Threats to the dunnart
The main threats to the dunnart are habitat fragmentation, inappropriate fire regimes, and feral predators.
Islands of bushland in a sea of farm crops
While once common throughout Southwest Australia these diminutive marsupials are now confined to ‘islands’ of remnant vegetation, the result of large-scale clearing for agriculture.
The majority of its remaining habitat is privately-owned bush remnants.
Dunnarts are known to be able to recolonise burnt areas readily as they are adapted to mid-successional complexes of vegetation. However, a single fire can potentially wipe out an entire population.
As these remnants have become increasingly isolated from one another, lack of connective bush corridors can mean that re-colonisation is less likely to occur.
Feral animals
Other major threats to the little long-tailed dunnart include feral foxes and feral cats, which are aided in their search for prey by the ever-shrinking bush remnants across their ranges.
Feral foxes and cats have played a major role in the decline and extinction of Australian fauna since European settlement.
Studies have shown that when living alongside one another, foxes tend to be primary predators with cats playing second fiddle. In the absence of foxes, cats have been found to fill the fox’s role and so increase their impact on fauna.
Together, they are ‘ecological vacuum-cleaners’ of Australia’s bushland, deserts, coasts and wetlands and have had tremendous impact on its unique and diverse fauna.
Feral Foxes
The European red fox (Vulpes vulpes) was introduced into Australia in the mid 1800s in Southeast Australia for the sport of fox hunting and has since spread over much of Australia. Only tropical northern Australia remains fox-free. Even Tasmania has seen deliberate, illegal fox introductions in recent years.
The fox is an opportunistic predator and scavenger and can eat fruit and berries when prey is scarce. It has played a major role in the decline of many ground nesting birds, reptiles, amphibians and small to mid-sized mammals, such as dunnarts, bandicoots and even rock wallabies.
Feral Cats
Domestic cats (Felis catus) are believed to have been first introduced into Australia in the 1700s. They were brought in as companion animals by European settlers and turned loose across rural areas in the hope that they would reduce numbers of introduced rodents.
Feral cats are now well established over the entire mainland of Australia (including the north where foxes are absent) and on many coastal islands off mainland Australia.
Being agile climbers, good fishers and able to survive long periods in desert regions without drinking, cats are extremely adaptable and highly efficient hunters. They are responsible for the extinctions of some island fauna and have been linked to the decline of many insects, frogs, reptiles, birds and small mammals.
As cats generally have strong hunting instincts, domestic and feral cats impact heavily and directly on native fauna.
Domestic cats can be found roaming freely around almost all Australian towns and cities, where they hunt such prey as frogs, fish, birds, mammals, skinks, geckoes and insects.
While feral cats may at times hunt larger prey than their pet cousins, larger species of native animals can be particularly vulnerable to domestic cat predation when young and small. Domestic cats, for example, are known to hunt and kill the young of bandicoots, possums and monitor lizards (goannas).
Additionally, feral cat populations are continually increasing from domestic cat populations. Cats breed from an early age and in good conditions, feral cats can have two litters of 3-7 kittens a year.