species.

A small number of wallabies has already found a new home on a private property called Avocet. Part of the property was set aside for conservation under a Voluntary Conservation Agreement with the Queensland Government. The Foundation for National Parks & Wildlife is funding research into this population to find out how successful the translocation efforts are. Data from past and new trappings will reveal population size, survival and reproduction rates and the distribution of the wallabies throughout the reserve.

If this project proves the success of the translocation program it may be possible to reintroduce the species into other areas of both Queensland and New South Wales.

The Foundation funded this project in 2008. In addition PhD student Lisa Kingsley (pictured) received a Junior Scientist grant from the Foundations Small Grants Program to continue her research at Avocet.

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