2.2Grouping mammals according to body size and survey methods
The methods used to detect non-flying mammals during field surveys can be grouped according to the target species’ body size and the nature of their ecology. In general, direct evidence (such as an animal in the hand or visual observation by an experienced investigator) provides the most unequivocal evidence of species presence, and most survey methods are designed around these approaches. Survey methods designed to detect mammalian fauna by direct evidence include capture techniques, diurnal observation, and spotlight survey. Signs of fauna activity, such as diggings in the ground, scratches on tree trunks, burrows, nests, dens, scats and tracks can provide indirect evidence of a species’ presence, especially if the sign is species-specific. Where signs are detected, but are not sufficient to distinguish between species, then direct survey methods targeting the locations where signs of fauna activity were detected are required to provide a definite species identification.
There are a large number of biological and ecological factors that influence how visible a species is in the field and in turn how easily it is detected, including:
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body size and other morphological characteristics (for example, fur colour, distinctive markings, brightness of eye shine)
-
behaviour (for example, vocalisations, displays, flight, home range size, diet and foraging activity, ease of capture, use of nests, dens or burrows)
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sociality (for example, whether individuals are solitary or gregarious)
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activity patterns (diurnal, nocturnal, crepuscular, seasonal, climatic or longer term environmental effects such as rainfall, which relate to breeding and hibernation)
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habit (ground-dwelling, arboreal or scansorial)
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habitat (for example, structure and density of vegetation, or physical attributes of the topography such as steepness of slope, rocky outcrops or boulders, gullies or caves)
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abundance (common or rare within an area).
Taking into account the above factors, species that are likely to be the most visible in the field are those that are large and conspicuous, possibly gregarious, active during the day, ground-dwelling, inhabit an open terrain (for example, grasslands) and relatively common. Examples of this type of species in Australia are found within the large kangaroo species (Macropus genus). In contrast, the majority of the non-flying mammal species listed under the EPBC Act are small or medium in body size, nocturnal, inhabit rugged, remote or densely vegetated habitats, and by the nature of their limited abundance and restricted distributions are considered rare. Of the large-sized species listed, which includes the Barrow Island euro, Macropus robustus isabellinus, the rock wallabies Petrogale spp., the wombats and the quolls, detection is limited by the rugged habitats in which the species live or (in the case of the quolls and the wombats) their nocturnal activity patterns.
All of the non-flying mammals listed on the EPBC Act have been grouped into one of four classes (Table 1) according to body size and habit, which directly relate to appropriate survey methods for detection. Three body weight classes (small, medium and large) are defined. Arboreal species are grouped as a distinct class, because although this group includes both small and medium-sized species, the appropriate survey methods for detecting arboreal mammals are similar. The average adult body weights are taken or calculated from male and female averages provided in published literature that is referenced in the species profiles. The body weight classes are not exclusive and have been used as a guide to group species according to appropriate survey methods, hence some species fall outside the defined weight range. For example, the chuditch or western quoll, Dasyurus geoffroii, and northern quoll, D. hallucatus, weigh on average less than the large-sized species minimum weight of 3000 grams, yet have been included with the other quolls in the large-sized class because of similarity in appropriate survey methods (Table 1).
The four non-flying mammal classes used in this report are:
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large-sized ground-dwelling mammals – includes species with an average adult body weight greater than 3000 grams
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medium-sized ground-dwelling mammals – includes species with an average adult body weight between 300–3000 grams
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arboreal mammals with an average adult body weight between 50–500 grams
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small-sized ground-dwelling mammals – includes species with an average adult body weight between 10–300 grams.
Large-sized ground-dwelling mammals include two wombat species, one kangaroo, ten wallabies, the quokka, Tasmanian devil and four species of quoll (Table 1). These species are almost entirely ground-dwelling, however, quolls can climb trees and rock wallabies inhabit very rugged terrain that differs from most of the other listed ground-dwelling species. All of the species are primarily nocturnal. However, they generally become active at dusk and all can exhibit activity during daylight hours to some degree, particularly during the winter months (see species profiles for details).
The medium-sized ground-dwelling mammals include the numbat, greater bilby, boodie, woylie, seven bandicoot species, three potoroos, three bettongs and five species of hare-wallabies (Table 1). With the exception of the numbat, these species are all nocturnal and shelter during the day in nests, burrows, hollow logs or dense vegetation on the ground.
The small and medium-sized arboreal species are a diverse assemblage of seven primarily arboreal mammals (Table 1). They include the red-tailed phascogale, two possum species, two gliders and two rats, the brush-tailed rabbit rat (which is both tree and ground-dwelling) and the golden-backed tree rat, which, based on very limited information, appears to be primarily arboreal (see species profile).
The small-sized ground-dwelling mammal class contains a diverse range of species including a shrew, a pygmy possum, marsupial moles, 10 Dasyuridae species and 14 native rodents. This class includes species from a wide range of ecosystems (for example, the arid zone of central Australia and alpine regions of Victoria and New South Wales). Despite this diversity of habitat, survey methods typically used to detect these species are similar.
The classes have been used here to group species according to similar survey methods and differ from the classes used by Burbidge and McKenzie (1989) and Short and Smith (1994) to define mammal size classes in terms of a critical weight range for medium-sized, non-flying mammals between 35 and 5500 grams. Burbidge and McKenzie (1989) demonstrated that mammals within the critical weight range have disproportionately experienced a far greater rate of extinction in Australia since European settlement than other mammals. When the non-flying mammals listed under the EPBC Act are considered in terms of the critical weight range, 74 per cent fall within this range (note that species with male weights over 5500 grams were not included in the calculation).
Table 1. Threatened non-flying mammal species listed on the EPBC Act as at July 2010 classified according to body weight and habit.
Family
|
Scientific name
|
Common name
|
EPBC Act status
|
Large-sized ground-dwelling species (average body weight > 3000 g)
|
Vombatidae
|
Vombatus ursinus ursinus
|
Common wombat (Bass Strait)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Lasiorhinus krefftii
|
Northern hairy-nosed wombat
|
Endangered
|
Macropodidae
|
Macropus robustus isabellinus
|
Barrow Island euro
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Setonix brachyurus
|
Quokka
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Petrogale lateralis
|
Black-footed rock wallaby (West Kimberley race)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Petrogale lateralis
|
Black-footed rock wallaby (MacDonnell Ranges race)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Petrogale lateralis lateralis
|
Black-flanked rock wallaby
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Petrogale lateralis hackettii
|
Recherche rock wallaby
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Petrogale penicillata
|
Brush-tailed rock wallaby
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Petrogale persephone
|
Proserpine rock wallaby
|
Endangered
|
|
Petrogale xanthopus xanthopus
|
Yellow-footed rock wallaby
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Onychogalea fraenata
|
Bridled nailtail wallaby
|
Endangered
|
|
Macropus eugenii eugenii
|
Tammar wallaby
|
Extinct
|
Dasyuridae
|
Dasyurus geoffroii*
|
Chuditch or western quoll
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Dasyurus maculatus gracilis
|
Spotted-tailed quoll or yarri (north Queensland)
|
Endangered
|
|
Dasyurus maculatus maculatus
|
Spotted-tailed quoll (SE mainland population)
Spotted-tailed quoll (Tasmanian population)
|
Endangered
Vulnerable
|
|
Dasyurus hallucatus
|
Northern quoll
|
Endangered
|
|
Sarcophilus harrisii
|
Tasmanian devil
|
Endangered
|
Medium-sized Ground-dwelling Species (average body weight range approx. 300-3000 g)
|
Dasyuridae
|
Myrmecobius fasciatus
|
Numbat
|
Vulnerable
|
Peramelidae
|
Perameles bougainville bougainville
|
Western barred bandicoot (Shark Bay)
|
Endangered
|
|
Isoodon auratus auratus
|
Golden bandicoot (mainland)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Isoodon auratus barrowensis
|
Golden bandicoot (Barrow Island)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Isoodon obesulus obesulus
|
Southern brown bandicoot
|
Endangered
|
|
Isoodon obesulus nauticus
|
Southern brown bandicoot (Nyuts Archipelago)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Perameles gunnii gunnii
|
Eastern barred bandicoot (Tasmania)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Perameles gunnii unnamed subsp.
|
Eastern barred bandicoot (mainland)
|
Endangered
|
|
Macrotis lagotis
|
Greater bilby
|
Vulnerable
|
Potoroidae
|
Bettongia tropica
|
Northern bettong
|
Endangered
|
|
Bettongia lesueur lesueur
|
Boodie or burrowing bettong (Shark Bay)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Bettongia lesueur unnamed subsp.
|
Boodie or burrowing bettong (Barrow and Boodie Islands)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Bettongia lesueur graii
|
Boodie or burrowing bettong (inland subspecies)
|
Extinct
|
|
Bettongia penicillata ogilbyi
|
Woylie
|
Endangered
|
|
Potorous gilbertii
|
Gilbert's potoroo
|
Critically Endangered
|
|
Potorous longipes
|
Long-footed potoroo
|
Endangered
|
|
Potorous tridactylus tridactylus
|
Long-nosed potoroo (South-east mainland)
|
Vulnerable
|
Macropodidae
|
Lagorchestes hirsutus bernieri
|
Rufous hare wallaby (Bernier Island)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Lagorchestes hirsutus dorreae
|
Rufous hare wallaby (Dorre Island)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Lagorchestes hirsutus unnamed subsp.
|
Rufous hare wallaby (central mainland) or mala
|
Endangered
|
|
Lagorchestes conspicillatus conspicillatus**
|
Spectacled hare wallaby (Barrow Island)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Lagostrophus fasciatus fasciatus
|
Banded hare wallaby (Marnine Munning)
|
Vulnerable
|
Small & Medium-sized Arboreal Species (average body weight range approx. 100-500 g)
|
Petauridae
|
Gymnobelideus leadbeateri
|
Leadbeater's possum
|
Endangered
|
|
Petaurus australis unnamed subsp.
|
Fluffy glider or yellow-bellied glider (wet tropics)
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Petaurus gracilis
|
Mahogany glider
|
Endangered
|
Pseudocheiridae
|
Pseudocheirus occidentalis
|
Western ringtail possum
|
Vulnerable
|
Muridae
|
Mesembriomys macrurus
|
Golden-backed tree rat
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Conilurus penicillatus
|
Brush-tailed rabbit rat
|
Vulnerable
|
Dasyuridae
|
Phascogale calura
|
Red-tailed phascogale
|
Endangered
|
Small-sized Ground-dwelling Species (average body weight range approx. 10-300 g)
|
Croidurine
|
Crocidura attenuata trichura
|
Christmas Island shrew
|
Endangered
|
Notoryctidae
|
Notoryctes caurinus
|
Northern marsupial mole or Karkarratul
|
Endangered
|
|
Notoryctes typhlops
|
Southern marsupial mole or Yitjarritjarri
|
Endangered
|
Burramyidae
|
Burramys parvus
|
Mountain pygmy possum
|
Endangered
|
Dasyuridae
|
Sminthopsis butleri
|
Carpentarian dunnart
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Sminthopsis griseoventer boullangerensis
|
Boullanger Island dunnart
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Sminthopsis aitkeni
|
Kangaroo Island dunnart
|
Endangered
|
|
Sminthopsis psammophila
|
Sandhill dunnart
|
Endangered
|
|
Sminthopsis douglasi
|
Julia Creek dunnart
|
Endangered
|
|
Pseudantechinus mimulus
|
Carpentarian antechinus
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Parantechinus apicalis
|
Dibbler
|
Endangered
|
|
Dasycercus byrnei
|
Kowari
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Dasycercus cristicauda
|
Mulgara
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Dasycercus hillieri
|
Ampurta
|
Endangered
|
Muridae
|
Pseudomys pilligaensis
|
Pilliga mouse
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Pseudomys fieldi
|
Shark Bay mouse or djoongari
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Pseudomys australis
|
Plains rat
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Pseudomys fumeus
|
Smoky mouse or konoom
|
Endangered
|
|
Pseudomys shortridgei
|
Dayang or heath rat
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Pseudomys oralis
|
Hastings River mouse
|
Endangered
|
|
Notomys aquilo
|
Northern hopping mouse
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Notomys fuscus
|
Dusky hopping mouse or wilkiniti
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Xeromys myoides
|
False water rat
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Zyzomys pedunculatus
|
Central rock rat
|
Endangered
|
|
Zyzomys palatalis
|
Carpentarian rock rat
|
Endangered
|
|
Zyzomys maini
|
Arnhem Land rock rat
|
Vulnerable
|
|
Melomys rubicola
|
Bramble Cay melomys
|
Endangered
|
|
Leporillus conditor***
|
Greater stick-nest rat or wopilkara
|
Vulnerable
|
* The chuditch Dasyurus geoffroii and the northern quoll Dasyurus hallucatus weigh on average less than 3000 grams.
** The spectacled hare wallaby (Barrow Island) Lagorchestes conspicillatus conspicillatus weighs on average more than 3000 grams.
*** The greater stick-nest rat Leporillus conditor weighs on average more than 300 grams.
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