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Tag: rediscovery

  • “Native cat” thought to have vanished seen for the first time in 80 years

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    An endangered species of marsupial known as the “northern quoll” or the “North Australian native cat” has been spotted in a wildlife sanctuary in Queensland for the first time in almost a century, sparking hopes of a potential comeback. 

    The critter was captured on a motion-sensor camera at the 164,850-hectare Piccaninny Plains Wildlife Sanctuary in Northern Kaanju Country, jointly owned by Australian Wildlife Conservancy (AWC) and The Tony & Lisette Lewis Foundation.  

    Once widespread across northern and eastern Australia, northern quoll populations have collapsed due to toxic cane toads; feral predators including cats; inappropriate fire regimes; and habitat loss.  

    The closest detection of the species was in 2017, when a quoll was captured on a trail camera on the neighbouring Indigenous managed Kaanju Ngaachi Wenlock and Pascoe River IPA by Chuulangun Rangers. 

    Ecologists have been fearing the loss of the species from Piccaninny Plains for nearly two decades after failing to detect the elusive marsupial in surveys since 2008—including multiple targeted camera deployments in 2015, 2021 and 2023. 

    Then last year, sanctuary manager Nick Stock, following a hunch, deployed a single camera on an isolated rocky outcrop within the sanctuary that he spotted from a helicopter. Within days he had captured unmistakable evidence of a quoll. 

    “It was a fantastic surprise!” Helena Stokes, AWC Wildlife Ecologist said. “After years of no sightings, to finally confirm a northern quoll on the sanctuary is hugely uplifting for our team. It reinforces the importance of persistence, good science, and managing threats across large landscapes.” 

    This record, according to Stokes gives them a “roadmap” and a clear starting point for future surveys and research. 

    “It’s possible this quoll, and hopefully others, have adapted their behaviour in response to the presence of cane toads. Understanding that resilience could be vital for the species’ long-term survival,” she said. 

    The rediscovery also offers an important starting point for understanding how the species continues to persist on Cape York.

    Early signs indicate that the rocky outcrop has largely escaped fire—thanks to AWC’s long‑term fire management—and, to date, surveillance cameras have not detected any feral cats in the area. 

    “Every rediscovery matters,” said Nick Stock. “Just when we were close to giving up hope, this little quoll reminds us why we keep searching, and why protecting these landscapes at scale is essential.”

    Do you have a tip on a science story that Newsweek should be covering? Do you have a question about endangered species? Let us know via science@newsweek.com.
     

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  • Long-eared species feared extinct for 55 years rediscovered in Turkmenistan

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    The Turkestan long-eared bat, not seen for 55 years, has been rediscovered in the Karakum Desert, researchers said.

    The Turkestan long-eared bat, not seen for 55 years, has been rediscovered in the Karakum Desert, researchers said.

    Museum für Naturkunde Berlin

    In October, a team of international researchers set out in search of a creature not observed since 1970.

    Scientists from Germany, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan embarked on an expedition to the Karakum Desert, the only known habitat of the Turkestan long-eared bat, according to a Nov. 4 news release from the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin.

    After reviewing Turkmenistan’s bat populations, scientists gave the species top research priority due to the extremely limited knowledge available and fears that it could now be extinct.

    The species is known only from a few museum specimens and has never been photographed or described alive — until now.

    As the team scoured the desert habitat which spans the border regions of Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, they discovered a young female Turkestan long-eared bat hidden in a crevice.

    This is among the first photographs ever captured of the species, researchers said.
    This is among the first photographs ever captured of the species, researchers said. Christian Dietz Museum für Naturkunde Berlin

    Shortly after, an adult male was seen in a cave 54 miles away near the border of Uzbekistan, experts said. The sightings mark the species rediscovery after a 55-year absence.

    Researchers also captured the first audio, video and image materials of the species, according to the release.

    Experts said the Turkestan long-earned bat is likely endangered, facing threats of an increasingly hotter, drier desert caused by climate change.

    “The natural vegetation cover is steadily declining, and the already limited habitat of the species is shrinking further,” researchers said.

    Turkmen government plans to establish a protected area covering 50,000 hectares in the Karakum Desert that will benefit the long-eared bat and other vulnerable species in the region, experts said.

    Lauren Liebhaber

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    Lauren Liebhaber covers international science news with a focus on taxonomy and archaeology at McClatchy. She holds a bachelor’s degree from St. Lawrence University and a master’s degree from the Newhouse School at Syracuse University. Previously, she worked as a data journalist at Stacker.
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    Lauren Liebhaber

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