Antechinus Stuartii

Author(s):  
Richard W. Braithwaite
Keyword(s):  
1987 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 163 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Lunney ◽  
B. Cullis ◽  
P. Eby

This study of the effects of logging on small mammals in Mumbulla State Forest on the south coast of New South Wales included the effects of a fire in November 1980 and a drought throughout the study period from June 1980 to June 1983. Rattus fuscipes was sensitive to change: logging had a significant impact on its numbers, response to ground cover, and recapture rate; fire had a more severe effect, and drought retarded the post-fire recovery of the population. The three species of dasyurid marsupials differed markedly in their response to ground cover, canopy cover, logging and fire. Antechinus stuartii was distributed evenly through all habitats and was not affected by logging, but fire had an immediate and adverse effect which was sustained by the intense drought. A. swainsonii markedly preferred the regenerating forest, and was not seen again after the fire, the failure of the population being attributed to its dependence on dense ground cover. Sminthopsis leucopus was found in low numbers, appeared to prefer forest with sparse ground cover, and showed no immediate response to logging or fire; its disappearance by the third year post-fire suggests that regenerating forest is inimical to the survival of this species. Mus musculus showed no response to logging. In the first year following the fire its numbers were still very low, but in the next year there was a short-lived plague which coincided with the only respite in the 3-year drought and, importantly, occurred in the intensely burnt parts of the forest. The options for managing this forest for the conservation of small mammals include minimising fire, retaining unlogged forest, extending the time over which alternate coupes are logged and minimising disturbance from heavy machinery.


1997 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 737 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ross L. Goldingay ◽  
Robert J. Whelan

The distribution and abundance of small terrestrial mammals were assessed in forest adjacent to powerline easements at three different sites in New South Wales. At each site, four transects of 300 m length extended into the forest from the edge of the easement. The abundances of two native species (Antechinus stuartii, Rattus fuscipes) did not differ significantly with distance from the easement but abundances differed markedly among sites. Mammals were captured in only one easement where dense vegetation was present. Feral carnivores, which may mediate edge effects on small mammals, were surveyed by using hair-sampling tubes. Cats and dogs were detected only 50–200 m inside the forest. Foxes were not detected by hair-tubes but were observed on two easements. These results suggest that powerline easements may not create edge effects in eucalypt forest for some native mammal species, although further studies are needed to determine the generality of this conclusion. We recommend that easement management should be more benign to native mammals, given the ubiquity of this form of habitat fragmentation. Promotion of dense vegetative cover and habitat linkages within easements could achieve this.


Parasitology ◽  
1965 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 383-389 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Nutting ◽  
Patricia Woolley

Pathological manifestations occasioned by mites of the genus Demodex are reported from Antechinus stuartii, a marsupial mouse. Derangements from single mite invasion of a hair follicle to massive nodule formation are detailed. In heavy infestations mites are found well distributed in the skin of the body with nodules limited, however, to the head, hind legs, around the base of the tail, the cloacal regions and, in females, just anterior to the pouch area.Mites invade the hair follicle, where increase in their numbers leads to hypertrophy of the follicular epithelium which forms marked lobules surrounded by heavily vascularized connective tissue. It is thought that destruction of the lobule cells and penetration of the blood vessels due to increased mite numbers and activity leads to leucocytic infiltration with destruction of the mites and nodule deflation. In two instances of nodule deterioration a thickened skin plaque with markedly reduced mite populations remained in place of the nodule.Gross symptoms of demodicidosis are occasionally marked in animals maintained in the laboratory but have not been found in specimens from the field. This suggests that environmental or dietary factors may be important in the onset of gross symptoms of demodicidosis.This investigation was supported in part by a National Science Foundation (U.S.A.) grant (G-23321) and by a Commonwealth Scientific and an Industrial Research Organization (Australia) grant for marsupial research to the Zoology Department, A.N.U.Dr Herman Beerman, Professor and Chairman, Department of Dermatology, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, very kindly read and criticized our interpretation of the pathology. We are grateful for his help.We would like to thank Margaret Dahlquist, Research Assistant, for her excellent technical assistance in the preparation of material for this report.


1977 ◽  
pp. 209-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony K. Lee ◽  
Adrian J. Bradley ◽  
Richard W. Braithwaite

2002 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 77 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. S. Crowther

Previous work on bioclimatic mapping of species within the Antechinus stuartii–A. flavipes complex has been carried out, but this was before A. subtropicus was recognised and a complete taxonomic revision of the complex had been completed. This revised study of bioclimatic modelling of species within the A. stuartii–A. flavipes complex indicates substantial differences between the four species (A. stuartii, A. agilis, A. subtropicus and A. flavipes) in 35 climatic indices. A. stuartii is predicted to have a near-coastal distribution in northern and central New South Wales stretching as far south as Kioloa and as far north as south-eastern Queensland, avoiding the far coastal strip. A. agilis is predicted to have an extensive distribution in Victoria and southern New South Wales as far north as western Sydney; it is also predicted to occur in Tasmania, even though there is no evidence of it ever occurring there. A. flavipes is predicted to have an extensive inland and coastal distribution much larger than its recorded distribution. A. subtropicus is predicted to have a very narrow distribution in areas with high seasonal rainfall and high temperatures with low seasonality. All species are predicted to occur sympatrically, with A. stuartii and A. agilis predicted to have extensive overlap on the coast near Kioloa and to the immediate west and south-west of Sydney.


1997 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henry Sathananthan ◽  
Lynne Selwood ◽  
Isabel Douglas ◽  
Kamani Nanayakkara

The development of Antechinus stuartiifrom the 2-cell stage to the blastocyst stage in vivo was examined by routine transmission electron microscopy. The 2–8-cell stages had a similar organization of organelles, whereas the 16- to 32-cell stages had pluriblast cells and trophoblast cells forming an epithelium closely apposed to the zona pellucida. Specialized cell–zona plugs were formed at the 8-cell stage, and primitive cell junctions appeared in later conceptuses. The cytoplasmic organelles included mitochondria, lysosomes, aggregates of smooth endoplasmic reticulum, lipid and protein yolk bodies and fibrillar arrays, possibly contractile in function. Nuclei had uniformly-dispersed dense chromatin. Nucleoli of 2–4-cell conceptuses were dense, compact and fibrillar, and those of 8-cell conceptuses and later conceptuses were finely granular and became progressively reticulated. The embryonic genome is probably not switched on before the 8-cell stage. Sperm tails were detected in cells in several early conceptuses. The yolk mass had the same organelles as cells. Centrioles were discovered for the first time in marsupial conceptuses. These were prominently situated at a spindle pole in a 32-cell blastomere and were associated with a nucleus and sperm tail at the 4-cell stage. It is very likely that the paternal centrosome is inherited at fertilization and perpetuated in Antechinus embryos during cleavage.


1997 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 475 ◽  
Author(s):  
James R. McFarlane ◽  
Carl D. Rudd ◽  
Lynda M. Foulds ◽  
Terry P. Fletcher ◽  
Marilyn B. Renfree

Tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii) luteinizing hormone (LH) was purified from pituitaries collected from wild and captive populations by salt sequential precipitation, ion exchange chromatography and gel filtration. Pituitary tissue (5 g) yielded 1·8 mg of purified wallaby luteinizing hormone (ME-14B), as verified by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). A heterologous radioimmunoassay has been developed for measurement of LH in plasma of marsupials using a monoclonal antibody raised against bovine LH (518B7). This assay system was able to measure basal LH concentrations in male and female tammars and detected a significant rise in plasma LH in response to oestradiol benzoate in female tammars and luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) in males. Parallel dose–response curves were also obtained from pituitary extracts from four other species of marsupial (brushtail possum, Trichosurus vulpecula; brown antechinus,Antechinus stuartii; kowari, Dasyuroides byrnei; and Eastern pygmy possum,Cercartetus nanus) in this assay, which suggests its usefulness in the measurement of LH in other marsupial species.


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