Abstract

The black‐tailed dusky antechinus (Antechinus arktos) is a recently discovered, endangered, carnivorous marsupial mammal endemic to the Tweed Shield Volcano caldera, straddling the border between Queensland and New South Wales in eastern Australia. The species' preference for cool, high‐altitude habitats makes it particularly vulnerable to a shifting climate as these habitats recede. Aside from basic breeding and dietary patterns, the species' ecology is largely unknown. Understanding fine‐scale habitat attributes preferred by this endangered mammal is critical to employ successful conservation management. Here, we assess vegetation attributes of known habitats over three sites at Springbrook and Border Ranges National Parks, including detailed structure data and broad floristic assessment.Floristic compositional assessment of the high‐altitude cloud rainforest indicated broad similarities. However, only 22% of plant species were shared between all sites indicating a high level of local endemism. This suggests a diverse assemblage of vegetation across A. arktos habitats.Habitat characteristics were related to capture records of A. arktos to determine potential fine‐scale structural habitat requirements. Percentage of rock cover and leaf litter were the strongest predictors of A. arktos captures across survey sites, suggesting a need for foraging substrate and cover. Habitat characteristics described here will inform predictive species distribution models of this federally endangered species and are applicable to other mammal conservation programs.

Highlights

  • Research indicates climate change is increasing atmospheric temperatures, in turn reducing the home ranges of many animal species, those confined to montane habitats (Colloff et al, 2016; Gray, Baker, & Firn, 2017; IPCC, 2014)

  • We will address the following research questions: 1. How do known A. arktos sites differ in vegetation structure and composition?

  • We found that while there were a suite of plant species characteristic of high-altitude cool temperate rainforest found between the four sites, composition

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Research indicates climate change is increasing atmospheric temperatures, in turn reducing the home ranges of many animal species, those confined to montane habitats (Colloff et al, 2016; Gray, Baker, & Firn, 2017; IPCC, 2014). Since description of A. arktos in 2014, the species has been listed as endangered under both state and federal legislation, due to its highly fragmented, high-altitude habitat, limited potential for distribution on the caldera, extremely low apparent abundance, and a range of threats exacerbating these problems (Baker et al, 2014; Gray, Baker, et al, 2017; Gray, Burwell, & Baker, 2016; Gray, Dennis, & Baker, 2017) These factors remain poorly understood and need urgent research to ensure effective conservation management (Baker et al, 2014; Gray, Baker, et al, 2017; Gray et al, 2016; Gray, Dennis, et al, 2017). How do fine-scale structural and cover habitat attributes differ between known sites?

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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