A conservation genetics project on Kojonup Reserve is guiding the management of one of Bush Heritage’s sweetest marsupial residents – the Red-tailed Phascogale.
University of Western Australia zoology and genetics student Rhiannon de Visser slows down her speech, giving one word, kindly, at a time.
“Single – nucleotide – polymorphisms.” She laughs. “It’s a bit of a mouthful.”
And for most of us, it is indeed. The term, shortened by scientists to ‘snips’, or SNPs, describes variations within an animal’s genetic code.
These variations are distributed throughout an individual’s DNA, and can be used to determine how different animals are related. And for a population of tiny, tree-dwelling marsupials at Bush Heritage’s Kojonup Reserve on Koreng Noongar Country in south-west Western Australia, information like this could help safeguard their long-term survival.
Rhiannon first laid eyes on a phascogale in 2020, when she assisted on a four-day monitoring trip to assess the health of the Kojonup population. The survey marked a decade since 30 of the gentle-natured creatures, with bushy tufts on the end of their long tails, were released at Kojonup in Bush Heritage’s first-ever species translocation, in collaboration with the WA Department of Biodiversity, Conservation, and Attractions.
In 2021, with the population breeding and even expanding onto neighbouring properties, the translocation is considered a success. And for Red- tailed Phascogales, which now inhabit less than 1% of their former range across Australia, that’s great news.
But with climate change and changed fire regimes listed as key threats for phascogales, adaptability is critical, and that’s where Bush Heritage ecologist Angela Sanders, who was present at the initial translocation, says more might need to be done to secure the Kojonup population’s future.
“We need to know more about the genetic makeup of this population,” says Angela.
The results of Rhiannon’s DNA analysis will tell Angela and her team whether the original 30 animals translocated in 2010-11 provided adequate genetic diversity to sustain a diverse population long-term at Kojonup. They'll also indicate whether other phascogales that may have been living in the surrounding landscape have bred with the Kojonup population.