Register      Login
Pacific Conservation Biology Pacific Conservation Biology Society
A journal dedicated to conservation and wildlife management in the Pacific region.
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

From rediscovery towards recovery: a recent history of Australia’s most critically endangered marsupial, Gilbert’s potoroo (Potorous gilbertii)

J. Anthony Friend A * , Elizabeth A. Sinclair https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5789-8945 B C and Jacqueline M. Courtenay D E
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Biodiversity Conservation Science Division and South Coast Region, Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, Albany, WA 6330, Australia.

B School of Biological Sciences, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.

C Kings Park Science, Department of Biodiversity, Conservation, and Attractions, West Perth, WA 6005, Australia.

D Earth Creations, Bolgart, WA 6568, Australia.

E Gilbert’s Potoroo Action Group, Albany, WA 6330, Australia.

* Correspondence to: tony.friend@dbca.wa.gov.au

Handling Editor: Mike Calver

Pacific Conservation Biology 31, PC24103 https://doi.org/10.1071/PC24103
Submitted: 2 January 2025  Accepted: 6 January 2025  Published: 6 February 2025

© 2025 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND)

Abstract

Context

Ngilgaitch/Gilbert’s potoroo (Potorous gilbertii) was presumed extinct until its rediscovery at Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve, Australia, in 1994.

Aims

Our paper summarises the history and rediscovery of Ngilgaitch/Gilbert’s potoroo, outlines the diverse research conducted to inform recovery, describes key management actions, and documents the fluctuating fortunes of the species between 1994 and 2024.

Methods

We summarise research and management actions to promote the species’ recovery at Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve and nearby reserves.

Key results

About 40 Ngilgaitch/Gilbert’s potoroo survived in heathland on the slopes of Maardjitup Gurlin/Mount Gardner, feeding almost exclusively on the fruiting bodies of hypogeal fungi. Two ‘insurance’ populations were established between 2005 and 2014 by translocation from the original population to Bald Island (810 ha) and a mainland enclosure (380 ha). These colonies proved critical to the species’ survival when a wildfire consumed most of the habitat at Two Peoples Bay in November 2015, causing the functional extinction of the population. Efforts have begun to restore this population through translocation from the insurance populations.

Conclusion

Establishing new potoroo populations by translocation has been the most valuable recovery technique for this species. Current and predicted climate change must be considered when choosing translocation sites. Management of all populations requires effective fire management, feral predator control, and actions derived from genetic information.

Implications

The Two Peoples Bay potoroo population was effectively lost following the 2015 fire. However, the regenerating habitat at the site remains an important resource in efforts to ensure the survival of the species.

Keywords: climate change, community advocacy, habitat management, hypogeal fungi, Ngilgaitch, population genetics and genomics, species recovery, translocation.

References

Abbott I (2001) Aboriginal names of mammal species in south-west Western Australia. CALM Science 3, 433-486.
| Google Scholar |

Abbott I (2002) Origin and spread of the cat, Felis catus, on mainland Australia, with a discussion of the magnitude of its early impact on native fauna. Wildlife Research 29, 51-74.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Abbott I (2008) Historical perspectives of the ecology of some conspicuous vertebrate species in south-west Western Australia. Conservation Science Western Australia 6, 1-214.
| Google Scholar |

Algar D, Burrows ND (2004) Feral cat control research: Western Shield review—February 2003. Conservation Science Western Australia 5, 131-163.
| Google Scholar |

Andrys J, Kala J, Lyons TJ (2017) Regional climate projections of mean and extreme climate for the southwest of Western Australia (1970–1999 compared to 2030–2059). Climate Dynamics 48, 1723-1747.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Austen J (2015) Characterisation of native trypanosomes and other protozoans in the Australian marsupials the Quokka (Setonix brachyurus) and the Gilbert’s Potoroo (Potorous gilbertii). PhD thesis, Murdoch University, Perth, WA, Australia.

Austen JM, Jeffries R, Friend JA, Ryan U, Adams PJ, Reid SA (2009) Morphological and molecular characterization of Trypanosoma copemani n. sp. (Trypanosomatidae) isolated from Gilbert’s potoroo (Potorous gilbertii) and Quokka (Setonix brachyurus). Parasitology 136, 783-792.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Austen JM, Ryan UM, Friend JA, Ditcham WGF, Reid SA (2011) Vector of Trypanosoma copemani identified as Ixodes sp. Parasitology 138, 866-872.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Austen JM, Reid SA, Robinson DR, Friend JA, Ditcham WGF, Irwin PJ, Ryan U (2015) Investigation of the morphological diversity of the potentially zoonotic Trypanosoma copemani in quokkas and Gilbert’s potoroos. Parasitology 142, 1443-1452.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Baker AM, Gynther IC (2023) ‘Strahan’s mammals of Australia,’ 4th edn. (Reed New Holland: Sydney, NSW, Australia)

Barbosa AD, Austen J, Portas TJ, Friend JA, Ahlstrom LA, Oskam CL, Ryan UM, Irwin PJ (2019) Sequence analyses at mitochondrial and nuclear loci reveal a novel Theileria sp. and aid in the phylogenetic resolution of piroplasms from Australian marsupials and ticks. PLoS ONE 14, e0225822.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Baynes A, Merrilees D, Porter JK (1975) Mammal remains from the upper levels of a late Pleistocene deposit in Devil’s Lair, Western Australia. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 5, 97-117.
| Google Scholar |

Bennett AF, Baxter BJ (1989) Diet of the long-nosed potoroo, Potorous tridactylus (Marsupialia, Potoroidae), in southwestern Victoria. Wildlife Research 16, 263-271.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Bolam FC, Mair L, Angelico M, Brooks TM, Burgman M, Hermes C, Hoffmann M, Martin RW, McGowan PJK, Rodrigues ASL, et al. (2021) How many bird and mammal extinctions has recent conservation action prevented? Conservation Letters 14, e12762.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Bougher NL, Friend JA (2009) Fungi consumed by translocated Gilbert’s potoroos (Potorous gilbertii) at two sites with contrasting vegetation, south coastal Western Australia. Australian Mammalogy 31, 97-105.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Bougher NL, Lebel T (2001) Sequestrate (truffle-like) fungi of Australia and New Zealand. Australian Systematic Botany 14, 439-484.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Bougher NL, Friend JA, Bell L (2008) Fungi available to and consumed by translocated Gilbert’s Potoroos: Preliminary assessments at three translocation sites. Department of Environment and Conservation, Perth. Available at https://library.dbca.wa.gov.au/FullTextFiles/024745.pdf

Brunner H, Coman B (1974) ‘The identification of mammalian hairs.’ (Inkata Press: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia)

Burbidge AA, McKenzie NL (1989) Patterns in the modern decline of Western Australia’s vertebrate fauna: causes and conservation implications. Biological Conservation 50, 143-198.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Claridge AW, Cork SJ (1994) Nutritional-value of hypogeal fungal sporocarps for the long-nosed potoroo (Potorous-tridactylus), a forest-dwelling mycophagous marsupial. Australian Journal of Zoology 42, 701-710.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Claridge AW, Tanton MT, Cunningham RB (1993) Hypogeal fungi in the diet of the long-nosed potoroo (Potorous tridactylus) in mixed species and regrowth Eucalypt forest stands in south-eastern Australia. Wildlife Research 20, 321-337.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Clark P, Adlard RD, Spratt DM (2004) Haemoparasites of australian mammals. In ‘Haemoparasites of Australian mammals’. (Ed. P Clarke) pp 147–162. (CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic, Australia)

Cochrane JA, Friend JA, Hill SJE (2005) Endozoochory and the Australian bluebell: Consumption of Billardiera fusiformis (Labill.) Payer (Pittosporaceae) seeds by three mammal species at Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve, Western Australia. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 88, 191-196.
| Google Scholar |

Cook DL (1963) The fossil vertebrate fauna of Strongs Cave, Boranup, Western Australia. Western Australian Naturalist 8, 153-162.
| Google Scholar |

Courtenay JM (1997) Breeding histories of adult female Gilbert’s Potoroos. Unpublished Report to the Gilbert’s Potoroo Recovery Team. Department of Conservation and Land Management, Albany.

Courtenay JM, Friend JA (2004) Gilbert’s Potoroo (Potorous gilbertii) Recovery Plan (2003–2008). Western Australian Wildlife Management Program No.32. Department of Conservation and Land Management. Available at https://www.dcceew.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/p-gilbertii.pdf

Courtenay J, Start AN, Burbidge AA (1998) Gilbert’s potoroo recovery plan, 1998–2007. Department of Conservation and Land Management, Perth, WA, Australia. Available at https://library.dbca.wa.gov.au/FullTextFiles/021262.pdf

Danks A (1997) Conservation of the Noisy Scrub-bird: a review of 35 years of research and management. Pacific Conservation Biology 3, 341-349.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Department of Conservation and Land Management (1995) ‘Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve management plan 1995–2005.’ Department of Conservation and Land Management, Perth, WA, Australia.

Denmark Environment Centre Inc. (2003) Gilbert’s potoroo – Australia’s most endangered mammal survey 2002/2003. Denmark Environment Centre Inc., Denmark, WA, Australia.

Denmark Environment Centre Inc. (2004) Gilbert’s potoroo – Australia’s most endangered mammal survey 2003/2004. Denmark Environment Centre Inc., Denmark, WA, Australia.

Dortch J, Wright R (2010) Identifying palaeo-environments and changes in Aboriginal subsistence from dual-patterned faunal assemblages, south-western Australia. Journal of Archaeological Science 37, 1053-1064.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Elmore LW, Miller DA, Vilella FJ (2005) Foraging area size and habitat use by red bats (Lasiurus borealis) in an intensively managed pine landscape in Mississippi. The American Midland Naturalist 153, 405-417.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Fairfax RJ (2019) Dispersal of the introduced red fox (Vulpes vulpes) across Australia. Biological Invasions 21, 1259-1268.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Forshaw D, Horwitz AM, Ellard K, Friend JA, Greed L, Metz M (2017) Hyperoxaluria, hyperglycoluria and renal oxalosis in Gilbert’s potoroos (Potorous gilbertii). Australian Veterinary Journal 95, 250-258.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Frankham R (2005) Genetics and extinction. Biological Conservation 126, 131-140.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Frankham R (2010) Challenges and opportunities of genetic approaches to biological conservation. Biological Conservation 143, 1919-1927.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Frankham GJ, Handasyde KA, Eldridge MDB (2012a) Novel insights into the phylogenetic relationships of the endangered marsupial genus Potorous. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 64, 592-602.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Frankham GJ, Reed RL, Eldridge MDB, Handasyde KA (2012b) The genetic mating system of the long-nosed potoroo (Potorous tridactylus) with notes on male strategies for securing paternity. Australian Journal of Zoology 60, 225-234.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Friend JA (2001) Radio-tracking of Gilbert’s Potoroo. Final Report, BankWest Landscope Conservation VisaCard. Department of Conservation and Land Management, Perth, WA, Australia.

Friend JA (2004) Translocation proposal. Gilbert’s Potoroo (Potorous gilbertii). Trial translocations – Mount Gardner to Bald Island 2004–05. Department of Conservation and Land Management, Perth, WA, Australia.

Friend JA (2008) Cross-fostering Gilbert’s potoroos. Landscope 23, 6-8 Available at https://library.dbca.wa.gov.au/Journals/080052/080052-23.025.pdf.
| Google Scholar |

Friend JA (2023) Gilbert’s Potoroo, Potorous gilbertii. In ‘Strahan’s mammals of Australia’, 4th edn (Eds AM Baker, IC Gynther). pp. 300–301. (Reed New Holland: Sydney, NSW, Australia)

Friend JA, Kitchener DJ (2023) Broad-faced Potoroo, Potorous platyops. In ‘Strahan’s mammals of Australia’, 4th edn. (Eds AM Baker, IC Gynther) p. 304. (Reed New Holland: Sydney, NSW, Australia)

Friend JA, Hill SJE, Button TA (2005) Bald Island getaway for Gilbert’s potoroos. Landscope 21, 48-54 Available at https://library.dbca.wa.gov.au/Journals/080052/080052-21.009.pdf.
| Google Scholar |

Friend JA, Comer S, Page MJ, Thomas A (2016) Gilbert’s potoroo (Potorous gilbertii) Recovery Plan. Wildlife Management Program No. 62. Department of Parks and Wildlife, Perth, WA, Australia.

Friend JA, Cowen SC, Comer S (2022) Translocation proposal: Gilbert’s potoroo from Bald Island and Waychinicup enclosure to Two Peoples Bay, Waychinicup and Middle Island – population reinforcement and genetic enhancement. Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, Perth, WA, Australia.

Froberg MK, Fitzgerald TJ, Hamilton TR, Hamilton B, Zarabi M (1993) Pathology of congenital syphilis in rabbits. Infection and Immunity 61, 4743-4749.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Garnett S, Latch S, Lindenmayer D, Woinarski J (2018) ‘Recovering Australian threatened species: a book of hope.’ (CSIRO Publishing: Melbourne, Vic, Australia)

Garnett ST, Hayward-Brown BK, Kopf RK, Woinarski JCZ, Cameron KA, Chapple DG, Copley P, Fisher A, Gillespie G, Latch P, Legge S, Lintermans M, Moorrees A, Page M, Renwick J, Birrell J, Kelly D, Geyle HM (2022) Australia’s most imperilled vertebrates. Biological Conservation 270, 109561.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Glauert L (1948) The cave fossils of the South-West. West Australian Naturalist 1, 100-104.
| Google Scholar |

Glauert L (1950) The development of our knowledge of the marsupials of Western Australia. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 34, 115-134.
| Google Scholar |

Gould J (1841) ‘Monograph of the Macropodidae or family of Kangaroos.’ Pt.1 (The Author: London)

Gould J (1863) ‘The mammals of Australia.’ (The Author: London) 10.5962/p.312839

Gould J (1973) ‘Kangaroos.’ (The Macmillan Company of Australia: Melbourne, Vic, Australia)

Green K, Mitchell AT (1998) Breeding of the long-footed potoroo, Potorous longipes (Marsupialia: Potoroidae), in the wild: behaviour, births and juvenile independence. Australian Mammalogy 20, 1-7.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Green K, Mitchell AT, Tennant P (1998) Home range and microhabitat use by long-footed Potoroos (Potorous longipes). Wildlife Research 25, 357-372.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Green K, Tory MK, Mitchell AT, Tennant P, May TW (1999) The diet of the long-footed potoroo (Potorous longipes). Australian Journal of Ecology 24, 151-156.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Harris RB, Fancy SG, Douglas DC, Garner GW, Amstrup SC, McCabe TR, Pank LF (1990) Tracking wildlife by satellite: current systems and performance. Fish and Wildlife Technical Report 30. United States Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service. p. 19.

Hart RP, Freebury G, Barrett S (2024) Phytophthora cinnamomi: extent and impact in Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve, Western Australia (1983–2024). Pacific Conservation Biology 30, PCB24028.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Heinsohn GE (1968) Habitat requirements and reproductive potential of the macropod marsupial Potorous tridactylus in Tasmania. Mammalia 32, 30-43.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Hoffmann M, Duckworth JW, Holmes K, Mallon DP, Rodrigues ASL, Stuart SN (2015) The difference conservation makes to extinction risk of the world’s ungulates. Conservation Biology 29, 1303-1313.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Hopkins AJM, Smith GT, Saunders DA (2024a) Introduction to the special issue of The Natural History of Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve, Western Australia. Pacific Conservation Biology 30, PC24023.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Hopkins AJM, Williams AAE, Harvey JM, Hopper SD (2024b) A new vegetation classification for Western Australia’s Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve and its significance for fire management. Pacific Conservation Biology 30, PC24036.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

IUCN (1994) ‘IUCN red list categories.’ (IUCN: Gland, Switzerland)

Jarić I, Roll U, Bonaiuto M, Brook BW, Courchamp F, Firth JA, Gaston KJ, Heger T, Jeschke JM, Ladle RJ, Meinard Y, Roberts DL, Sherren K, Soga M, Soriano-Redondo A, Veríssimo D, Correia RA (2022) Societal extinction of species. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 37, 411-419.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Johnson CN, Isaac JL (2009) Body mass and extinction risk in Australian marsupials: the ‘Critical Weight Range’ revisited. Austral Ecology 34, 35-40.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Johnston PG (1983) Long-nosed Potoroo, Potorous tridactylus. In ‘The Australian museum complete book of Australian mammals’. (Ed. R Strahan) p. 181. (Angus and Robertson Publishers: Sydney and Melbourne, Australia)

Johnston PG, Sharman GB (1976) Studies on populations on Potorous Desmarest (Marsupialia) I. Morphological variation. Australian Journal of Zoology 24, 573-588.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Johnston PG, Sharman GB (1977) Studies on populations of potorous Desmarest (Marsupialia) II. Electrophoretic, chromosomal and breeding studies. Australian Journal of Zoology 25, 733-747.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Johnston PG, Davey RJ, Seebeck JH (1984) Chromosome homologies in Potorous tridactylus and P. longipes (Marsupialia: Macropodidae) based on G-banding patterns. Australian Journal of Zoology 32, 319-324.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Kessell AE, Boulton JG, Dutton GJ, Woodgate R, Shamsi S, Peters A, Connolly JH (2014) Haemolytic anaemia associated with Theileria sp. in an orphaned platypus. Australian Veterinary Journal 92, 443-449.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Knapp L, Cummings D, Cummings S, Fielder PL, Hopper SD (2024) A Merningar Bardok family’s Noongar oral history of Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve and surrounds. Pacific Conservation Biology 30, PC24018.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Krockenberger MB, Canfield PJ, Malik R (2003) Cryptococcus neoformans var. gattii in the koala (Phascolarctos cinereus): a review of 43 cases of cryptococcosis. Medical Mycology 41, 225-234.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Lee JY, Ryan UM, Jeffries R, McInnes LM, Forshaw D, Friend JA, Irwin PJ (2009) Theileria gilberti n. sp. (Apicomplexa: Theileriidae) in the Gilbert’s Potoroo (Potorous gilbertii). Journal of Eukaryote Microbiology 56, 290-295.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Le Pla M, Hradsky BA, Di Stefano J, Farley-Lehmer TC, Birnbaum EK, Pascoe JH (2024) Movement and ranging behaviour of long-nosed potoroos (Potorous tridactylus) in south-west Victoria, Australia. Wildlife Research 51, WR23013.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Long KI (2001) Spatio-temporal interactions among male and female long-nosed potoroos, Potorous tridactylus (Marsupialia: Macropodoidea): mating system implications. Australian Journal of Zoology 49, 17-26.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Mans BJ, Pienaar R, Latif AA (2015) A review of Theileria diagnostics and epidemiology. International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife 4, 104-118.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Merchant JC, Sharman GB (1966) Observations on the attachment of marsupial pouch young to the teats and on the rearing of pouch young by foster-mothers of the same or different species. Australian Journal of Zoology 14, 593-609.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Merrilees D (1968) Man the destroyer: late Quaternary changes in the Australian marsupial fauna. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 51, 1-24.
| Google Scholar |

Mohr CO, Stumpf WA (1966) Comparison of methods for calculating areas of animal activity. The Journal of Wildlife Management 30, 293-304.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Moseby KE, Read JL (2006) The efficacy of feral cat, fox and rabbit exclusion fence designs for threatened species protection. Biological Conservation 127, 429-437.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Murray DC, Haile J, Dortch J, White NE, Haouchar D, Bellgard MI, Allcock RJ, Prideaux GJ, Bunce M (2013) Scrapheap challenge: a novel bulk-bone metabarcoding method to investigate ancient DNA in faunal assemblages. Scientific Reports 3, 3371.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Nguyen V (2000) A diet study of Australia’s most critically endangered mammal, Gilbert’s Potoroo, Potorous gilbertii (Marsupialia : Potoroidae). Honours thesis, Edith Cowan University, Perth, WA, Australia.

Nguyen VP, Needham AD, Friend JA (2005) A quantitative dietary study of the ‘Critically Endangered’ Gilbert’s Potoroo (Potorous gilbertii). Australian Mammalogy 27, 1-6.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Nuske SJ, Vernes K, May TW, Claridge AW, Congdon BC, Krockenberger A, Abell SE (2017) Redundancy among mammalian fungal dispersers and the importance of declining specialists. Fungal Ecology 27, 1-13.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

O’Donoghue PJ, Adlard RD (2000) Catalogue of protozoan parasites recorded in Australia. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 45, 1-163.
| Google Scholar |

Orr K, Danks A, Gillen K (1993) Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve Draft Management Plan 1993. Department of Conservation and Land Management for the National Parks and Nature Conservation Agency, Albany, WA, Australia.

Ottewell K, Friend JA, Millar M, Sun R (2023) Population genomics of the critically endangered Gilbert’s Potoroo. Summary report to Gilbert’s Potoroo Action Group, Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, Perth, WA, Australia.

Paparini A, Ryan UM, Warren K, McInnes LM, de Tores P, Irwin PJ (2012) Identification of novel Babesia and Theileria genotypes in the endangered marsupials, the woylie (Bettongia penicillata ogilbyi) and boodie (Bettongia lesueur). Experimental Parasitology 131, 25-30.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Prideaux GJ, Gully GA, Couzens AMC, Ayliffe LK, Jankowski NR, Jacobs Z, Roberts RG, Hellstrom JC, Gagan MK, Hatcher LM (2010) Timing and dynamics of Late Pleistocene mammal extinctions in southwestern Australia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107, 22157-22162.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Read JL, Bowden T, Hodgens P, Hess M, McGregor H, Moseby K (2019) Target specificity of the felixer grooming “trap”. Wildlife Society Bulletin 43, 112-120.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Ride WDL (1970) ‘A guide to native mammals of Australia.’ (Oxford University Press: Melbourne, Vic, Australia)

Roberts FHS (1960) A systematic study of the Australian species of the genus Ixodes (Acarina: Ixodidae). Australian Journal of Zoology 8, 392-486.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Rolls EC (1969) ‘They all ran wild: the story of pests on the land in Australia.’ (Angus and Robertson: Sydney, NSW, Australia)

Saito K, Tagawa M, Hasegawa A (2003) Rabbit syphilis diagnosed clinically in household rabbits. The Journal of Veterinary Medical Science 65, 637-639.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Scotts DJ, Craig SA (1988) Improved hair-sampling tube for the detection of rare mammals. Australian Wildlife Research 15, 469-472.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Scotts DJ, Seebeck JH (1989) Ecology of Potorous longipes (Marsupialia: Macropodidae): with preliminary recommendations for its conservation in Victoria. Arthur Rylah Institute of Environmental Research Technical Report series 62. National Parks and Wildlife Division, Victoria.

Seddon PJ, Griffiths CJ, Soorae PS, Armstrong DP (2014) Reversing defaunation: restoring species in a changing world. Science 345, 406-412.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Seebeck JH (1981) Potorous tridactylus (Kerr) (Marsupialia: Macropodidae): its distribution, status and habitat preferences in Victoria. Australian Wildlife Research 8, 285-306.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Seebeck JH (1982) Long-nosed potoroo, Potorous tridactylus: husbandry and management of a captive colony. In ‘The management of Australian animals in captivity’. (Ed. DD Evans) pp. 111–116. (Australian Mammal Society and Zoological Board of Victoria: Melbourne, Vic, Australia)

Seebeck JH, Bennett AF, Scotts DJ (1989) Ecology of the Potoroidae – a review. In ‘Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-kangaroos’. (Eds G Grigg, P Jarman, I Hume) pp. 67–88. (Surrey Beatty & Sons Pty Ltd: Sydney, NSW, Australia)

Shortridge GC (1909) An account of the geographical distribution of the marsupials and monotremes of south-west Australia, having special reference to the specimens collected during the Balston expedition of 1904–1907. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 79, 803-848.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Sinclair EA, Westerman M (1997) Phylogenetic relationships within the genus Potorous (Marsupialia: Macropodidae) based on allozyme electrophoresis and sequence analysis of the cytochrome b gene. Journal of Mammalian Evolution 4, 147-161.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Sinclair EA, Danks A, Wayne AF (1996) Rediscovery of Gilbert’s potoroo, Potorous tridactylus in Western Australia. Australian Mammalogy 19, 69-72.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Sinclair EA, Murch AR, Di Renzo M, Palermo M (2000) Chromosome morphology in Gilbert’s Potoroo, Potorous gilbertii (Marsupialia: Potoroidae). Australian Journal of Zoology 48, 281-287.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Sinclair EA, Costello B, Courtenay JM, Crandall KA (2002) Detecting a genetic bottleneck in Gilbert’s Potoroo (Potorous gilbertii) (Marsupialia: Potoroidae), inferred from microsatellite and mitochondrial DNA sequence data. Conservation Genetics 3, 191-196.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Smith GT (1987) The changing environment for birds in the south-west of Western Australia; some management implications. In ‘Nature conservation: the role of remnants of native vegetation’. (Eds DA Saunders, GW Arnold, AA Burbidge, AJM Hopkins) pp. 269–277. (Surrey Beatty & Sons: Chipping Norton, NSW, Australia)

Spratt DM, Beveridge I (2018) Wildlife parasitology in Australia: past, present and future. Australian Journal of Zoology 66, 286-305.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Start AN, Burbidge AA (1995) Gilbert’s potoroo (Potorous tridactylus gilbertii). Interim Wildlife Management Guidelines No. 3. Department of Conservation and Land Management, Perth, WA, Australia.

Stead-Richardson E, Bradshaw D, Friend T, Fletcher T (2010) Monitoring reproduction in the critically endangered marsupial, Gilbert’s potoroo (Potorous gilbertii): preliminary analysis of faecal oestradiol-17β, cortisol and progestagens. General and Comparative Endocrinology 165, 155-162.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Storey-Lewis B, Mitrovic A, McParland B (2018) Molecular detection and characterisation of Babesia and Theileria in Australian hard ticks. Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases 9, 471-478.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Syme K (1999) Survey of underground fungi at Two Peoples Bay as the first stage of a dietary study of the critically endangered Gilbert’s Potoroo. A report for the World Wide Fund for Nature Australia.

Syme K, Lebel T, Hilton RN (2025) Macrofungi of Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve, Western Australia. Pacific Conservation Biology 31, PC24091.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Taggart DA, Schultz DJ, Fletcher TP, Friend JA, Smith IG, Breed WG, Temple-Smith PD (2010) Cross-fostering and short-term pouch young isolation in macropod marsupials: implications for conservation and species management. In ‘Macropods: the biology of Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-kangaroos’. (Eds G Coulson, M Eldridge) pp. 263–278. (CSIRO Publishing: Collingwood, Vic, Australia)

Tilbrook L (1983) ‘Nyungar tradition: glimpses of Aborigines of south-western Australia, 1829–1914.’ (University of Western Australia Press: Nedlands, WA, Australia) Available at https://aiatsis.gov.au/sites/default/files/catalogue_resources/m0022954.pdf

Uilenberg G (2006) Babesia—A historical overview. Veterinary Parasitology 138, 3-10.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Vaughan RJ (2008) A health and disease study of Australia’s most critically endangered mammal, the Gilbert’s Potoroo (Potorous gilbertii). PhD thesis, Murdoch University, Murdoch, WA, Australia.

Vaughan RJ, Vitali SD, Eden PA, Payne KL, Warren KS, Forshaw D, Friend JA, Horwitz AM, Main C, Krockenberger MB, Malik R (2007) Cryptococcosis in Gilbert’s and long-nosed potoroo. Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 38, 567-573.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Vaughan-Higgins R, Buller N, Friend JA, Robertson I, Monaghan CL, Fenwick S, Warren K (2011) Balanoposthitis, dyspareunia, and treponema in the Critically Endangered Gilbert’s Potoroo (Potorous gilbertii). Journal of Wildlife Diseases 47, 1019-1025.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Vetten S (1996) Microhabitat use by Gilbert’s Potoroo (Potorous tridactylus gilbertii Gould) in relation to vegetation associations and ground cover. Honours thesis, Edith Cowan University, Perth, WA, Australia.

Vetten S, Courtenay J, Needham A (1997) Microhabitat use by Gilbert’s Potoroo (Potorous tridactylus gilbertii Gould) in relation to vegetation associations and ground cover. Newsletter of the Australian Mammal Society 2, 22.
| Google Scholar |

Viana DS, Granados JE, Fandos P, Pérez JM, Cano-Manuel FJ, Burón D, Fandos G, Párraga Aguado MA, Figuerola J, Soriguer RC (2018) Linking seasonal home range size with habitat selection and movement in a mountain ungulate. Movement Ecology 6, 1.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Westerman M, Loke S, Springer MS (2004) Molecular phylogenetic relationships of two extinct potoroid marsupials, Potorous platyops and Caloprymnus campestris (Potoroinae: Marsupialia). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 31, 476-485.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Winkelmann JR, Bonaccorso FJ, Goedeke EE, Laura J, Ballock LJ (2003) Home range and territoriality in the Least Blossom Bat, Macroglossus minimus, in Papua New Guinea. Journal of Mammalogy 84, 561-570.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Woinarski JCZ, Burbidge AA, Harrison PL (2015) Ongoing unraveling of a continental fauna: Decline and extinction of Australian mammals since European settlement. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 112, 4531-4540.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Woinarski JCZ, Garnett ST, Legge SM, Lindenmayer DB (2017) The contribution of policy, law, management, research, and advocacy failings to the recent extinctions of three Australian vertebrate species. Conservation Biology 31, 13-23.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |

Woinarski JCZ, Garnett ST, Legge SM (2024) No more extinctions: recovering Australia’s biodiversity. Annual Review of Animal Biosciences 13,.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |