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Laurance, WF. 1997. A distributional survey and habitat model for the endangered northern
Bettong Bettongia tropica in tropical Queensland. Biol. Conserv. 82(1): 47-60.
Address:
WF Laurance; INST NACL PESQUISAS; BIOL DYNAM FOREST FRAGMENTS
PROJECT, CP 478; MANAUS; AMAZONAS; BRAZIL; BR-69011970 BC
The northern bettong Bettongia tropica is an endangered rat-kangaroo
that occurs only in certain dry and mesic forests in tropical
Queensland, Australia. In 1994 and 1995 I conducted a live-trapping
survey at 152 sires throughout its potential geographic range.
Detailed floristic, physiognomic, topographic and geology data
from each site were used to develop a predictive model of bettong
habitat requirements, using generalized linear modeling. Data
from 62 spotlighting censuses and opportunistic observations
were also used to assess potential threats to northern bettongs
posed by introduced foxes Vulpes vulpes, while trapping and
habitat data were employed to evaluate possible effects of rooting-damage
from feral pigs and competition from rufous bettongs Aepyprymnus
rufescens on northern bettong populations. The northern bettong
was detected in only one area, the Lamb Range, where it was
present at nearly half (33/70) of the sites surveyed. Sparse
populations recorded previously at several other localities
in north Queensland may have declined or disappeared. A multiple
Poisson regression model indicated that northern bettongs were
strongly associated with certain types of wet and mesic sclerophyll
forests and woodlands, while rainforest and rainforest-invaded
wet sclerophyll forests were avoided. Northern bettongs occurred
only on infertile metamorphic and granitic substrates, and were
never detected on richer basaltic or alluvial soils. This probably
occurs because fruit-bodies of ectomycorrhizal fungi, which
are a key food resource of northern bettongs, are most abundant
on infertile soils. Foxes were never detected during the survey,
and are unlikely to threaten northern bettong populations at
present. Circumstantial evidence suggests that interspecific
competition from rufous bettongs is also of minimal importance.
Rooting damage by feral pigs, however, may be more significant;
northern bettongs were rarely detected at sites with heavy pig
damage, and this may be because pigs are also feeding on fungal
fruit-bodies. At present, the greatest threat to northern bettongs
is probably encroaching land development, especially in the
crucial Lamb Range area. Northern Queensland is experiencing
rapid population growth, and local shires are attempting to
shunt residential development onto areas with infertile soils
to avoid the lass of productive agricultural land. While normally
a laudable practice, this is precisely the wrong policy in this
specific region. A re-evaluation of the strategic development
plans of local shires is urgently needed to protect remaining
habitats of the northern bettong. Habitat management, especially
regular burning, is also required in key bettong habitats. Burning
will prevent further invasion of wet sclerophyll forests by
rainforest vegetation, which renders the habitat unsuitable
for bettongs, and also is likely to promote the local production
of fungal fruit-bodies upon which the northern bettong is highly
dependent. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd.
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