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Wildlife Research Wildlife Research Society
Ecology, management and conservation in natural and modified habitats
Table of Contents
Wildlife Research

Wildlife Research

Volume 51 Number 10 2024

WR24083Potential threats and habitat of the night parrot on the Ngururrpa Indigenous Protected Area

Ngururrpa Rangers , Clifford Sunfly, Andrew Schubert, Angela M. Reid, Nicholas Leseberg, Luke Parker and Rachel Paltridge 0009-0006-3691-2521

Photographs of a night parrot captured on camera-trap on the Ngururrpa IPA and night parrot habitat.

This paper provides an introduction to night parrots in the Great Sandy Desert of Western Australia from the dual perspectives of Indigenous rangers and scientists working together to understand their ecology on the Ngururrpa Indigenous Protected Area. We describe night parrot roosting habitat and use firescar mapping and predator surveys to develop recommendations for the protection of night parrots in this area.

Kukatja summary: Ngatjangkura inni kulu kulkurru ngaka ngurrupa IPA. Rangers kamu scientists paya warakuyarra kutjungka tjatuwana mangininpa. Kulkurruya Ngurra tjanapa nginaya mangalwana. Ngampurrpala tjana kangikuwa warukamarra wilpinpa murtitikirlpaya kamu murtika.

A short video describing our project can be seen here.

This article belongs to the Collection Indigenous and cross-cultural wildlife research in Australia.

WR24053Partnering and engaging with Traditional Owners in conservation translocations

Dorian Moro 0000-0003-1621-2676, Rebecca West 0000-0001-8577-3317, Cheryl Lohr 0000-0002-8925-0983, Ruth Wongawol and Valdera Morgan

A photograph showing a Traditional Owner being involved in conservation translocation.

We conducted a survey, and present a case study, of the perspectives of non-Indigenous practitioners and Traditional Owners who had been involved with conservation translocations. The main finding was to acknowledge the importance of recognising and adopting the cultural dimension of conservation translocations when conducted on Indigenous Country. Results highlight key guiding principles to assist increased partnerships between Traditional Owners and western practitioners. Photograph by Wild Deserts.

This article belongs to the collection Indigenous and cross-cultural wildlife research in Australia.

WR24068Pang-ngooteekeeya weeng malangeepa ngeeye (remembering our future: bringing old ideas to the new)

Jack Pascoe 0000-0001-6061-3130, Marcus Clarke, Ebony Hickey, Laura Prentice, Vicki Couzens and John Clarke

A photograph showing Eastern Maar Country.

This paper outlines the Eastern Maar approach to biocultural landscape restoration. The paper outlines the principles that guide the practice and how culturally significant entities are central to the way we view and understand Country. Finally, the paper highlights ways that non-Maar people and organisations can partner with us to care for Eastern Maar Country. Photograph by David Roberts.

This article belongs to the Collection Indigenous and cross-cultural wildlife research in Australia.

WR24071Prioritising animals for Yirralka Ranger management and research collaborations in the Laynhapuy Indigenous Protected Area, northern Australia

Bridget Campbell 0000-0001-6032-9471, Shaina Russell, Gabrielle Brennan, Yirralka Rangers , Bec Condon, Yinimala Gumana, Frances Morphy and Emilie Ens

Yolŋu Ŋaḻapaḻmi nominated 30 priority animals during interviews with the Yirralka Rangers and university researchers.

Amidst growing international calls for inclusive conservation, and a backdrop of declining species and cultural diversity, Indigenous-led conservation approaches are of growing importance. This study established a working list of priority animals of concern to Yolŋu Yirralka Rangers and Ŋalapalmi (knowledge holders) in the Laynhapuy Indigenous Protected Area. This priority animal list will guide Indigenous-led fauna management and equitable, collaborative fauna research grounded in Yolŋu priorities. Photograph by Yirralka Rangers.

This article belongs to the Collection Indigenous and cross-cultural wildlife research in Australia.

WR24069Pirra Jungku and Pirra Warlu: using traditional fire-practice knowledge and contemporary science to guide fire-management goals for desert animals

Sarah Legge 0000-0001-6968-2781, Hamsini Bijlani, Karajarri Rangers , Ngurrara Rangers , Braedan Taylor, Jacqueline Shovellor, Frankie McCarthy, Chantelle Murray, Jesse Ala’i, Courtney Brown, Kevin Tromp, Sam Bayley, Ewan Noakes, Jackie Wemyss, Hannah Cliff, Nigel Jackett, Bruce Greatwich, Ben Corey, Mark Cowan, Kristina J. Macdonald 0000-0003-0357-1231, Brett P. Murphy, Sam Banks and Malcom Lindsay 0000-0001-9683-8331

Karajarri Rangers, and Ngurrara Rangers.

Karajarri and Ngurrara Rangers collaborated with scientists to investigate how fire management in the Great Sandy Desert could help mammals and reptiles. We found that some species prefer particular spinifex post-fire ages, from recently burnt to long-unburnt, and that patchworks of spinifex ages benefit mammals. This means that we should aim to reduce fire size and increase the area of mature/long-unburnt spinifex. Our work provides ecological information from a little-studied region of Australia, and highlights the role of Indigenous land managers in biodiversity conservation. Photographs by Anne Jones.

Translated summary: the two ranger groups have decided not to translate the summary into their languages. Although there are many language speakers from Ngurrara, the most fluent Karajarri speaker passed away last year, and translating complex sentences is now challenging. Out of mutual respect for their collaboration, the rangers prefer not to include a summary that is only in a Ngurrara language. However, we use words from both languages in the text. A short video about our project can be seen here.

This article belongs to the collection Indigenous and cross-cultural wildlife research in Australia.

WR24094Aboriginal rangers co-lead night parrot conservation: background, survey effort and success in Western Australia 2017–2023

Malcolm Lindsay 0000-0001-9683-8331, Rachel Paltridge, Nicholas Leseberg, Nigel Jackett, Stephen Murphy, Birriliburu Rangers , Kanyirninpa Jukurrpa (KJ) Martu Rangers , Karajarri Rangers , Kiwirrkurra Rangers , Ngurrara Rangers , Nyangumarta Rangers , Wiluna Martu Rangers , Gooniyandi Rangers , Kija Rangers , Paruku Rangers , Nharnuwangga Wajarri Ngarlawangga Warida Rangers , Ngurra Kayanta Rangers , Ngururrpa Rangers , Adrian Boyle, Alexander Watson, Bruce Greatwich, Neil Hamaguchi and Stella Shipway

Paruku Rangers setting an autonomous recording unit to survey night parrot in Australia.

Night parrot surveys were conducted by 13 Western Australian Aboriginal ranger groups and scientific partners between 2017 and 2023, over 8613 survey nights, confirming 22 new night parrot sites, which is 54% of all confirmed night parrot sites in Australia today. This work has greatly expanded our knowledge about night parrot distribution and ecology, while showcasing how respectful two-way scientific partnerships, supported by regional networks, can deliver significant benefits to both threatened species management and caring for Country and culture. Photograph by Paruku Rangers & the Kimberley Land Council.

This article belongs to the Collection Indigenous and cross-cultural wildlife research in Australia.


Photo of young red fox (Vulpes vulpes) about to get a quick snack from a bird feeder.

We explored whether mesocarnivores use residential yards, and how certain features influence mesocarnivore occupancy, relative abundance, and interspecies temporal activity overlap. Mesocarnivore occupancy of residential yards was influenced by yard-level features, such as fences, as opposed to surrounding landscape composition. With residential lawns becoming a more prominent landcover type worldwide, understanding how they provide resources for wildlife in suburban settings and how yard features can create hot spots of conflict with wildlife would be beneficial. Photograph by Emily Johansson.


A pygmy bluetongue lizard in its natural grassland microhabitat.

Reptiles partition their activity among their microhabitats for thermoregulatory, predatory, and refuge opportunities. We investigated whether a habitat specialist, the endangered pygmy bluetongue, preferentially occupied vacant spider burrows in specific microhabitats in agricultural grasslands. Pygmy bluetongues showed strong positive and negative associations with various microhabitats. Our results have implications for selecting appropriate microhabitats when installing artificial burrows for lizards at future translocation sites and land-management implications to ensure landscape heterogeneity for successful conservation. Photograph by Kimberley Michael.

WR24055Here kitty-kitty: lure choice for predator attraction in a temperate environment

Alexandra J. Paton 0000-0002-2701-8732, Barry W. Brook and Jessie C. Buettel 0000-0001-6737-7468

A photograph of a visual lure of a feather boa being attacked by a feral cat.

Lures improve predator detection on camera traps, although it is unknown which are effective for attracting Felis catus. We tested how three lures affect the capture of feral cats in south-eastern Tasmania. Cats were attracted to all lure treatments; however, their activity decreased when Tasmanian devil activity increased in response to a lure, indicating limitations of lures owing to interspecific interactions. Photograph by Alexandra J. Paton.


A photo of acoustic monitoring device installed on a tree in black-throated finch habitat with a lake in the background.

Passive acoustic monitoring has the potential to aid in the effective monitoring of endangered species, but analysis of recordings is challenging. We developed a call recogniser for the southern black-throated finch, and compared its ability to detect the species at new locations with manual bird surveys. We found strong agreement between the two methods suggesting this to be a useful tool in the conservation of this species. Photograph by Juan Mula Laguna.

WR23126High chytrid prevalence and infection intensities in tadpoles of Mixophyes fleayi

Matthijs Hollanders 0000-0003-0796-1018, Laura F. Grogan, Hamish I. McCallum and David A. Newell

Various stages of oral dekeratinisation in tadpoles of Mixophyes fleayi.

The amphibian chytrid fungus has descimated frog populations but infection outcome depends on the frog’s life stage. We investigated chytrid infection patterns in tadpoles and found that they are often infected with higher pathogen loads than are adults and juveniles. This suggests that tadpoles could act as a reservoir for infection and further opens the door to additional research into immune responses of different amphibian life stages. Photograph by Matthijs Hollanders.


Aerial image of a fallow deer herd taken by thermal camera. Orange boxes are drawn around hotspots (deer).

The introduced Tasmanian fallow deer population is believed to have grown exponentially within the last 25 years, impacting agriculture and conservation. This study compared two aerial survey methods – human observers and thermal imaging – to improve population monitoring. Human counts produced more reliable population density estimates in this study, but thermal imagery allowed precise spatial analysis of how deer were distributed within the landscape. Image by Cameron Wells.

WR23097Response of white-tailed deer to removal of invasive wild pigs

Matthew T. McDonough 0009-0002-6253-7324, Robert A. Gitzen, Stephen J. Zenas, Mark D. Smith, Kurt C. VerCauteren and Stephen S. Ditchkoff

Photograph of a white-tailed deer and a wild pig looking at each other in darkness.

The recent range expansion of invasive wild pigs in North America has lead to increasing concerns of how they affect native species. This study aims to investigate how white-tailed deer respond to wild pig removals and found that, although relative abundance did not change, detection of white-tailed deer increased as wild pigs were removed. We suggest that wild pigs affect white-tailed deer behaviourally at a local scale and that behavioural changes may not result in population-level effects. Photograph by Matthew McDonough.


A photograph of a man (pilot) monitoring beaver population from an aircraft.

The North American beaver populations are still being trapped in many USA states. We identified predictors of beaver colony density in Ohio and improved aerial survey methods for broad scale monitoring. Areas with high wetland and reclaimed surface mine areas are important habitat for beavers in Ohio and yielded the greatest density of beaver colonies. We develop a model-based habitat classification and make recommendations for improving the efficiency and spatial representation of aerial monitoring efforts. Photograph by Joe Barber.

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