- Lesser Stick-nest Rat
Taxobox
name = Lesser Stick-nest Rat
status = CR
status_system = iucn3.1
trend = unknown
status_ref = IUCN2008|assessors=Robinson, T. & Burbidge, A.|year=2008|id=11633|title=Leporillus apicalis|downloaded=10 October 2008]
extinct =1933
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis =Mammal ia
ordo =Rodent ia
familia =Muridae
subfamilia =Murinae
genus = "Leporillus "
species = "L. apicalis"
binomial = "Leporillus apicalis"
binomial_authority = Gould, 1854The Lesser Stick-nest Rat or White-tipped Stick-nest Rat ("Leporillus apicalis") lived in Southern inland
Australia . It accumulated large mounds of sticks to construct itsnest s, which were up to three metres long and a metre high. It was easily tamed, sometimes climbing onto tables to getsugar . It was also eaten by people. The last capture was filmed on 18 July 1933, when the stick-nests were set alight. The specimens are held in the South Australian Museum. The rat may have declined from competition withcattle andsheep . There is a possibility that a Lesser Stick-nest Rat was seen in a cave inWestern Australia in 1970.2008 IUCN Change of Status
The 2008 release of the the updated IUCN Status for the Lesser Stick-nest Rat, has interestingly 'downgraded' their status from Extinct to Critically Endangered (Possibly Extinct), owing to the very slight possibility that a very small population may still exist in yet to be surveyed remote lands of the Australian interior.
On the site, the reasoning is "Listed as Critically Endangered (Possibly Extinct) because, although there are no confirmed reports of this species since 1933, there is a reliable record from 1970 and continued, occasional reports of fresh vegetation being added to old stick-nests. Much of this species' range is in remote portions of central Australia, which have not been fully surveyed. This species is probably extinct, but if it does persist its numbers would almost certainly be very small."cite web
url= http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/11633
title= IUCN 2008 Red List - Leporillus apicalis
accessdaymonth= 10 October
accessyear= 2008]External source
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References
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