Hallu wrote:Anyone been on Maria Island recently ? How's the population over here ? A documentary I saw claimed they're getting quite familiar and that you can see them during the day.
Some 28 disease-free devils were introduced to the East Coast island throughout 2012 and 2013, and that group has grown to a healthy population of between 70 and 80.
Hallu wrote:Anyone been on Maria Island recently ? How's the population over here ? A documentary I saw claimed they're getting quite familiar and that you can see them during the day.
MickyB wrote:Thanks for the link Nuts.
Am I correct in assuming that devils don't currently live in Narawntapu National Park?
I also didn't realise that the devils could be vaccinated against DFTD.
Hallu wrote:MickyB wrote:Thanks for the link Nuts.
Am I correct in assuming that devils don't currently live in Narawntapu National Park?
I also didn't realise that the devils could be vaccinated against DFTD.
"Having a vastly reduced number of devils means the ecosystem is not totally functioning and when you walk around Narawntapu now although there are devils there are lots of carcases lying around that haven't been cleaned up.
"There's more food there for devils than there are devils."
Nuts wrote:I'm not sure what the vaccinations were for Micky, not DFTD.
They have an ongoing problem with mange out there, I'd suspect just specific to Wombats & not something i'd assume helped by vaccination?
A test group of Tasmanian devils vaccinated against the deadly facial tumour disease which is threatening to wipe them out is ready to be released in the wild.
The devils will be released in the Narawntapu National Park in northern Tasmania in September.
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