Indistinct changes in the mammal fauna between 1986-2017 at Judbarra-Gregory National Park, Northern Territory

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Abstract

The mammal fauna in many parts of northern Australia has undergone dramatic changes in the past 20-30 years, though longitudinal data that spans this period are limited and largely from coastal and high rainfall regions. We examined data from Judbarra-Gregory National Park that has been collected in a generally systematic manner from 1986 to 2015. We standardised this data in a simple manner (i.e., species by relative abundance and site frequency) to examine if there were any stark changes over this time span. Though we recognise some limitations in our comparisons (i.e., spatial variation in sites and methods), the data indicated that the mammal fauna had generally not changed substantially in composition, relative abundance or frequency across sites. However, some species symptomatic of small mammal decline elsewhere (i.e., Rattus tunneyi ) may have become less common, whereas other species were recorded for the first time in more recent years (2010-2017), particularly by camera traps (i.e., Trichosurus vulpecula, Isoodon macrourus, Melomys burtoni ). We postulate that change in the mammal fauna on the semi-arid fringe of tropical savannas may have occurred prior to the 1980s, with a long history of cattle grazing likely a contributing factor. The mammal fauna there, is also perhaps naturally sparse, and heterogeneous in spatial and temporal distribution.

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