- Brush-tailed Rock-wallaby
Taxobox
name = Brush-tailed Rock-wallabyMSW3 Groves|pages=68]
status = NT
status_ref = IUCN2006|assessors=Australasian Marsupial & Monotreme Specialist Group | year = 1996 | id = 16746 | title = Petrogale penicillata | downloaded =2006-05-11 Listed as Vulnerable (VU C2a v2.3)]
trend = down
status_system = iucn3.1
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis =Mammal ia
subclassis =Marsupial ia
ordo =Diprotodontia
familia =Macropodidae
genus = "Petrogale "
species = "P. penicillata"
binomial = "Petrogale penicillata"
binomial_authority = (Gray, 1827)The Brush-tailed Rock-wallaby or Small-eared Rock-wallaby ("Petrogale penicillata") is a kind of
wallaby , one of several rock-wallabies in the genus "Petrogale ". It inhabits rock piles and cliff lines along theGreat Dividing Range from about 100 km north-west ofBrisbane to northern Victoria, in vegetation ranging fromrainforest to dry sclerophyl forests. Populations have declined seriously in the south and west of its range, but it remains locally common in northernNew South Wales and southernQueensland . ["A Field Guide to the Mammals of Australia", Menkhorst, P and Knight, F, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 2001 ISBN 0-19-550870-X]External introductions
As part of the acclimatisation movement of the late 1800s, governor Grey introduced this and four other species of wallabies (including the rare
Parma Wallaby ) to islands inHauraki Gulf , nearAuckland, New Zealand , where they became well-established. In modern times, these populations have come to be viewed as exotic pests, with severe impacts on the indigenous flora and fauna. As a result, eradication is being undertaken. Wallabies have been removed from Rangitoto andMotutapu Island s, and eradication is ongoing fromKawau Island .In 2003 some Kawau brush-tails were relocated to the Waterfall Springs Conservation Park north of
Sydney , New South Wales, for captive breeding purposes.Due to an escape of a pair in the 1920s, a small breeding population of the Brush-tailed Rock-wallabies also exists on the island of
Oahu inHawaii .References
External links
* [http://www.fnpw.org.au/OurProjects/Plants_Wildlife/BTRW.htm Brush-tailed Rock-wallaby recovery in NSW (Foundation for National Parks & Wildlife)]
* [http://www.fnpw.com.au/ForSupporters/PAWS/enews063/BTRW.htm Brush-tailed Rock-wallaby population in Green Gully - a conservation case study]
* [http://www.fnpw.org.au/enews054/BTRWNews.htm Brush-tailed Rock-wallaby habitat modelling]
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