Seems very similar to America's Ivory Billed Woodpecker, whom I do not trust sightings for since everyone seems to have seen "the ivory billed woodpecker" in their yard.It seems people are popping up all over the place in Australia nowadays 'seeing' Thylacines. I guess the internet and all these muzzy videos and photos is partially to blame, putting the idea into more and more peoples' heads about any unidentified animal(s) that they come across. So its mushroomed into a sort of mass misidentification now. The most recent publicised examples, the young lady in South Australia, and the piece of video from WA ,seem just the latest of many.
It seems this is a genuine scientific Uni sponsored effort (for which I am glad and have a lot more confidence in than ye rogue yobbo going out and ...). Still, it is a long shot, but I am willing to go along with this one.
Should be interesting what other carnivores and sundry marsupials come up in their camera trap surveys on Cape York Peninsula.
It seems this is a genuine scientific Uni sponsored effort (for which I am glad and have a lot more confidence in than ye rogue yobbo going out and ...). Still, it is a long shot, but I am willing to go along with this one.
Should be interesting what other carnivores and sundry marsupials come up in their camera trap surveys on Cape York Peninsula.
Surely you jest - a group concerned with wildlife conservation would never place emphasis on more famous and popular species in the hopes of attracting attention and money towards more reasonable but less charismatic goals?A cynic might suggest this is in fact the only reason this survey is being carried out...