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Boodie

The boodie (Bettongia lesueur), also known as the burrowing bettong or Lesueur's rat-kangaroo,[4] is a small, furry, rat-like mammal native to Australia. Once common throughout the continent, it is now restricted to a few coastal islands. A member of the rat-kangaroo family (Potoroidae), it lives in burrows and is active at night when it forages for fungi, roots, and other plant matter. It is about the size of a rabbit and, like most marsupials, carries its young in a pouch.

Boodie[1]
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[3]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Marsupialia
Order: Diprotodontia
Family: Potoroidae
Genus: Bettongia
Species:
B. lesueur
Binomial name
Bettongia lesueur
(Quoy & Gaimard, 1824)
Subspecies
Boodie range
(brown — native, pink — reintroduced)

Before European settlement, it was the most common macropod in Australia (a group that includes kangaroos, wallabies, and other Australian mammals). Competition and predation by introduced rabbits, cats, and foxes, as well as habitat loss, pressured the population. It was declared a pest in the 1900s and was wiped out by the 1960s; however, the loss of the boodie and other ground-foraging animals has degraded soil quality. Populations persisted on three west coast islands (Bernier, Dorre, and Barrow), and the boodie has been reintroduced to the mainland since the 2000s.[5]

Taxonomy and name edit

The boodie belongs to the family Potoroidae, which includes the rat-kangaroos, potoroos, and other bettongs. It is one of four species in the genus Bettongia. There are three subspecies of Bettongia lesueur: B. l. graii, the extinct mainland subspecies; B. l. nova, an undescribed subspecies on Barrow and Brodie Island; and B. l. lesueur.[6]

The word "boodie" comes from its name boodi or burdi in Noongar,[7][8] an Aboriginal language spoken in southwestern Australia. The animal was first collected on an 1817 French expedition of the west coast, and was named Bettongia lesueur after Charles Lesueur, an artist and naturalist who accompanied a previous French expedition.

Paleontology edit

In the late Oligocene, fossils of paleopotoroines and potoroines (potoroid ancestors) appeared. During the Oligocene, ice buildup on Antarctica resulted in less rainfall on Australia. Rainforests declined, replaced by more arid-tolerant leathery leaf woodlands and reed swamps. This climate shift may have favored a radiation of terrestrial marsupials, including potoroid ancestors.[9] Fossils of the family Potoroidae appear from the mid-Miocene to Recent sediments.[10] Subfossil records of the burrowing bettong have been found in West Victoria, western New South Wales, and South Australia.[11]

Morphology edit

The boodie is a small, rat-like marsupial with short, rounded ears and a lightly haired, thick tail. This animal has a pointed rostrum and beady black eyes, hind limbs longer than the forelimbs, and large hind feet. This bettong is yellow-gray above and light gray below. Its short, dense fur feels soft and woolly. The animal bears a faint hip stripe and a distinctive white tail tip. This tail is weakly prehensile and used to carry nest material.[11][12] About the size of a wild rabbit, this little marsupial weighs an average of 1.5 kg.[4] Head and body length is an average of 40 cm.[11] Little to no sexual dimorphism seems to exist. However, morphology varies among subspecies and between islands.[13]

In general, a potoroid skull can be separated from a macropodid skull by the presence of well-developed upper canines and large plagiaulacoid (bladelike) premolars. Also unlike macropodids, the squamosal bone widely contacts the frontal. B. lesueur skulls are short and broad with large palatal vacuities, inflated auditory bullae, and short, broad nasals. The mandible is relatively short and deep compared to other relatives. The dental formula for all the modern potoroines is I 3/1 C 1/0 PM 1/1 M 4/4. Molars are bunodont and quadrate, and the premolars have 9-11 fine, vertical ridges. Young bettongs have two molars which are replaced by one adult premolar; this event is a good indication of maturity. The postcranial skeleton of all potoroids has seven cervical, 13 thoracic, six lumbar, two sacral, and 22 caudal vertebrae, with 13 pairs of ribs.[10]

Reproduction edit

If conditions are good, the boodie seems to mate throughout the year, probably using a polygynous mating system. Males do not seem to have dominance hierarchies; rather, they defend females against other males. Some females seem to establish associations with other females; whether these contribute to increased reproductive success is unknown.[5][10] Gestation lasts 21 days, with only one young per litter. Like other marsupial newborns, the newborn is altricial. About four months elapse until weaning.[4] After young leave the pouch, they take six to seven months to mature sexually.[13] Females mate the day after giving birth, and the fertilized egg arrests development until the young is weaned. This is an example of facultative embryonic diapause. In captivity, females are able to bear three young per year.[4]

Ecology edit

The boodie once lived in a range of dry subtropical and tropical habitats, from open eucalyptus and acacia woodlands to arid spinifex grasslands. In its current range on the islands, it seems to prefer open Triodia (spinifex) and dune habitats, but will burrow anywhere except places with rocky substrate.[13] The burrowing bettong eats a variety of foods, such as seeds, fruits, flowers, tubers, roots, succulent leaves, grasses, fungi, termites, and marine refuse. It will also raid vegetable gardens. Current populations fluctuate, building up during the years with average or good rainfall and crashing during drought years.[4][6] These marsupials are known to live at least three years in the wild.[13]

After colonisation of Australia, its predators were mainly the introduced red fox and cats.[4] Some natural predators on the islands include the wedge-tailed eagle and sea eagles; on Barrow Island, monitor lizards appear to be a significant predator.[13]

At the Arid Recovery Reserve near Roxby Downs in South Australia, the boodie is preyed upon by the western quoll.[14]

Before its extinction on the mainland, the boodie served a very important function in the Australian grassland ecosystem. As it foraged, it mixed organic matter into the soil, spreading fungi and seeds. This mixing also increased water absorption into the soil and reduced the combustible material under trees, decreasing the likelihood of fire. These actions helped maintain the balance of trees, shrubs, and grasses. The loss of small, ground-foraging animals after European settlement contributed to widespread soil deterioration.[15] Also, B. lesueur may have helped to thin woody weeds on rangeland by browsing shrubs growing after fires.[16]

The contraction of the distribution range in Southwest Australia during English settlement has been difficult to determine, Guy C. Shortridge searched unsuccessfully for the species south of Perth in 1909, and Charles M. Hoy obtained a skull that might have been collected at the sub-fossil site at the Margaret River Caves systems located within the Leeuwin-Naturaliste National Park.[17]

Behavior and physiological attributes edit

B. lesueur is very vocal, communicating through grunts, hisses, and squeals.[11] It shelters in burrows, the only macropodiform to do so.[5] Burrows vary from simple tunnels to complex networks with multiple entrances and deep, interconnecting tunnels. These elaborate burrows, or warrens, have been seen having from four to 94 entrances.[11] Warrens are communal, housing an average of 20-40 bettongs. Bettongs appear to switch warrens from time to time, though each has one or two preferred warrens. During the day in the warrens, they form groups of one male and one or many females; males never share warrens with other males. Some of the female-female groups seem to be mother-daughter associations. However, individuals seem to forage alone, showing none of the day-range group associations.[5][13]

The boodie is nocturnal, sheltering during the day in burrows and foraging widely at night for food.[4] Locomotion is mainly with the hind legs. The forelimbs are used for support when the boodie is stationary.[11] This bettong exhibits a slow gait and fast gait. The fast gait (or bipedal hop) is characteristic of the macropodiforms and uses only the hind limbs, with the forelimbs held close to the body and tail acting as a counterbalance. The slow gait (or quadrupedal crawl) is used during foraging and other unstressed times.[10] Nighttime movement is usually fairly limited, averaging less than 200 m. However, researchers have measured this marsupial traveling 2.2 km searching for food. One individual tracked on Barrow Island traveled 5 km.[13] B. lesueur uses scent to locate food, which it digs up with the claws on its strong forelimbs.[6] The boodie will even climb into low shrubs to find food.[4] Demonstrating little interspecific interactions, bettongs are apparently undisturbed by run-ins with other non-predators.

Bettong digestive systems are characterized by a very large sacciform fore stomach, a tubiform fore stomach with limited sacculation, and a small hind stomach. The hind gut has a well-developed, simple cecum. Like many macropodiforms, bettongs have fore gut fermentation. Daily water intake is only about 3% of its body weight. B. lesueur seems to have renal adaptations to conserve water, which is important in its arid and semiarid habitats.[10]

Species decline edit

Researchers have proposed many possible causes for the boodie's decline on mainland Australia, which began once Australia was colonized. Nineteenth-century colonists killed boodies, considering them a destructive garden pest. As pastoral leases spread over the grasslands, livestock grazing reduced vegetation cover, shrinking their habitat. Also, introduced species such as foxes, cats, and rabbits took a severe toll on the boodie, especially on islands. Rabbits competed with them for food and shelter, and the foxes and cats became their major predators. The theory that rabbits compete with boodies for food has been disputed in a study done in 2002[18] although further investigation is needed. Finally, the Indigenous Australians maintained certain fire regimes, and when these ceased, the habitat probably changed.[4] The species was amongst several marsupials declared pests under the Western Australian Vermin Act 1918, by a regional animal control board at Denmark, Western Australia in 1922.[17] By the 1960s, all the boodies on the mainland were extinct.[6]

Conservation efforts edit

Once present in all mainland states except Victoria, the burrowing bettong survived as three remnant populations on small offshore islands.[19][20] These islands include Bernier and Dorre Islands in Shark Bay and Barrow Island off the northwest coast of Western Australia. The marsupial was listed on the 2006 IUCN Red List as Vulnerable due to acute restriction of its area of occupancy to less than 100 km2. In 2008, however, due to successful conservation efforts both by government agencies and the private sector, the species was listing was downgraded to Near Threatened, as its range and population had increased, and are still increasing. Newly established populations included Herrison Prong on mainland Shark Bay by the DEC, as well as Faure Island, Scotia Sanctuary, and Yookamurra Sanctuary, which were established by the Australian Wildlife Conservancy. The species was released at a large fenced sanctuary at Newhaven in the Northern Territory in June 2022,[21] and at Mallee Cliffs National Park in September 2023.[22] It is pegged for reintroduction to Dirk Hartog Island following the removal of feral cats and domestic livestock,[23] as well as to a fenced landscape at Sturt National Park, in New South Wales.[24]

References edit

  1. ^ Groves, C. P. (2005). Wilson, D. E.; Reeder, D. M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 57. ISBN 0-801-88221-4. OCLC 62265494.
  2. ^ Richards, J.; Morris, K. & Burbidge, A. (2008). "Bettongia lesueur". The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN. 2008: e.T2784A9480530. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T2784A9480530.en.
  3. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i . Heirisson Prong Threatened Species Project. 2005-09-25. Archived from the original on 2007-04-01. Retrieved 2006-12-08.
  5. ^ a b c d Sander, U.; Short, J.; Turner, B. (1997). "Social organisation and warren use of the burrowing bettong Bettongia lesueur (Macropodoidea: Potoroidae)". Wildlife Research. 24 (2): 143–157. doi:10.1071/WR96021.
  6. ^ a b c d Massicot, P. (2006-06-02). "Burrowing Bettong". Animal Info. Retrieved 2006-12-08.
  7. ^ Abbott, Ian (2001). "Aboriginal names of mammal species in south-west Western Australia" (PDF). CALMScience. 3 (4): 461.
  8. ^ Oxford Dictionary. Oxford University Press. http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/boodie 2012-10-19 at the Wayback Machine (12 Sep 2012)
  9. ^ Burk, A. & Springer, M.S. (2000). "Intergeneric relationships among Macropodoidea (Metatheria:Diprotodontia) and the chronicle of kangaroo evolution". Journal of Mammalian Evolution. 7 (4): 214–237. doi:10.1023/A:1009488431055. S2CID 41226126.
  10. ^ a b c d e Seebeck, J.H. & Rose, R.W. (1989). (PDF). In D.W. Walton & B.J. Richardson (eds.). Fauna of Australia. Vol 1B Mammalia. Australian Government Publishing Service. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2005-07-23. Retrieved 2006-12-08.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Burrowing bettong (boodie) 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine. Nature Base Fauna Species Profiles.
  12. ^ Burrowing bettong (Bettongia lesueur) 2007-05-01 at the Wayback Machine. (2006). ARKive.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Short, J. & Turner, B. (1999). "Ecology of burrowing bettongs, Bettongia lesueur (Marsupialia: Potoroidae), on Dorre and Bernier Islands, Western Australia". Wildlife Research. 26 (5): 651–669. doi:10.1071/WR98039.
  14. ^ West, R. S.; Tilley, L.; Moseby, K. E. (2019-10-16). "A trial reintroduction of the western quoll to a fenced conservation reserve: implications of returning native predators". Australian Mammalogy. 42 (3): 257–265. doi:10.1071/AM19041. ISSN 1836-7402.
  15. ^ Martin, G. (2003). "The roll of small ground-foraging mammals in topsoil health and biodiversity: Implications to management and restoration". Ecological Management & Restoration. 4 (2): 114–119. doi:10.1046/j.1442-8903.2003.00145.x.
  16. ^ Sarre, A. (1999). "Slow change on the range" (PDF). Ecos (100): 44.
  17. ^ a b Short, J.; Calaby, J. (July 2001). "The status of Australian mammals in 1922 - collections and field notes of museum collector Charles Hoy". Australian Zoologist. 31 (4): 533–562. doi:10.7882/az.2001.002. ISSN 0067-2238.
  18. ^ Robley, A. J., Short, J. & Bradley, S. (2002) Do European rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) influence the population ecology of the burrowing bettong (Bettongia lesueur)? Wildlife research, 29, 423-429.
  19. ^ Menkhorst, P., Knight, F. (2004) A Field Guide to the Mammals of Australia, Oxford University Press, South Melbourne, Victoria, ISBN 0-19-555037-4
  20. ^ Van Dyck, S., Gynther, I., Baker, A. (2013) Field Companion to the Mammals of Australia, New Holland Publishers, Chatswood, New South Wales, ISBN 9781877069819
  21. ^ "Burrowing Bettong's historic homecoming to Central Australia". The National Tribune. 2022-06-01. Retrieved 2022-06-03.
  22. ^ "Locally-extinct bettongs and bandicoots released". Mirage News. Retrieved 2023-10-03.
  23. ^ "Boodie (Burrowing Bettong)". Shark Bay. Retrieved 2020-09-03.
  24. ^ author. "Sturt National Park Review of Environmental Factors for the reintroduction of locally extinct mammals". NSW Environment, Energy and Science. Retrieved 2020-09-03. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)

Sources

  • Tim Flannery (2007). Chasing Kangaroos: A Continent, a Scientist, and a Search for the World's Most Extraordinary Creature, ISBN 978-0-8021-1852-3

External links edit

  • Skull terminology mammalogy lab for Texas A&M
  • Arid Recovery
  • Images and Video - ARKive.org

boodie, boodie, bettongia, lesueur, also, known, burrowing, bettong, lesueur, kangaroo, small, furry, like, mammal, native, australia, once, common, throughout, continent, restricted, coastal, islands, member, kangaroo, family, potoroidae, lives, burrows, acti. The boodie Bettongia lesueur also known as the burrowing bettong or Lesueur s rat kangaroo 4 is a small furry rat like mammal native to Australia Once common throughout the continent it is now restricted to a few coastal islands A member of the rat kangaroo family Potoroidae it lives in burrows and is active at night when it forages for fungi roots and other plant matter It is about the size of a rabbit and like most marsupials carries its young in a pouch Boodie 1 Conservation statusNear Threatened IUCN 3 1 2 CITES Appendix I CITES 3 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaInfraclass MarsupialiaOrder DiprotodontiaFamily PotoroidaeGenus BettongiaSpecies B lesueurBinomial nameBettongia lesueur Quoy amp Gaimard 1824 Subspecies B lesueur graii B lesueur lesueur B lesueur novaBoodie range brown native pink reintroduced Before European settlement it was the most common macropod in Australia a group that includes kangaroos wallabies and other Australian mammals Competition and predation by introduced rabbits cats and foxes as well as habitat loss pressured the population It was declared a pest in the 1900s and was wiped out by the 1960s however the loss of the boodie and other ground foraging animals has degraded soil quality Populations persisted on three west coast islands Bernier Dorre and Barrow and the boodie has been reintroduced to the mainland since the 2000s 5 Contents 1 Taxonomy and name 2 Paleontology 3 Morphology 4 Reproduction 5 Ecology 6 Behavior and physiological attributes 7 Species decline 8 Conservation efforts 9 References 10 External linksTaxonomy and name editThe boodie belongs to the family Potoroidae which includes the rat kangaroos potoroos and other bettongs It is one of four species in the genus Bettongia There are three subspecies of Bettongia lesueur B l graii the extinct mainland subspecies B l nova an undescribed subspecies on Barrow and Brodie Island and B l lesueur 6 The word boodie comes from its name boodi or burdi in Noongar 7 8 an Aboriginal language spoken in southwestern Australia The animal was first collected on an 1817 French expedition of the west coast and was named Bettongia lesueur after Charles Lesueur an artist and naturalist who accompanied a previous French expedition Paleontology editIn the late Oligocene fossils of paleopotoroines and potoroines potoroid ancestors appeared During the Oligocene ice buildup on Antarctica resulted in less rainfall on Australia Rainforests declined replaced by more arid tolerant leathery leaf woodlands and reed swamps This climate shift may have favored a radiation of terrestrial marsupials including potoroid ancestors 9 Fossils of the family Potoroidae appear from the mid Miocene to Recent sediments 10 Subfossil records of the burrowing bettong have been found in West Victoria western New South Wales and South Australia 11 Morphology editThe boodie is a small rat like marsupial with short rounded ears and a lightly haired thick tail This animal has a pointed rostrum and beady black eyes hind limbs longer than the forelimbs and large hind feet This bettong is yellow gray above and light gray below Its short dense fur feels soft and woolly The animal bears a faint hip stripe and a distinctive white tail tip This tail is weakly prehensile and used to carry nest material 11 12 About the size of a wild rabbit this little marsupial weighs an average of 1 5 kg 4 Head and body length is an average of 40 cm 11 Little to no sexual dimorphism seems to exist However morphology varies among subspecies and between islands 13 In general a potoroid skull can be separated from a macropodid skull by the presence of well developed upper canines and large plagiaulacoid bladelike premolars Also unlike macropodids the squamosal bone widely contacts the frontal B lesueur skulls are short and broad with large palatal vacuities inflated auditory bullae and short broad nasals The mandible is relatively short and deep compared to other relatives The dental formula for all the modern potoroines is I 3 1 C 1 0 PM 1 1 M 4 4 Molars are bunodont and quadrate and the premolars have 9 11 fine vertical ridges Young bettongs have two molars which are replaced by one adult premolar this event is a good indication of maturity The postcranial skeleton of all potoroids has seven cervical 13 thoracic six lumbar two sacral and 22 caudal vertebrae with 13 pairs of ribs 10 Reproduction editIf conditions are good the boodie seems to mate throughout the year probably using a polygynous mating system Males do not seem to have dominance hierarchies rather they defend females against other males Some females seem to establish associations with other females whether these contribute to increased reproductive success is unknown 5 10 Gestation lasts 21 days with only one young per litter Like other marsupial newborns the newborn is altricial About four months elapse until weaning 4 After young leave the pouch they take six to seven months to mature sexually 13 Females mate the day after giving birth and the fertilized egg arrests development until the young is weaned This is an example of facultative embryonic diapause In captivity females are able to bear three young per year 4 Ecology editThe boodie once lived in a range of dry subtropical and tropical habitats from open eucalyptus and acacia woodlands to arid spinifex grasslands In its current range on the islands it seems to prefer open Triodia spinifex and dune habitats but will burrow anywhere except places with rocky substrate 13 The burrowing bettong eats a variety of foods such as seeds fruits flowers tubers roots succulent leaves grasses fungi termites and marine refuse It will also raid vegetable gardens Current populations fluctuate building up during the years with average or good rainfall and crashing during drought years 4 6 These marsupials are known to live at least three years in the wild 13 After colonisation of Australia its predators were mainly the introduced red fox and cats 4 Some natural predators on the islands include the wedge tailed eagle and sea eagles on Barrow Island monitor lizards appear to be a significant predator 13 At the Arid Recovery Reserve near Roxby Downs in South Australia the boodie is preyed upon by the western quoll 14 Before its extinction on the mainland the boodie served a very important function in the Australian grassland ecosystem As it foraged it mixed organic matter into the soil spreading fungi and seeds This mixing also increased water absorption into the soil and reduced the combustible material under trees decreasing the likelihood of fire These actions helped maintain the balance of trees shrubs and grasses The loss of small ground foraging animals after European settlement contributed to widespread soil deterioration 15 Also B lesueur may have helped to thin woody weeds on rangeland by browsing shrubs growing after fires 16 The contraction of the distribution range in Southwest Australia during English settlement has been difficult to determine Guy C Shortridge searched unsuccessfully for the species south of Perth in 1909 and Charles M Hoy obtained a skull that might have been collected at the sub fossil site at the Margaret River Caves systems located within the Leeuwin Naturaliste National Park 17 Behavior and physiological attributes editB lesueur is very vocal communicating through grunts hisses and squeals 11 It shelters in burrows the only macropodiform to do so 5 Burrows vary from simple tunnels to complex networks with multiple entrances and deep interconnecting tunnels These elaborate burrows or warrens have been seen having from four to 94 entrances 11 Warrens are communal housing an average of 20 40 bettongs Bettongs appear to switch warrens from time to time though each has one or two preferred warrens During the day in the warrens they form groups of one male and one or many females males never share warrens with other males Some of the female female groups seem to be mother daughter associations However individuals seem to forage alone showing none of the day range group associations 5 13 The boodie is nocturnal sheltering during the day in burrows and foraging widely at night for food 4 Locomotion is mainly with the hind legs The forelimbs are used for support when the boodie is stationary 11 This bettong exhibits a slow gait and fast gait The fast gait or bipedal hop is characteristic of the macropodiforms and uses only the hind limbs with the forelimbs held close to the body and tail acting as a counterbalance The slow gait or quadrupedal crawl is used during foraging and other unstressed times 10 Nighttime movement is usually fairly limited averaging less than 200 m However researchers have measured this marsupial traveling 2 2 km searching for food One individual tracked on Barrow Island traveled 5 km 13 B lesueur uses scent to locate food which it digs up with the claws on its strong forelimbs 6 The boodie will even climb into low shrubs to find food 4 Demonstrating little interspecific interactions bettongs are apparently undisturbed by run ins with other non predators Bettong digestive systems are characterized by a very large sacciform fore stomach a tubiform fore stomach with limited sacculation and a small hind stomach The hind gut has a well developed simple cecum Like many macropodiforms bettongs have fore gut fermentation Daily water intake is only about 3 of its body weight B lesueur seems to have renal adaptations to conserve water which is important in its arid and semiarid habitats 10 Species decline editResearchers have proposed many possible causes for the boodie s decline on mainland Australia which began once Australia was colonized Nineteenth century colonists killed boodies considering them a destructive garden pest As pastoral leases spread over the grasslands livestock grazing reduced vegetation cover shrinking their habitat Also introduced species such as foxes cats and rabbits took a severe toll on the boodie especially on islands Rabbits competed with them for food and shelter and the foxes and cats became their major predators The theory that rabbits compete with boodies for food has been disputed in a study done in 2002 18 although further investigation is needed Finally the Indigenous Australians maintained certain fire regimes and when these ceased the habitat probably changed 4 The species was amongst several marsupials declared pests under the Western Australian Vermin Act 1918 by a regional animal control board at Denmark Western Australia in 1922 17 By the 1960s all the boodies on the mainland were extinct 6 Conservation efforts editOnce present in all mainland states except Victoria the burrowing bettong survived as three remnant populations on small offshore islands 19 20 These islands include Bernier and Dorre Islands in Shark Bay and Barrow Island off the northwest coast of Western Australia The marsupial was listed on the 2006 IUCN Red List as Vulnerable due to acute restriction of its area of occupancy to less than 100 km2 In 2008 however due to successful conservation efforts both by government agencies and the private sector the species was listing was downgraded to Near Threatened as its range and population had increased and are still increasing Newly established populations included Herrison Prong on mainland Shark Bay by the DEC as well as Faure Island Scotia Sanctuary and Yookamurra Sanctuary which were established by the Australian Wildlife Conservancy The species was released at a large fenced sanctuary at Newhaven in the Northern Territory in June 2022 21 and at Mallee Cliffs National Park in September 2023 22 It is pegged for reintroduction to Dirk Hartog Island following the removal of feral cats and domestic livestock 23 as well as to a fenced landscape at Sturt National Park in New South Wales 24 References edit Groves C P 2005 Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press p 57 ISBN 0 801 88221 4 OCLC 62265494 Richards J Morris K amp Burbidge A 2008 Bettongia lesueur The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species IUCN 2008 e T2784A9480530 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2008 RLTS T2784A9480530 en Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 2022 01 14 a b c d e f g h i The burrowing bettong Bettongia lesueur Heirisson Prong Threatened Species Project 2005 09 25 Archived from the original on 2007 04 01 Retrieved 2006 12 08 a b c d Sander U Short J Turner B 1997 Social organisation and warren use of the burrowing bettong Bettongia lesueur Macropodoidea Potoroidae Wildlife Research 24 2 143 157 doi 10 1071 WR96021 a b c d Massicot P 2006 06 02 Burrowing Bettong Animal Info Retrieved 2006 12 08 Abbott Ian 2001 Aboriginal names of mammal species in south west Western Australia PDF CALMScience 3 4 461 Oxford Dictionary Oxford University Press http oxforddictionaries com definition english boodie Archived 2012 10 19 at the Wayback Machine 12 Sep 2012 Burk A amp Springer M S 2000 Intergeneric relationships among Macropodoidea Metatheria Diprotodontia and the chronicle of kangaroo evolution Journal of Mammalian Evolution 7 4 214 237 doi 10 1023 A 1009488431055 S2CID 41226126 a b c d e Seebeck J H amp Rose R W 1989 Potoroidae PDF In D W Walton amp B J Richardson eds Fauna of Australia Vol 1B Mammalia Australian Government Publishing Service Archived from the original PDF on 2005 07 23 Retrieved 2006 12 08 a b c d e f Burrowing bettong boodie Archived 2007 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Nature Base Fauna Species Profiles Burrowing bettong Bettongia lesueur Archived 2007 05 01 at the Wayback Machine 2006 ARKive a b c d e f g Short J amp Turner B 1999 Ecology of burrowing bettongs Bettongia lesueur Marsupialia Potoroidae on Dorre and Bernier Islands Western Australia Wildlife Research 26 5 651 669 doi 10 1071 WR98039 West R S Tilley L Moseby K E 2019 10 16 A trial reintroduction of the western quoll to a fenced conservation reserve implications of returning native predators Australian Mammalogy 42 3 257 265 doi 10 1071 AM19041 ISSN 1836 7402 Martin G 2003 The roll of small ground foraging mammals in topsoil health and biodiversity Implications to management and restoration Ecological Management amp Restoration 4 2 114 119 doi 10 1046 j 1442 8903 2003 00145 x Sarre A 1999 Slow change on the range PDF Ecos 100 44 a b Short J Calaby J July 2001 The status of Australian mammals in 1922 collections and field notes of museum collector Charles Hoy Australian Zoologist 31 4 533 562 doi 10 7882 az 2001 002 ISSN 0067 2238 Robley A J Short J amp Bradley S 2002 Do European rabbits Oryctolagus cuniculus influence the population ecology of the burrowing bettong Bettongia lesueur Wildlife research 29 423 429 Menkhorst P Knight F 2004 A Field Guide to the Mammals of Australia Oxford University Press South Melbourne Victoria ISBN 0 19 555037 4 Van Dyck S Gynther I Baker A 2013 Field Companion to the Mammals of Australia New Holland Publishers Chatswood New South Wales ISBN 9781877069819 Burrowing Bettong s historic homecoming to Central Australia The National Tribune 2022 06 01 Retrieved 2022 06 03 Locally extinct bettongs and bandicoots released Mirage News Retrieved 2023 10 03 Boodie Burrowing Bettong Shark Bay Retrieved 2020 09 03 author Sturt National Park Review of Environmental Factors for the reintroduction of locally extinct mammals NSW Environment Energy and Science Retrieved 2020 09 03 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Sources Tim Flannery 2007 Chasing Kangaroos A Continent a Scientist and a Search for the World s Most Extraordinary Creature ISBN 978 0 8021 1852 3External links editTypes of teeth Animal Diversity Web Skull terminology mammalogy lab for Texas A amp M Arid Recovery Images and Video ARKive org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boodie amp oldid 1204193541, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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