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The habitat and diet of koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus) in Queensland
Journal article   Peer reviewed

The habitat and diet of koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus) in Queensland

A Melzer, Romane H Cristescu, W Ellis, S FitzGibbon and G Manno
Australian Mammalogy, Vol.36(2), pp.189-199
2014

Abstract

climate variability eucalyptus faecal pellet leaf cuticle monocalyptus symphomyrtus
Descriptions of koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) habitat and diet from 11 sites across Queensland are presented. Koala activity was recorded from 49 regional ecosystems across nine land zones and five bioregions. Thirty-four tree species were identified from an examination of leaf cuticle fragments in faecal pellets. Although the species were from three families and seven genera, 44% of browse species (15) belonged to the myrtaceous subgenus Symphomyrtus. Eleven of these contributed most of the koala diet across all sites. However, most species were present in minor or trace dietary elements. There was also a large number of unidentified species or dietary elements, all of which were usually present in trace amounts. The importance of these minor and trace components is not known. Diet at some sites was founded on a single eucalypt species. Here the likelihood of those sites' browse resources being lost or degraded by stochastic events, as climate variability increases, raises questions about the persistence of the resident koala populations. © Australian Mammal Society 2014.

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#13 Climate Action
#15 Life on Land

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