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Red-tailed Phascogale. Photo Meredith Spencer.
Red-tailed Phascogale. Photo Meredith Spencer.

Red-tailed Phascogales

Scientific name: Phascogale calura

Recognisable by their distinctive tails – rust coloured at the top with a black and bushy end, the Red-tailed Phascogale is a carnivorous marsupial that lives off insects, spiders and small birds.

When the sun goes down at our Kojonup Reserve in south-west Western Australia, these tiny creatures spring into action, performing giant leaps between branches and trees.

Measuring 10cm in the body and weighing just 60g (about the weight of a chicken egg), they move at blink-and-you-miss-it speeds, leaping up to two metres in a single bound!

A Red-tailed Phascogale. Photo S J Bennett (flickr.com/people/quollism/)

Where do Red-tailed Phascogales live?

Once widespread through the southern half of Australia, surviving populations of Red-tailed Phascogales are mostly restricted to remnants of native vegetation throughout the wheatbelt region of WA.

Their preferred habitat is dense, mature forests of Wandoo (Eucalyptus wandoo) and Sheoak (Allocasuarina huegeliana), which provide them with tree hollows.

In 2010 and 2011 populations were translocated from National Parks to our Kojonup Reserve, which provides fantastic Wandoo habitat sprawled across the 389-hectare property. Wandoo trees provide excellent nesting sites in the form of hollow logs and limbs, which the phascogales line with grass and feathers.

To support the translocation, more than 60 nesting boxes were set up at Kojonup and the animals transported directly into them, to give them a home-base to return to if faced with predators in unfamiliar surrounds.

The area is actively monitored with camera traps and regularly surveyed. During surveys we’ve often found many phascogales huddled in groups in their nests and we think they do this to keep warm.

Ecologist Angela Sanders supervises volunteers setting up a nesting box for Red-tailed Phascogales.

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We provide Alpaca wool in the artificial nest boxes, which is highly prized as boxes are raided for wool, which is often supplemented by feathers, bark, leaves and sticks.

A huddle of Red-tailed Phascogales in a wool-lined nesting box. Photo Maureen Francesconi.

Red-tailed Phascogale behaviour

Red-tailed Phascogales are nocturnal and live in trees. They can be more active in the day time if seeking food and will often move to the ground to feed on a wide range of small insects, spiders and small birds.

They’re territorial and the females will come back to the same nesting sites year after year, with three or four sites that they’ll use. Males move, on average, three to four times as far as females, with the greatest disparity during the July mating season. Home ranges vary from 1.5 ha to 8 ha.

A Red-tailed Phascogale. Photo Jeroen van Veen.

As with some other small dasyurids (such as Brush-tailed Phascogales and antechinus), each year all males die within a month of mating.

Research suggests the stress of breeding season and the physiological changes males undergo results in fatal gastrointestinal ulcers (Bradley 1990).

While males can live up to 11 months, females can survive up to 36, reproducing two or three times.

The gestation period is 28 to 30 days, and while up to 13 young may be born, the maximum litter size that can be reared is eight (adult females have 8 nipples). From August to October they’ll remain dependent on their mothers, but they’ll have weaned and dispersed to set up their own home ranges by the end of summer.

Threats to Red-tailed Phascogales

Red-tailed Phascogales are listed as nationally ’vulnerable’ under the EPBC (Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation) Act and considered Near Threatened by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). One of their primary threats is habitat loss and fragmentation from the widespread clearing of habitat for agriculture and development, and changed fire regimes.

Foxes are a threat when phascogales are active on the ground, but they can escape to the trees. Cats, however, are able to climb and can significantly impact on a population.

What’s Bush Heritage doing?

In 2010 our Ecologist Angela Sanders received a phone call from a colleague at the Western Australian Department of Parks and Wildlife who was looking for a place to translocate Red-tailed Phascogales.

Our Kojonup Reserve was a great candidate – it was part of their former range, it had Wandoo, it had Sheoak, plus we’d been controlling foxes for many years and no cats had been recorded on the reserve.

The idea was simple – moving a small proportion of a phascogale population from elsewhere in the wheatbelt and establishing a new, self-sustaining population on Kojonup.

Between 2010 and 2011 around 30 phascogales were released onto Kojonup Reserve just before their mating season. Trees were fitted with wool-lined boxes to allow safe nesting and to increase their chances of survival.

The results have been astounding. Recent surveys suggest they’ve started to spread out of Kojonup Reserve and into neighbouring bushland.

“We’ve been seeing more individuals every year since 2011,” said Angela. “Since these critters are short-lived, all of these would have been born at Kojonup, which indicates the phascogales are breeding – a wonderful sign."

"It’s really great habitat and it probably hasn’t had phascogales on here for 50 or 60 years, so it’s really good to put them back."

Podcast

Climb up the tree. Open the nest box. And look inside...

The secret life of phascogales



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Bradley, A.J. (1990). Seasonal effects on the haematology and blood chemistry in the red-tailed phascogale, Phascogale calura (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae). Australian Journal of Zoology. 37:533-543.

Red-tailed Phascogale stories

BLOG 27/04/2023

Phascogales prevail 12 years on

Twelve years ago, long-serving Ecologist, Angela Sanders and her team arrived on Kojonup reserve with 30 Red-tailed Phascogales. Now, after more than a decade of careful management and detailed monitoring, we have the results of a long-awaited genetic diversity test.

Read More
Red-tailed Phascogale. Photo Meredith Spencer.

BUSHTRACKS 15/04/2021

Marsupials under the microscope

A conservation genetics project on Kojonup Reserve is guiding the management of one of Bush Heritage’s sweetest marsupial residents – the Red-tailed Phascogale.

Read More

BLOG 05/11/2020

Red-tailed Phascogale found at Chereninup

We put out seven cameras on our Chereninup Reserve in the Fitz-Stirling region of south-west Western Australia in the hope of catching a Tammar Wallaby or two. Instead we found a Red-Tailed Phascogale running across the ground in front of the camera.

Read More

BLOG 22/05/2018

Phascogales a translocation success

The annual monitoring of Red-tailed Phascogales at our Kojonup Reserve has just been completed with some good news for the species.

Read More

BUSHTRACKS 30/09/2016

A giant leap

The 2010 translocation of 30 Red-tailed Phascogales to Kojonup Reserve in Western Australia signalled a maturing of approach for Bush Heritage Australia.

Read More

BLOG 10/06/2016

Red-tailed Phascogale survey

Our Kojonup Reserve has once again come up with the goods. Red-tailed Phascogales have been found in abundance. The recent survey found 23 individuals and I was amazed to pull five animals out of one of the nest boxes!

Read More
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