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Article << Previous     |     Next >>   Contents Vol 31(2)

Conservation of the false water rat (Xeromys myoides) depends on landscape complementation

Tanya L. Russell A B C, Peter T. Hale A

A The Ecology Centre, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
B Present Address: Ifakara Health Institute, PO Box 53, Ifakara, Kilombero, United Republic of Tanzania & Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Pembroke Place, Liverpool, L3 5QA, United Kingdom.
C Corresponding author. Email: trussell@ihi.or.tz
 
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Abstract

Identification of habitat variables that are associated with patch occupancy can provide a solid foundation for conservation, especially when habitats and landscapes are affected by human activities. As a case study to investigate the importance of landscape complementation and habitat quality for conservation, we examined the habitat preferences of a vulnerable native rodent, the false water rat (Xeromys myoides Thomas). In this study, results from surveys for animal presence and recording of habitat attributes in localities in south-east Queensland showed that X. myoides prefers a habitat with a wide mangrove zone of short mangroves and a high percentage of relatively tall vegetation cover in the sedge/saltmarsh zone. The absence of X. myoides from areas of likely habitat at a large scale can be attributed, at least in part, to the local habitat variables that overrode predictions based at a large scale. The findings suggest that availability of suitable habitat is a factor limiting the distribution and abundance of X. myoides. It is clear that landscape complementation influences patch occupancy and should be an essential consideration for conservation programs.

Keywords: anthropogenic impacts, habitat preferences, intertidal wetlands, logistic regression.


   
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