Gilbert's potoroo is one of Australia's most
critically endangered mammals, Along with the dwindling number of the species after their rediscovery in Australia, one of the potoroos was found to have some sort of sickness when brought into captivity in early 2000. The scientists who had brought the young male potoroo and its mother into captivity found that the animal had significant loss of appetite, and lost 32% of its body mass within a few weeks. They had observed it moving in circles in captivity and behaving in an odd manner. They had also noticed symptoms of sporadic coughing fits and before its death had seen that the potoroo had actually gone into a state of
hypothermia. In a later study of a long-nosed potoroo, the same symptoms were found and were likened to a fatal disease,
cryptococcosis, which had been contracted while the animals were in the wild. This could also be a factor why the potoroo population has been dwindling in the wild, because the disease could be killing the young before they are able to reproduce.
Translocation efforts A small population was successfully established on
Bald Island between 2005 and 2007 (a total of 10 animals having been moved there, making a total of 14), when just 40 individuals remained in the wild. This was intended as an "insurance population" for those still in the wild at Two Peoples Bay. Remote islands are suitable owing to the absence of feral animals and
predators. In 2016,
Michaelmas Island, off the coast of
Two Peoples Bay, was chosen as a new habitat location. The island's lack of predators was a key factor in its selection, which would provide Gilbert's potoroo with a similar level of long-term protection enjoyed by the
quokkas of
Rottnest Island, also in Western Australia. Four individuals (rescued from the Two Peoples Bay fire but two died and the remaining two were removed and put back into the Two Peoples reserve after being looked after and fed to regain their normal weight. The animals had stayed only on the granite part, which covers a third of the island, and there had not been enough food to sustain them. In 2017, four animals were translocated as a temporary trial from Bald Island to
Middle Island, a island in the Recherche Archipelago. The signs were good, so a second trial began in 2018 with the translocation of 10 animals from Bald Island. As of December 2018, the entire population was estimated to comprise at least 100 individuals, with 10 on Middle Island, 70 on Bald Island, 20 at Waychinicup and two at Mt Gardner (Two Peoples Bay). == References ==