| Don't Bag the Environment April to September 2011 |
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Spotted-tailed quoll projectFrom April 2011 - September 2011 all funds collected from the Don't Bag the Environment program will be donated to help protect the endangered Spotted-tailed quoll Dasyurus maculatus, one of our largest surviving carnivorous marsupials.
Females breed only once a year and baby quolls are left nestled in grass-lined burrows or hollow logs while their mothers go out to hunt or forage for food. Spotted-tailed quolls consume a variety of prey, including possums, rats, birds, rabbits and insects. A major threat to Spotted-tailed quolls is the destruction of their native habitat through logging. A staggering 70% of Victoria's native bushland has already been cleared, making it harder and harder for quolls to find safe places to live and raise their young. The introduction of predators such as foxes, and accidental poisoning as a result of wild dog baiting programs also put quolls at risk. In Tasmania, many quolls fall victim to deliberately laid poison baits designed to kill wildlife before they feed on post-logging regeneration seedlings. Australia has some of the most magnificent and biodiverse forests in the world that help to mitigate the effects of climate change as well as maintain our water supplies. Yet many of these ancient forests, particularly in Tasmania, Victoria and New South Wales, are being clear-felled, burnt, and turned into woodchips for paper and cardboard.
You can donate to this project through the Paddy Pallin Foundation or by donating direct to the Wilderness Society. |
| Last Updated on Monday, 21 March 2011 09:41 |
See what the Don't Bag the Environment program is supporting. You can donate through the Paddy Pallin Foundation now! |