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Australian Mammalogy Australian Mammalogy Society
Journal of the Australian Mammal Society

Just Accepted

This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.

Factors contributing directly to platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) mortality and implications for conserving populations in the wild

Melody Serena, Geoff Williams, Jessica Thomas

Abstract

Based on details of more than 400 platypus deaths recorded since 1989 with an identifiable cause, five main factors contributed directly to platypus mortalities: drowning in fish nets or enclosed crustacean traps (such as opera house traps), being killed by predators (especially canids), becoming accidentally hooked by recreational anglers who then cut the line, becoming entangled in discarded fishing line or other types of litter, and being hit by motor vehicles (especially though not exclusively in Tasmania). Additional mortality factors included drought, severe flooding, being drawn into irrigation pumps and entrapment in manmade materials or infrastructure. Disease was implicated as being the likely causal agent in two platypus deaths, including a female that died late in lactation. Platypus mortalities were recorded throughout the year but peaked in early autumn in Victoria, when many recently weaned juveniles are likely to be present. Given the very high number of platypus mortalities attributed to use of fish nets or enclosed crustacean traps, their use should be banned in all waters where platypus population are known to occur.

AM24032  Accepted 30 November 2024

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