Australasian Leisure Management
May 21, 2025

Bounceback program monitoring shows Quolls and possums thriving in Flinders Ranges

Despite the harsh summer conditions in the in the Ikara-Flinders Ranges, more than a decade after their reintroduction to the Flinders Ranges by Bounceback, western quolls and brush-tailed possums are thriving.

Latest monitoring by the Bounceback program - South Australia’s longest running landscape-scale biodiversity program - shows the quolls and possums, both previously locally extinct, having healthy and resilient populations.

National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) rangers and volunteers set 162 traps for five nights across the Flinders Ranges, where they caught, scanned and carefully released 135 western quolls and 30 brush-tailed possums.

Bounceback, in partnership with the Foundation for Australia’s Most Endangered Species (FAME), successfully reintroduced western quolls in 2014 and brush-tailed possums in 2015, and is currently working to establish red-tailed phascogales in the Gawler Ranges.

Of the 135 western quolls captured, 81 were new to the monitoring team, proving that, despite a harsh and dry summer, a healthy and viable population is adapting and flourishing in the Flinders Ranges.

The western quoll once ranged 70% of Australia but became extinct everywhere except Western Australia in the late 19th century.

The 30 brush-tailed possums captured, including 12 new ones, matched a 2024 record.

As part of the Bounceback program, The Department of Environment and Water and FAME have established three safer havens for endangered species in South Australia’s Far North since 2013 and, in 2024, entered a new partnership to create three more over the next three years.

The safer havens are unfenced areas, each about 500km2, where feral animals, are substantially reduced to allow reintroduced native animals to thrive.

Relocating bilbies, restoring bassian thrushes and protecting threatened plants are among 11 projects to be undertaken in the Flinders, Gawler and Gammon ranges.

The projects will help increase climate resilience and create refuges for species reliant on cooler, wetter and higher areas of the Flinders Ranges.

More information on the Bounceback program

Australasian Leisure Management Magazine
Subscribe to the Magazine Today

Published since 1997 - Australasian Leisure Management Magazine is your go-to resource for sports, recreation, and tourism. Enjoy exclusive insights, expert analysis, and the latest trends.

Mailed to you six times a year, for an annual subscription from just $99.

New Issue
Australasian Leisure Management
Online Newsletter

Get business and operations news for $12 a month - plus headlines emailed twice a week. Covering aquatics, attractions, entertainment, events, fitness, parks, recreation, sport, tourism, and venues.