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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
Native Mice
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
Coxen's Fig Parrot
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
Environmental Education
Foundation Tracks
   

 Southern Brown Bandicoot Isoodon obesulus_DEC

Southern Brown Bandicoot Isoodon obesulus

The endangered Southern Brown Bandicoot is one of three bandicoot species found in the greater Sydney Area. In NSW the species is only known from northern Sydney and the far south-east of NSW.

The populations in Sydney are restricted to the Ku-ring-gai Chase and Garigal National Parks. The threats from predators such as foxes and cats, road mortality, bushfires and the problems of small, isolated populations make them particularly vulnerable to local extinctions.

During monitoring over the past four years, less than 50 of these compact, rabbit sized mammals have been found in the two parks. In September 2007 however, a Foundation funded survey picked up two new animals in Kuring-Gai Chase National Park, a male and a female bandicoot that had not been micro-chipped. After many disheartening surveys that had failed to find new females, this find of a female bandicoot with pouch young raises hopes for the species

It is a sign that fox control, another Foundation funded measure, is starting to make Ku-ring-Gai Chase National Park’s heathland safer for the bandicoots.
Your donations also help scientists set up a captive breeding program for the bandicoots as an insurance policy.

The recovery plan for the Southern Brown Bandicoot in NSW includes a captive breeding program. Donations have helped start up this costly long-term strategy which is now in its planning stage. It will involve capturing bandicoots from the two Sydney national parks, breeding them and releasing the young into the wild.