• Outdoors Outdoors

Trail camera captures rare 'rediscovery' of species that hasn't been seen in 80 years: 'A fantastic surprise'

"Hugely uplifting for our team."

A trail camera recently picked up footage of a small Australian marsupial that no one had seen in over 80 years.

Photo Credit: Australian Wildlife Conservancy

A trail camera recently picked up footage of a small Australian marsupial that no one had seen in over 80 years. 

As the Dodo reported, the camera captured images of a northern quoll in the Piccaninny Plains Wildlife Sanctuary in Australia. 

Currently listed as endangered, Northern quolls have long tails and white spots. Their numbers have dwindled in recent decades due to habitat loss and feral predators. 

Based on a hunch that they might still exist in the wilderness, the sanctuary's manager, Nick Stock, set up a trail camera. It picked up movement from a northern quoll within just days. 

"It was a fantastic surprise!" said Dr. Helena Stokes from the Australian Wildlife Conservancy. "After years of no sightings, to finally confirm a northern quoll on the sanctuary is hugely uplifting for our team."

The conservancy posted about the endangered northern quoll sighting on Instagram and wrote, "It's an exciting sign that targeted, science-led conservation is helping keep one of Australia's most threatened marsupials hanging on."

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This wildlife sighting in Australia is encouraging because it demonstrates the value of trail cameras in monitoring endangered species populations and supporting conservation efforts. These sightings offer small reminders of why it's crucial to keep searching for rare species and protecting the lands they need to thrive. 

Other trail cameras around the world have picked up images and videos of elusive species, including the Canada lynx, Allegheny woodrat, and Javan rhinoceros.  

These stories are wonderfully uplifting and give us hope that our planet's beautiful creatures can survive and thrive despite changing climate conditions and harmful human activity. Even the smallest and most seemingly insignificant creatures play important roles in regulating plant and animal populations and balancing natural ecosystems. 

In response to the conservancy's Instagram post, one social media user commented, "Remarkable capture!"

"So awesome!!" someone else wrote.

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