Quoll feet are also absolutely top tier!
Quoll feet are also absolutely top tier!
Random Delightful Fact of the Day -
Eastern quolls go grey as they get older!
A juvenile (~6 mths old) on the L, & a 4 yr old on the R
(Worth noting that 4 yrs old is oooooold for an eastern quoll)
It's bizarre. I can think of at least 3 scientific publications that predict (i.e., model) the uncontrolled explosion of deer across Tas. None of them were referred to in the report. weirdddd
βNo anticipatedβ except by all of us that have been saying for ever that the #feral #deer management plan is pathetic. π #wildoz
www.abc.net.au/news/2025-10...
βNot anticipatedβ, if youβve been living under a rock for the past 5 yearsβ¦
www.abc.net.au/news/2025-10...
Feral deer are a huuuuge problem in Tasmania thatβs only getting worse. Legislation catching up with reality would be a good start - incredibly, theyβre still a partly protected speciesβ¦
The City of Platypuses!!
The measure for how excellent a city is should be how quickly you can see something wonderful.
It took less than an hour after arriving in #Hobart for @drdevildave.bsky.social and me to see a #platypus, which is of course the most wonderful thing there is. #Tasmania #MammalWatching #WildOz
A dangerous(ly adorable) predator approachesβ¦
Harry, why is your dog stealing quoll food!?
Should note that the devils can, & do, extract themselves from this situation perfectly well. Thereβs no denying them foodβ¦
A Tasmanian devil standing pensively outside a tube containing food. The tube is CLEARLY too small for the devil to fit intoβ¦
Oh wait, no it isnβtβ¦ The devil has comically managed to insert the entire front half of his body into the narrow tube. It looks like he is entering another dimension
As part of eastern quoll translocation work, we use supplementary feeding stations that are meant to exclude Tasmanian devils.
The devils disagreeβ¦
I am here for the Captain Quoll rebrand!!
I'm guessing this is probably very well worth the read! onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10....
A marsupial pouch full of tiny, pink eastern quolls. Their distinctive spotted pelage is starting to become apparent
Quoll beans!!
These tiny eastern quolls are only around 5 weeks old, & just starting to get their spots
#GardensforWildlife members, here is a survey just for you! Your garden is the missing link in a new @utas.edu.au Honours research project. Honours student Millicent Biggs is studying how backyard gardens support #Tasmanian #wildlife. Start the survey here: lnkd.in/gChGeTAa
Please enjoy this antechinus sproinging* away
* technical term
The kultarr is officially three species!
So proud of this work and a big thanks to Australia's amazing museum network and my great supervisor team
@kennytravouillon.bsky.social
@reneecatullo.bsky.social
@planigale.bsky.social
bakerecologylab.wordpress.com
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
Echidnas! Everyone loves echidnas. www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
Thatβs a funky looking EQ - its vibe is all wrong!
A display of taxidermy of several species of Australian mammal, with a big green map of Australia.
A taxidermy eastern quoll. The map on its label suggests the quoll lives in Tasmania (where it still does live today) and the southeast of the mainland (where it became extinct)
You can date a display of Australian mammals by whether the distribution maps recognise recent extinctions. Eastern #quolls went extinct in mainland Australia in the 1960s, but they're still on this historic display at @hunterianglasgow.bsky.social Zoology Museum.
#taxidermy #extinction
Whoops, sorry - that wasn't meant to be the take-home! The captive-bred quolls did great, we just have to refine methods in terms of which individuals are released to help them with breeding. So a focus on juveniles & adults who have bred previously in future, which is exactly what we're doing βΊοΈ
Busy start to #ICCB2025 - sharing @tasland.bsky.social ten year fauna camera data set - pre & post-fire at Five Rivers. Huge shout out to coauthors including @drdevildave.bsky.social & Jo Potts
This work was the result of a great collaboration between @tasland.bsky.social, @utas.edu.au, WWF Australia and the Tasmanian Quoll Conservation Program (made up in part by Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary, Devils@Cradle, East Coast Nature World & Trowunna Wildlife Sanctuary)
A nesting box full of quolls, with both colour morphs (dark & fawn) represented.
Another interesting side finding was the first (that we know of) genetic confirmation of multiple paternity in eastern quolls, with multiple litters found to have been fathered by more than one male quoll!
Useful lessons to be learned from this for future translocations of this species, with a key one being around releasing reproductively naive adult quolls. They were able to survive well in the environment, but may not have been able to translate that to breeding success.
An adult male light-morph eastern quoll about to be released
However, genetic analysis of the next generation found no evidence that any of them had a captive-bred parent!
While we may have missed some juveniles in our sampling, this (at the least) indicates that the captive-bred quolls had lower breeding success than their wild counterparts
An eastern quoll in the hand, after having a small genetic sample taken
We also wanted to examine the genetic effects of the supplementation, so sampled the next generation of quolls post-release.
This was a key part of an Honour's project by Jessica Morrison, who's the lead author on the study
A dark morph eastern quoll darting off
A population supplementation of eastern quolls occurred @tasland.bsky.social's Silver Plains property, to boost a flagging population of this threatened species. Results were encouraging, w/ high survival & low dispersal of captive-bred quolls.
Read about it here - www.publish.csiro.au/AM/AM22011
An eastern quoll peeking out from a nest of dry grass
π£ New quoll science, looking at the genetic outcomes of a translocation of eastern quolls in Tasmania! π§ͺπ§¬
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
π§΅Thread below β¬οΈ
Come chat about quolls, puns, and finding any excuse to draw animals for science at my poster at #ICCB2025
Monday atΒ 4:30 PM - 6:00 PM inΒ Great Hall 3 & 4
See you there!