WORLD / ASIA-PACIFIC
Bandicoot back from the brink on Australian mainland
Published: Sep 15, 2021 06:23 PM
People take photos near Sydney Opera House in Sydney, Australia, Aug. 20, 2021.Photo:Xinhua

People take photos near Sydney Opera House in Sydney, Australia, Aug. 20, 2021.Photo:Xinhua



 A small nocturnal marsupial that once roamed the Australian mainland has been brought back from the brink of extinction after a decades-long conservation effort, authorities said Wednesday. 

The Eastern Barred Bandicoot populated the grassy plains of Victoria state's southwest until it was all but obliterated by non-native foxes, feral cats and habitat destruction.

By 1989, there were just 150 animals left in the region, mostly scrounging an existence in rusted-out cars at a rubbish dump.

Over the past three decades, multimillion dollar captive breeding and rewilding programs have revived the mainland Australian population to an estimated 1,500 - bumping it off the state's "extinct in the wild" list.

"We are excited to announce the change in conservation status for the Eastern Barred Bandicoot from extinct in the wild to endangered -- it is an incredible first for Australia," Victoria state Environment Minister Lily D'Ambrosio said.

A closely related sub-species can also be found on the southern island of Tasmania, where it is classified as vulnerable.

The announcement is a rare conservation win in Australia, which environmentalists say has the world's worst mammal extinction rate.

Amy Coetsee, threatened species biologist at Zoos Victoria, said it offered "hope that with persistence, determination and the support of government, volunteers and communities, we can win the fight against extinction."

Conservation teams created several predator-free sites for the bandicoots - some fenced and others protected by trained dogs - as well as moving animals to fox-free islands.

The areas were populated with bandicoots largely bred in captivity by Zoos Victoria, which is now ending that breeding program on account of the success.

Coetsee said the organization was "100 percent confident" that the Eastern Barred Bandicoot was now secure in the wild.