Biology:Mareeba rock-wallaby

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Short description: Species of marsupial

Mareeba rock-wallaby[1]
Mareeba Rock Wallaby JCB.jpg
Mareeba rock-wallaby with joey
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Marsupialia
Order: Diprotodontia
Family: Macropodidae
Genus: Petrogale
Species:
P. mareeba
Binomial name
Petrogale mareeba
Eldridge & Close, 1992
Mareeba Rock Wallaby area.png
Mareeba rock-wallaby range (brown), within Australia

The Mareeba rock-wallaby (Petrogale mareeba) is a rare species of rock-wallaby found around Mareeba in northeastern Queensland, Australia.

Taxonomy

The Mareeba rock-wallaby is a member of a group of seven very closely related species within the genus Petrogale, which also includes the Cape York rock-wallaby (P. coenensis), the unadorned rock-wallaby (P. inornata) and the allied rock-wallaby (P. assimilis). It was only identified as a separate species in 1992.[citation needed] Both the common name and the Latin specific epithet reflect the distribution of this species around the settlement of Mareeba.

Distribution and habitat

The Mareeba rock-wallaby is a rare species, found in the highlands west of Cairns from around Mount Garnet to the Mitchell River and Mount Carbine, and inland to Mungana,[3] but only on the tops of a couple of mountain ranges.[citation needed] The animals can be seen in their natural habitat in the Granite Gorge Nature Park, about 60 kilometres (37 mi) inland from Cairns.[citation needed]

Conservation

Classification

Although rare, and a near-threatened species under IUCN classification,[2] the animal is classed as one of "Least concern" under Queenland's Nature Conservation Act 1992.[4]

Survival after bushfires

After a huge fire raged through the Yourka Reserve near Einasleigh, run by Bush Heritage Australia in December 2019, part of the 2019–2020 bushfires in Australia, it was feared that the rock-wallaby population might not survive. However, it was found that the population was thriving, with several new joeys spotted in their mothers' pouches, using motion-sensing cameras. Reserve manager Paul Hales said that they had been conducting cool burns for years to reduce dense tree foliage, which had prevented the growth of native grasses such as cockatoo grass and kangaroo grass. Still, the December fire had helped to thin out the trees even more, "with daylight reaching the ground for the first time in 25 years". The renewed growth would help to support the survival of the ground-dwelling native animals.[5]

References

Further reading

Wikidata ☰ Q209660 entry