Australian Mammalogy
Release protocols to address hyperdispersal in a novel translocation of a carnivorous marsupial
Rebecca West
1, 2
2
Wild Deserts, 10755 Cameron Corner Road, Tibooburra, NSW 2880, Australia.
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Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2022-10-27
Journal:
Australian Mammalogy
scimago Q2
SJR: 0.463
CiteScore: 2.5
Impact factor: 0.9
ISSN: 03100049, 18367402
DOI:
10.1071/am22018
Animal Science and Zoology
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Abstract
Initial translocations are inherently risky due to uncertainty around species-specific responses to novel environments. Incorporating a range of release protocols can minimise risks of translocation failure. We identified post-translocation hyperdispersal as a risk to the first translocation of the crest-tailed mulgara (Dasycercus cristicauda), an Australian carnivorous marsupial, and tested temporary confinement and releasing females with pouch young as mitigation strategies. We released 16 females with pouch young and 3 males into unoccupied burrows within a 20 km2 feral animal exclosure, either within temporary confinement pens (n = 10) or without confinement (immediate release) (n = 9). Temporary confinement did not influence survival but did influence dispersal behaviour. Thirty-seven percent of translocated individuals (all 3 males, 4 of 16 females) hyperdispersed (3.0–11.6 km) outside the study exclosure after release, including 42% immediate release animals and 29% temporary confinement animals. No males remained in the exclosure at the study end. Confined females settled closer to their release site. Release of females with pouch young led to an increase in the translocated population from 9 to 58 individuals within 4 months. Releasing females with young from geographically distant sites may be important to offset male hyperdispersal. Our results suggest that temporary confinement and translocating breeding females are important release protocols for species with a propensity for hyperdispersal post-translocation.
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