Register      Login
Australian Mammalogy Australian Mammalogy Society
Journal of the Australian Mammal Society
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Natural Resource Management implications of the pre-European non-volant mammal fauna of the southern tip of Eyre Peninsula, South Australia

Matthew C. McDowell A B C and Graham C. Medlin A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Mammal Section, South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia.

B School of Biological Science, Flinders University of South Australia, PO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.

C Corresponding author. Email: matthew.mcdowell@flinders.edu.au

Australian Mammalogy 32(2) 87-93 https://doi.org/10.1071/AM09020
Submitted: 5 August 2009  Accepted: 7 April 2010   Published: 26 July 2010

Abstract

Sinkholes and coastal caves located in, around and between the Coffin Bay and Lincoln National Parks were surveyed for pre-European fossils, which were collected from or just below the sediment surface. Twenty-four pre-European fossil samples, including eight already in the collections of the South Australian Museum, were analysed and 25 native and five introduced species of non-volant mammal were identified. Native and introduced species were often found together, indicating that the sites have accumulated mammal remains in both pre- and post-European times. Only four of the non-volant native mammals recovered are known to be extant in the study area today: Lasiorhinus latifrons, Macropus fuliginosus, Cercartetus concinnus and Rattus fuscipes. In contrast, 20 native species recorded have been extirpated and one (Potorous platyops) is now extinct. C. concinnus was recorded from only one of the fossil assemblages but is known to be widespread in the study area today. This may indicate recent vegetation change related to European land management practices and have implications for natural resource management in the area.

Additional keywords: Holocene fossil, mammal decline, subfossil.


Acknowledgements

This research was funded by an Ark on Eyre grant. Many people have provided assistance in the completion of this research. Chief among these are the staff of the Department for Environment and Heritage, Eyre Peninsula, who provided their time, vehicles and knowledge to help us locate most of the sinkholes surveyed. We also thank SA Water for allowing access to the Southern Basin Prescribed Wells Area. We thank Tom Bott, Rhonda Ogilvie, and the Puckridge family for allowing us access to private property and helping us find sinkholes. The ‘Friends of Parks’ volunteers and Green Corps were a huge help in excavating SAW 1. We are grateful to Catherine Kemper (Curator of Mammals) and David Stemmer (Collection Manager, Mammals), South Australian Museum, who provided access to the reference collection in their care as well as data on modern mammals that have been collected in the study area. Finally, two South Australian Museum volunteers, Brian Ross and Zbigniew Rudnicki, deserve our deepest thanks for providing tireless aid in sorting the diagnostic elements from most of the sieve concentrates that we collected. We are also grateful to Alex Baynes, Mark Eldridge and an anonymous reviewer for constructive criticism that has greatly enhanced the quality of this paper.


References

Andrews P. (1990). ‘Owls, Caves and Fossils.’ (University of Chicago Press: Chicago.)

Aplin K. P. , Braithwaite R. W. , and Baverstock P. R. (2008). Pale field-rat, Rattus tunneyi. In ‘The Mammals of Australia’. (Eds S. Van Dyck and R. Strahan.) pp. 698–700. (Reed New Holland: Sydney.)

Baird R. F. (1991). The taphonomy of late Quaternary cave localities yielding vertebrate remains in Australia. In ‘Vertebrate Palaeontology of Australasia’. (Eds P. Vickers-Rich, J. M. Monaghan, R. F. Baird and T. H. Rich.) pp. 267–309. (Pioneer Design Studio: Melbourne.)

Baynes A. (1979). The analysis of a late Quaternary mammal fauna from Hastings Cave, Jurien, Western Australia. Ph.D. Thesis, University of Western Australia.

Baynes A. (1982). Dasyurids (Marsupialia) in late Quaternary communities in southwestern Australia. In ‘Carnivorous Marsupials’. (Ed. M. Archer.) pp. 503–510. (Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales: Sydney.)

Baynes, A. (1984). Native mammal remains from Wilgie Mia aboriginal ochre mine: evidence on the pre-European fauna of the western arid zone. Records of the Western Australian Museum 11, 297–310.
Baynes A. (1987). The original mammal fauna of the Nullarbor and southern peripheral regions: evidence from skeletal remains in superficial cave deposits. In ‘A Biological Survey of the Nullarbor Region, South and Western Australia in 1984’. (Eds N. L. McKenzie and A. C. Robinson.) pp. 139–152. (South Australian Department of Environment and Planning: Adelaide.)

Baynes A. (1990). The mammals of Shark Bay, Western Australia. In ‘Research in Shark Bay. Report of the France–Australe Bicentenary Expedition Committee’. (Eds P. F. Berry, S. D. Bradshaw and B. R. Wilson.) pp. 313–325. (Western Australian Museum: Perth.)

Baynes, A. , and Baird, R. (1992). The original mammal fauna and some information on the original bird fauna of Uluru National Park, Northern Territory. The Rangeland Journal 14, 92–106.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Baynes A. , and Johnson K. A. (1996). The contributions of the Horn Expedition and cave deposits to knowledge of the original mammal fauna of central Australia. In ‘Exploring Central Australia: Society, the Environment and the 1894 Horn Expedition’. (Eds S. R. Morton and D. J. Mulvaney.) pp. 168–186. (Surrey Beatty: Sydney.)

Bishop, G. C. , and Venning, J. (1986). Sheoak decline on western Eyre Peninsula, South Australia. The South Australian Naturalist 60, 60–66.
Breed W. G. (2008). Sandy inland mouse, Pseudomys hermannsburgensis. In ‘The Mammals of Australia’. (Eds S. Van Dyck and R. Strahan.) pp. 636–637. (Reed New Holland: Sydney.)

Copley, P. B. , Kemper, C. M. , and Medlin, G. C. (1989). The mammals of north-western South Australia. Records of the South Australian Museum 23, 75–88.
Dennis L. (1994). Vegetation survey Jussieu Peninsula. In ‘Biological Survey of the Coffin Bay–Lincoln Bush Corridor on Southern Eyre Peninsula’. (Ed. B. Atkins.) pp. 7–13. (Nature Conservation Society of South Australia Inc.: Adelaide.)

DEH (2004 a). Parks of the Coffin Bay Area Management Plan. Department for Environment and Heritage, Adelaide.

DEH (2004 b). Lincoln National Park Management Plan. Department for Environment and Heritage, Adelaide.

DEH (2007). No species loss: a nature conservation strategy for South Australia 2007–2017. Department for Environment and Heritage, Adelaide.

Hinten, G. , Harriss, F. , Rossetto, M. , and Braverstock, P. R. (2003). Genetic variation and island biogeography: microsatellite and mitochondrial DNA variation in island populations of the Australian bush rat, Rattus fuscipes greyii. Conservation Genetics 4, 759–778.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Masters P. (2008). Crest-tailed mulgara, Dasycercus cristicauda. In ‘The Mammals of Australia’. (Eds S. Van Dyck and R. Strahan.) pp. 49–50. (Reed New Holland: Sydney.)

McDowell, M. C. (1997). Taphonomy and palaeoenvironmental interpretation of a late Holocene deposit from Black’s Point Sinkhole, Venus Bay, SA. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 117, 79–95.
McDowell M. C. (2001). The analysis of late Quaternary fossil mammal faunas from Robertson Cave (5U17, 18, 19) and Wet Cave (5U10, 11) in the Naracoorte World Heritage Area, South Australia. M.Sc. Thesis, Flinders University, Adelaide.

Medlin G. C. (1993). ‘Field Guide to Chambers Gorge, Flinders Ranges.’ (South Australian Museum: Adelaide.)

Medlin G. C. (1996). Report on vertebrate remains from a sinkhole in the Venus Bay Conservation Park. Unpublished Report for the Wildlife Conservation Fund. DENR: Adelaide.

Morris, K. D. (2000). The status and conservation of native rodents in Western Australia. Wildlife Research 27, 405–419.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Moseby K. E. , and Read J. L. (2008). Bolam’s mouse, Pseudomys bolami. In ‘The Mammals of Australia’. (Eds S. Van Dyck and R. Strahan.) pp. 618–619. (Reed New Holland: Sydney.)

Peeters P. , Gerschwitz T. , and Carpenter R. (2006). Restoring sheoak grassy woodlands on lower Eyre Peninsula. Department for Environment and Heritage, Adelaide.

Robinson A. C. , Casperson K. D. , and Hutchinson M. N. (2000). A List of the vertebrates of South Australia. Department for Environment and Heritage, Adelaide.

Smith, M. J. (1977). Remains of mammals, including Notomys longicaudatus (Gould) (Rodentia: Muridae), in owl pellets from the Flinders Ranges, South Australia. Australian Wildlife Research 4, 159–170.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Watts C. H. , and Ling J. K. (1985). Marine and terrestrial mammals. In ‘Natural History of Eyre Peninsula’. (Eds C. R. Twidale, M. J. Tyler and M. Davies.) pp. 139–147. (Royal Society of South Australia: Adelaide.)

Woolley, P. A. (2005). The species of Dasycercus Peters, 1875 (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae). Memoirs of Museum Victoria 62, 213–221.
Woolley P. A. (2008). Dibbler, Parantechinus apicalis. In ‘The Mammals of Australia’. (Eds S. Van Dyck and R. Strahan.) pp. 65–66. (Reed New Holland: Sydney.)