Metadata
Title
Eastern Quoll (Dasyurus viverrinus) reintroduced to Mulligans Flat Woodland Sanctuary: SNPs and individual information
Category
general
UUID
414da003ce5941e6b2cf8ebcf5d50ac1
Source URL
https://datacommons.anu.edu.au/DataCommons/rest/display/anudc:6404?layout=def:di...
Parent URL
https://datacommons.anu.edu.au/DataCommons/
Crawl Time
2026-03-11T01:18:53+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Eastern Quoll (Dasyurus viverrinus) reintroduced to Mulligans Flat Woodland Sanctuary: SNPs and individual information

Source: https://datacommons.anu.edu.au/DataCommons/rest/display/anudc:6404?layout=def:display Parent: https://datacommons.anu.edu.au/DataCommons/

This project was conducted as part of the Mulligan’s Flat–Goorooyarroo Woodland Experiment, and our thanks go to all the volunteers and staff of partner organisations that have assisted with the translocation and ongoing monitoring since 2011. Licenses for the reintroduction were obtained from the Tasmanian Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water and Environment (DPIPWE) using procedures approved by their associated Ethics Committee (AEC Project 18/2010–2011). We thank DPIPWE for their support. The post-reintroduction procedures were approved by the Australian National University Animal Experimentation Ethics Committee (ethics protocol A2011/017; A2014/35; A2017/33; A2020/40). We would like to thank the ACT Parks and Conservation Service for their contribution to the translocation and monitoring of the eastern bettong at Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve. Funding for DNA sequencing was provided by the Woodlands and Wetlands Trust, and we thank manager Jason Cummings for his support of this work. The translocation and post-reintroduction monitoring were funded by an Australian Research Council Linkage Grants received by ADM (Australian Research Council Linkage LP110100126, LP140100209), in addition to support from ANU, ACT Government, and the Woodlands and Wetlands Trust. ADM was supported by an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (FT100100358) during part of this study. BB was funded by an ACT Government PhD Scholarship, an Australian Government Fee Offset Scholarship, and an ANU Supplementary Scholarship. We would like to thank the ACT Government for their comments on early drafts of this paper, and Prof. Craig Moritz and Prof Andrew Weeks for their contributions to early planning stages of this study. The authors also acknowledge the Ngunnawal people of the ACT region, on whose land this study took place. The Authors request that the Principal/Co-Investigator be contacted before the data is used, as it is part of an ongoing experiment.

Type

collection

Title

Eastern Quoll (Dasyurus viverrinus) reintroduced to Mulligans Flat Woodland Sanctuary: SNPs and individual information

Collection Type

Dataset

Access Privileges

Fenner School of Environment & Society

DOI - Digital Object Identifier

10.25911/50fr-x765

Metadata Language

English

Data Language

English

Significance Statement

Genetic and demographic data from the long-term monitoring of the first reintroduction of eastern quolls to mainland Australia to a conservation fenced reserve.

Full Description

This project was conducted as part of the Mulligan’s Flat–Goorooyarroo Woodland Experiment, and our thanks go to all the volunteers and staff of partner organisations that have assisted with the translocation and ongoing monitoring since 2011. Licenses for the reintroduction were obtained from the Tasmanian Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water and Environment (DPIPWE) using procedures approved by their associated Ethics Committee (AEC Project 18/2010–2011). We thank DPIPWE for their support. The post-reintroduction procedures were approved by the Australian National University Animal Experimentation Ethics Committee (ethics protocol A2011/017; A2014/35; A2017/33; A2020/40). We would like to thank the ACT Parks and Conservation Service for their contribution to the translocation and monitoring of the eastern bettong at Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve. Funding for DNA sequencing was provided by the Woodlands and Wetlands Trust, and we thank manager Jason Cummings for his support of this work. The translocation and post-reintroduction monitoring were funded by an Australian Research Council Linkage Grants received by ADM (Australian Research Council Linkage LP110100126, LP140100209), in addition to support from ANU, ACT Government, and the Woodlands and Wetlands Trust. ADM was supported by an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (FT100100358) during part of this study. BB was funded by an ACT Government PhD Scholarship, an Australian Government Fee Offset Scholarship, and an ANU Supplementary Scholarship. We would like to thank the ACT Government for their comments on early drafts of this paper, and Prof. Craig Moritz and Prof Andrew Weeks for their contributions to early planning stages of this study. The authors also acknowledge the Ngunnawal people of the ACT region, on whose land this study took place. The Authors request that the Principal/Co-Investigator be contacted before the data is used, as it is part of an ongoing experiment.

Contact Email

adrian.manning@anu.edu.au

Principal Investigator

Adrian Manning

Collaborators

Brittany Brockett

Fields of Research

3103 - Ecology

Socio-Economic Objective

280102 - Expanding knowledge in the biological sciences

Keywords

quoll; eastern quoll; reintroduction; translocation; fenced reserve; mammals; marsupials

Type of Research Activity

Applied Research

Date Coverage

Date To 2020

Date From 2016

Time Period

Establishment and early persistence

Date of data creation

2021

Year of data publication

2025

Creator(s) for Citation

Surname Manning

Given Name Adrian

Surname Brockett

Given Name Brittany

Publisher for Citation

The Australian National University Data Commons

Access Rights Type

Open

Licence Type

CC-BY - Attribution

Retention Period

Indefinitely

Extent or Quantity

13

Data Size

15 MB

Data Management Plan

No

Download data files

Number of files: 13

Size: 15 MB

Identifier: anudc:6404

Status: Published\ Published to:

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