
The disappearing mammal fauna of northern Australia: context, cause, and response
Author(s) -
Woinarski John C. Z.,
Legge Sarah,
Fitzsimons James A.,
Traill Barry J.,
Burbidge Andrew A.,
Fisher Alaric,
Firth Ron S. C.,
Gordon Iain J.,
Griffiths Anthony D.,
Johnson Christopher N.,
McKenzie Norm L.,
Palmer Carol,
Radford Ian,
Rankmore Brooke,
Ritchie Euan G.,
Ward Simon,
Ziembicki Mark
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
conservation letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.153
H-Index - 79
ISSN - 1755-263X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1755-263x.2011.00164.x
Subject(s) - mammal , context (archaeology) , biodiversity , national park , fauna , ecology , geography , predation , habitat , wildlife conservation , wildlife , biodiversity conservation , biology , archaeology
This article provides a context to, attempts an explanation for, and proposes a response to the recent demonstration of rapid and severe decline of the native mammal fauna of Kakadu National Park. This decline is consistent with, but might be more accentuated than, declines reported elsewhere in northern Australia; however, such a comparison is constrained by the sparse information base across this region. Disconcertingly, the decline has similarities with the earlier phase of mammal extinctions that occurred elsewhere in Australia. We considered four proximate factors (individually or interactively) that might be driving the observed decline: habitat change, predation (by feral cats), poisoning (by invading cane toads), and novel disease. No single factor readily explains the current decline. The current rapid decline of mammals in Kakadu National Park and northern Australia suggests that the fate of biodiversity globally might be even bleaker than evident in recent reviews, and that the establishment of conservation reserves alone is insufficient to maintain biodiversity. This latter conclusion is not new; but the results reported here further stress the need to manage reserves far more intensively, purposefully, and effectively, and to audit regularly their biodiversity conservation performance.