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Reintroducing the red-tailed phascogale (Phascogale calura): insights from 20 years of translocation efforts
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Reintroducing the red-tailed phascogale (Phascogale calura): insights from 20 years of translocation efforts

Tessa Manning, D Peacock, Amanda Bourne, Aliesha Dodson, Michelle Hall, Genevieve Hayes, Timothy Henderson, Rachel Ladd, Catherine Lynch, Danae Moore, …
Wildlife research (East Melbourne), Vol.53(3), WR25123
2026
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CC BY-NC-ND V4.0 Open Access

Abstract

captive breeding dasyurid hyperdispersal phascogale predation reintroduction supplementary feeding translocation
Reintroductions are challenging and many fail. The red-tailed phascogale (Phascogale calura) is a small semi-arboreal Australian dasyurid marsupial that has been extirpated from 99% of its pre-colonisation range. Nine reintroductions have been attempted since 2005 across five States and Territories, six into feral predator-free fenced areas (safe havens) from which feral cats and foxes were extirpated, and three into unfenced areas where cat and/or fox control occurs. We summarise the methods and results of these reintroduction attempts to inform future management. Of the nine reintroduction attempts, three were considered successful and support populations extant for more than five years (2 safe havens and 1 unfenced), three did not lead to population establishment (2 safe havens, 1 unfenced), two safe haven populations remain extant two years after initial reintroduction, and one unfenced reintroduction is still underway. All three successful reintroductions released wild-sourced adult animals, sometimes in combination with captive-bred animals, and were within 280 km of extant wild populations. In comparison all releases to date that did not result in established populations primarily released captive-bred animals. The main challenges encountered during red-tailed phascogale reintroductions included predation by introduced and native predators, hyperdispersal, toxoplasmosis, and severe weight loss post-release. All but one reintroduction (Western Australia, safe haven, wild-sourced founders) reported low recapture rates of founders or high mortality of radio-collared individuals, suggesting low initial survival of translocated animals. Red-tailed phascogales may be more challenging to reintroduce and monitor than some other marsupials due to their small size, making them 1) more vulnerable to predation from both native and invasive (i.e. feral cats and foxes) predators, 2) more susceptible to starvation after release, and their 3) more likely to hyperdisperse through safe haven fences. Captive breeding may affect the probability of post-release survival through inappropriate anti-predator behaviours, unfamiliarity with food sources at release sites and underdeveloped hunting behaviour, and possibly an increased susceptibility to toxoplasmosis. We recommend that practitioners consider sourcing wild animals for translocations where possible or, if using captive-bred animals, employing rigorous toxoplasmosis assessment and hygiene alongside a staged soft-release strategy involving gradually weaning each release group off supplementary food in situ.

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