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Ecology, management and conservation in natural and modified habitats
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The Feeding Ecology of the Dingo. 1. Stomach Contents From Trapping in South-Eastern Australia, and the Non-Target Wildlife Also Caught in Dingo Traps.

AE Newsome, LK Corbett, PC Catling and RJ Burt

Australian Wildlife Research 10(3) 477 - 486
Published: 1983

Abstract

In stomach contents of 530 dingoes (Canis familiaris dingo) in south east Australia, 89.3% of feed, by occurrence, was large and medium-sized marsupials (Wallabia, Macropus, Pseudocheirus and Trichosurus). Of 26 dingoes with sheep or cattle remains in the stomach, 11 had eaten it as carrion, judging from the presence of maggots, and 5 of those had obtained it from carcasses used as bait for the traps. There was 4% of feral pig, 0.3% of horse and 7.8% of rabbit, which are all regarded as pests. There were 26 species of prey altogether. Of the 25 other species caught in the traps, over 20 were protected wildlife.

https://doi.org/10.1071/WR9830477

© CSIRO 1983

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