Arboreal Marsupials on New England wool properties

Title
Arboreal Marsupials on New England wool properties
Publication Date
2006
Author(s)
Reid, Nick
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4377-9734
Email: nrei3@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:nrei3
Green, Stuart
Editor
Editor(s): Karen Zirkler
Type of document
Report
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Land & Water Australia (LWA)
Place of publication
Canberra, Australia
Series
Northern Tablelands Project Fact Sheet
UNE publication id
une:8853
Abstract
Arboreal marsupials are possums, gliders and their relatives, which live mainly in tree canopies. They fulfil an important role in farmland timber - the natural control of dieback - causing insects and parasitic mistletoes. Timber is important in providing shade and shelter for livestock and pasture productivity. Both dieback and mistletoes can debilitate and kill farm trees. Arboreal marsupial species vary in their diet, so a range of species offers a more comprehensive natural pest control service. Australia-wide, there are about 25 species of arboreal marsupial, most of them in eastern Australia. About ten species occur in New England. The Land, Water & Wool (LWW) Northern Tablelands Project (2002-06) (NSW) recorded four species of arboreal marsupial on southern New England wool properties over two summers (Table 1).
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