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Are dingoes the answer to Australia’s feral cat and fox problem?

Dingo - feature image (860x480)

A new study led by a Harry Butler Institute (HBI) scientist has queried whether dingoes, one of Australia’s apex predators, can help suppress introduced cats and foxes.

With 33 mammals, nine birds and three reptile species listed as extinct since the arrival of Europeans in Australia in 1788, the continent has the highest rate of extinction anywhere on the globe.

This devastating figure is largely due to habitat loss from land clearing, grazing and altered fire regime, coupled with the introduction of predators including the domestic cat and red fox.

Professor Trish Fleming, Director of the Centre for Terrestrial Ecosystem Science and Sustainability at HBI is lead researcher of a new study that's reviewed 157 Australian cat, fox and dingo diet studies to help inform the question of meso-predator (feral cat and fox) suppression by dingoes.

The national team of co-authors investigated key differences and overlap in diets of these three predator species to understand the current diets of these predators, and how they have changed over time, and across the country.

The findings, recently published in Royal Society Open Science, provide a comparative analysis of the diets of all three predators and identifies environmental factors that influence dietary overlap.

Professor Fleming said that the results, based on almost 70 years’ worth of data and almost 100,000 samples, show distinctive diets for dingoes and feral cats.

Cats consume mostly birds, reptiles and small mammals and are also reasonably flexible about what they eat, while dingoes consume more medium-sized and large mammals, including livestock.”

“Foxes show substantial dietary overlap with both cats and dingoes. Their diverse and opportunistic diet means they will simply switch food sources to mitigate food competition with dingoes,” she said.

Professor Fleming advised the results have conservation implications, especially for ‘re-wilding programs’ that propose reintroducing dingoes to help control feral cat and fox abundance, and therefore decrease predation pressure on native prey species.

"These results suggest that all three species would rarely compete for the same food items."

It is therefore unlikely that dietary competition with dingoes would suppress cat or fox numbers."

The study further reinforced concerns about the consequences of predation by feral cats and foxes on threatened species.

“We know that cats and foxes are both a serious conservation threat to Australian native fauna. Our findings further prove the need to control cats and foxes to protect vulnerable native species”.

Professor Fleming was joined by leading mammal ecologists from Charles Darwin University, University of Sydney, NSW Department of Primary Industries, WA Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, and Queensland Museum Network.

This research supports the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 15 to protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss.

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Posted on:

12 Oct 2022

Topics:

Science, Research

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