Hello again.
A few years ago I was on an advisory body for a cattle property near Springsure that had set aside 300ha as a reserve to protect the bridled nailtail wallaby - one of the rarest animals on the planet at the time. These small macropods had once been all over the continent but thought to have finally become extinct some decades ago. A relict population was discovered on a property near Emerald and the reserve was trying to build up a population from some animals taken off that property which had been resumed as a National Park.
Anyway, to the point. Whenever an animal was trapped it was tagged or recorded, weighed, checked for pregnancy if female, and then given a thorough de-ticking. It wasn’t uncommon to pull more than thirty ticks off a wallaby - especially around the base of the ears. The animal itself isn’t much bigger than a large cat.
The biggest problem for survival was feral cats - so, the Sporting Shooters Association would send up members several times a year to shoot them out. Did a reasonable job of it.
The other major problem was the National Park Service itself which was doing its best to recreate the extinction process for the animal in the National Park by killing out the dingoes, banning use of fire and resisting common sense to allow some limited grazing to keep the grass down to what the animals preferred. The green folks who control (the Minister who controls) the parks simply couldn’t make the sensible choice between staying “pure” and accommodating the survival needs of something rarer than snow leopards. As the populations in the park declined the pressure was on to take animals back off the reserve which was fought tooth and nail.
Cheers
I'll have you know that I took him straight to the Kilcoy Hospital, where said de-ticking took place.
Helen was D.O.N. there, at the time![]()
This thread brings back memories of a cranky old teacher whacking my knuckles for using Platypi.....apparently we had to use Platypodes or if you wanted to use Aussie English Platypuses was acceptable. Something about platypus not being Latin but Greek origin. Anyway I had to google an answer -
YouTube
Don't seem to be affected by prawn whitespot then, that devastated the prawn farms on the Logan river, thought to have been due to imported frozen but uncooked prawns that were then used as bait for fishing IIRC. Outbreak
White spot disease
Don't seem to be affected by prawn whitespot then, that devastated the prawn farms on the Logan river, thought to have been due to imported frozen but uncooked prawns that were then used as bait for fishing IIRC. Outbreak
White spot disease
We've got two platypus that can be regularly spotted in our creek, they are very shy creatures and one normally has to sit behind a bush or tree so they don't see you
A few weeks ago one of them came face to face with our rather large duck, they stared at each other for a minute or so then the platypus went under water !!
???? They don't inhabit the same latitudes.
Used to see lots of them in the Caboolture River when I paddled there years ago. We counted 13 in a 5k stretch of the river one morning and they are very inquisitive little animals. They would just sit on top of the water as we glided past.
We also see them regularly in the Styx River west of Armidale.
Numpty
Thomas - 1955 Series 1 107" Truck Cab
Leon - 1957 Series 1 88" Soft Top
Lewis - 1963 Series 11A ex Mil Gunbuggy
Teddy5 - 2001 Ex Telstra Big Cab Td5
Betsy - 1963 Series 11A ex Mil GS
REMLR No 143
We've seen platypus in the Mary River at Maleny, just next to Woolies in the town centre, while drinking coffee on the boardwalk.
Hello again.
Your teacher was technically correct on pulling up any flagrant use of pseudo-Latinism. Just as the plural of hippopotamus isn’t hippopotami for the same reason.
Actually, I used platypi more or less tongue in cheek in my earlier post before reverting to the more popular colloquial variant of platypuses. Platypus would have done just as well I suppose.
Whatever, the buggers are special.
Cheers,
Neil
1975 S3 88" - Ratel
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