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. 2020 Oct 28;15(10):e0239182.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0239182. eCollection 2020.

A 29-year retrospective analysis of koala rescues in New South Wales, Australia

Affiliations

A 29-year retrospective analysis of koala rescues in New South Wales, Australia

Renae Charalambous et al. PLoS One. .

Erratum in

Abstract

The koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) is currently listed by both the IUCN and the Australian Governments' Threatened Species Scientific Committee as vulnerable to extinction with an overall decreasing population trend. It is unknown exactly how many koalas remain in the wild, but it is known that habitat fragmentation and bushfires have ultimately contributed to the decline of the koala all over Australia. This novel study is a retrospective analysis of data over a 29-year period (1989-2018) using records for 12,543 sightings and clinical care admissions for wild koalas from the major koala hot-spots (Port Stephens, port Macquarie and Lismore) in New South Wales, Australia. This study aims to understand the long-term patterns and trends of key stressors that are contributing to the decline of koalas in New South Wales, and the synergic interactions of factors such as rescue location, sex and age of the koala, and if their decline is influenced progressively by year. The main findings of this retrospective analysis indicated that between all 3 rescue sites, the most common prognosis was disease, the most common disease was signs of chlamydia, and the most common outcome was release. The location where the highest number of koalas were found prior to being reported as sighted or admitted into clinical care was within the regional area of Lismore. Furthermore, sex was not a discriminating factor when it came to prognosis or outcome, but age was significant. Finally, incidents of disease were found to increase over long-term, whereas release decreased over time and euthanasia increased. The wealth of data available to us and the retrospective analysis enabled us in a way to 'zoom out' and reveal how the key environmental stressors have fluctuated spatially and temporally. In conclusion, our data provides strong evidence of added pressures of increased human population growth in metropolitan zones, which increases risks of acute environmental trauma and proximate stressors such as vehicle collisions and dog-attacks as well as increased sightings of virtually healthy koalas found in exposed environments. Thus our 'zoom out' approach provides support that there is an urgent need to strengthen on-ground management, bushfire control regimes, environmental planning and governmental policy actions that should hopefully reduce the proximate environmental stressors in a step wise approach. This will ensure that in the next decade (beyond 2020), NSW koalas will hopefully start to show reversed trends and patterns in exposure to environmental trauma and disease, and population numbers will return towards recovery and stability.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Prognosis recorded for each koala (as per sighting or admission into clinical care) for 12,543 koalas, logged as a percentage.
Fig 2
Fig 2. Disease recorded for each koala (as per sighting or admission into clinical care) for koalas with the prognosis disease, logged as a percentage.
Fig 3
Fig 3. Outcome recorded for each koala (as per sighting or admission into clinical care) for 12,543 koalas, logged as a percentage.
Fig 4
Fig 4. Data recorded for each koala (as per sighting or admission into clinical care) for koalas with the prognosis disease, against koalas with the outcome released, and the outcome euthanised logged as a percentage over time (1989–2018).

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