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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Bandicoots return to Booderee: initial survival, dispersal, home range and habitat preferences of reintroduced southern brown bandicoots (eastern sub species; Isoodon obesulus obesulus)

N. M. Robinson A B E , C. I. MacGregor A , B. A. Hradsky B C , N. Dexter D and D. B. Lindenmayer A B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Fenner School of Environment and Society, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.

B The National Environmental Science Program, Threatened Species Recovery Hub, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia.

C School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne, VIC 3010, Australia.

D Booderee National Park, Village Road, Jervis Bay, Jervis Bay Territory 2540, Australia.

E Corresponding author. Email: natasha.robinson@anu.edu.au

Wildlife Research 45(2) 132-142 https://doi.org/10.1071/WR17040
Submitted: 14 March 2017  Accepted: 24 January 2018   Published: 24 April 2018

Abstract

Context: Reintroductions can be an effective means of re-establishing locally extinct or declining faunal populations. However, incomplete knowledge of variables influencing survival and establishment can limit successful outcomes.

Aim: We aimed to examine the factors (e.g. sex, body mass, release order) influencing the survival, dispersal, home range and habitat selection of reintroduced southern brown bandicoots (eastern subspecies; Isoodon obesulus obesulus) into an unfenced, predator-managed environment in south-eastern Australia (Booderee National Park).

Methods: Over 2 weeks in May 2016, six female and five male bandicoots were wild-caught in state forest and hard released into the park. Release locations were approximately evenly distributed between three primary vegetation types assessed as suitable habitat: heath, woodland and forest. Bandicoots were radio-tracked day and night for 4 weeks from the initial release date.

Key results: No mortality was detected. Males dispersed more than twice as far as females (male WR17040_E1a.gif 704 m, female WR17040_E1a.gif 332 m), but there was no significant sex bias in home range size. At the landscape scale, bandicoots preferentially selected home ranges that contained heath and avoided forest. Within home ranges, heath and woodland were both favoured over forest.

Conclusions: Post-release dispersal is sex-biased, but more data are required to determine the influence of other predictors such as body mass and release order. Within the release area, bandicoots favoured non-forest vegetation types.

Implications: Our study outlines factors influencing the establishment of reintroduced bandicoots. We recommend that future bandicoot reintroductions to Booderee National Park occur within areas of heath and woodland, and that subsequent releases consider the potentially larger spatial requirements and conspecific avoidance among male bandicoots. Our findings contribute new knowledge for improving translocation methods of a nationally endangered medium-sized mammal.

Additional keywords: conservation biology, habitat preference, radio telemetry, threatened species, wildlife management.


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