Hopping into the history books: finding a new species on sanctuary
It was a routine, crisp Autumn night out in the field. Daniel Burton, Australian Wildlife Conservancy (AWC) Sanctuary Manager, was conducting feral predator control 10m outside the northern boundary of
Scotia Wildlife Sanctuary’s (on Barkandji country) 8,000 hectare fenced area when something small and unfamiliar sprinted by his vehicle. Blink once and he might have missed it.
Daniel pulled on the handbrake and hopped out of his 4WD. He carefully approached the nimble individual, making note of its unique appearance. The little critter looked like a mouse, Daniel was certain of that, but not any mouse he’d seen in the two years working and living at the south-west New South Wales sanctuary. Its eyes were wider, ears bigger, its tail longer, black and bushy. It was twice the size of a house mouse, and it wasn’t running, it was hopping.
Back at Scotia’s homestead, Daniel searched the mammal guide, hoping to identify the individual. He narrowed it down to four potential species – the Dusky Hopping Mouse, Spinifex Hopping Mouse, Fawn Hopping Mouse and Kultarr. He ran the options by Dr Laurence Berry former AWC Senior Ecologist who said, “we don’t have any of these species at Scotia”, to which Daniel responded, “well, we have one now!”.
And the work to identify the species began.
Hopping into the history books: finding a new species on sanctuary
It was a routine, crisp Autumn night out in the field. Daniel Burton, Australian Wildlife Conservancy (AWC) Sanctuary Manager, was conducting feral predator control 10m outside the northern boundary of
Scotia Wildlife Sanctuary’s (on Barkandji country) 8,000 hectare fenced area when something small and unfamiliar sprinted by his vehicle. Blink once and he might have missed it.
Daniel pulled on the handbrake and hopped out of his 4WD. He carefully approached the nimble individual, making note of its unique appearance. The little critter looked like a mouse, Daniel was certain of that, but not any mouse he’d seen in the two years working and living at the south-west New South Wales sanctuary. Its eyes were wider, ears bigger, its tail longer, black and bushy. It was twice the size of a house mouse, and it wasn’t running, it was hopping.
Back at Scotia’s homestead, Daniel searched the mammal guide, hoping to identify the individual. He narrowed it down to four potential species – the Dusky Hopping Mouse, Spinifex Hopping Mouse, Fawn Hopping Mouse and Kultarr. He ran the options by Dr Laurence Berry former AWC Senior Ecologist who said, “we don’t have any of these species at Scotia”, to which Daniel responded, “well, we have one now!”.
And the work to identify the species began.
Hopping into the history books: finding a new species on sanctuary