IUCN status: Near Threatened
EPBC Predator Threat Rating: High
IUCN claim: “The greatest current threat is predation by feral cats”
Cats hunted captive-bred reintroduced phascogales (Soderquist & Serena 1994).
Phascogale remained at low abundance as cat abundance declined, but no statistical analysis, control, or other variables were tested for (Wayne et al. 2017).
No studies were found linking cats to brush-tailed phascogale
population trends.
EPBC. (2015) Threat Abatement Plan for Predation by Feral Cats. Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999, Department of Environment, Government of Australia. (Table A1).
IUCN Red List. https://www.iucnredlist.org/ Accessed June 2023
Soderquist, T.R. and Serena, M., 1994. An experimental reintroduction programme for brush-tailed phascogales (Phascogale tapoatafa): the interface between captivity and the wild. In Creative Conservation: Interactive Management of Wild and Captive Animals (pp. 431-438). Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands.
Wallach A.D., Lundgren E.J. (2025) Review of evidence that foxes and cats cause extinctions of Australia’s endemic mammals. BioScience. DOI: 10.1093/biosci/biaf046
Wayne, A.F., Maxwell, M.A., Ward, C.G., Wayne, J.C., Vellios, C.V. and Wilson, I.J., 2017. Recoveries and cascading declines of native mammals associated with control of an introduced predator. Journal of Mammalogy, 98(2), pp.489-501.