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Home arrow Nature & Biodiversity arrow Plants & Animals arrow Western Shield arrow Back from the Brink Monday, 12 May 2008 largerspacer1smallerspacer2reset
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Back from the Brink Print
A ferak cat with its prey

Foxes and cats are making a meal of Western Australia's wildlife. These foreign predators have already contributed to the extinction of ten native mammals. Dozens more species are threatened and survive only in low numbers—six of the mammals are restricted to tiny islands. CALM has successfully pioneered programs to control foxes to prevent further extinctions.

This work has now been expanded into the world's biggest campaign against feral predators, to save native animals and return them to areas where they once thrived.

The campaign's name: Western Shield.

Over the past 100 years, more mammals have become extinct in Australia than in any other country. The loss of 18 Australian mammal species is a catastrophe caused predominantly by predators and competitors introduced from overseas. Loss of Habitat has also led to extinctions, and changes to other habitats make some of the remaining native animals even more susceptible to predators. Our wildlife may now be facing a new danger from the release of rabbit calicivirus. Feral predators also hunt rabbits, so if the virus reduces their numbers significantly, hungry foxes and cats could turn more and more to native animals. While this threat is not expected to be serious, it will be yet another pressure on Endangered species.