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February 11, 2012
news brief
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Disease Threatens Tasmanian Devils
AFP
A Tasmanian Devil
A Tasmanian Devil

Oct. 14, 2003 — A top wildlife expert issued a tough warning on Tuesday that the world's largest marsupial predator, the Tasmanian devil, was under serious threat from a mysterious disease.

U.S. expert Marco Restani said it could take years to find a solution, calling the disease "the most significant wildlife disease I have seen."

Devil Facial Tumor Disease first manifests itself as small lesions and lumps around the animal's mouth, then as cancerous tumors on the face and eventually throughout the entire body. Death occurs within months, often from starvation.

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"The population decreases that we see — 80 to 90 percent in some areas — are huge," said Restani of St. Cloud University in Minnesota. "These decreases that we see in the top-level predator in some areas raise the alarm that perhaps not all is well in the ecosystem.

"I think people should take it bloody seriously."

The feisty animal is the world's largest marsupial predator since the extinction of the thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger, which was largely wiped out by hunting.

Like the thylacine, it was once found all over Australia. Both animals found final refuge in isolated Tasmania after the introduction of the dingo by Aboriginal peoples.

Restani, who recently completed a survey of the devil population, was speaking during a meeting in Tasmania's second city about the problem. He said if the disease turned out to be a retrovirus as expected, it could make it hard to find a cure.

"If this is indeed a retrovirus, it actually takes years and years of effort both in terms of staffing and resources to determine what to do about it," he said.

The disease has already spread through eastern parts of Tasmania, with reports of cases in other areas as well.

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more information
Name: Tasmanian Devil (Sarcophilus harrisii)
Primary Classification: Dasyuridae (Carnivorous Marsupials)
Location: Eastern Tasmania; extinct in Australia.
Habitat: Dry eucalyptus forest.
Diet: Carrion, insects, snakes, some vegetation, wallabies, and other small mammals.
Size: Up to 30 inches in length and 20 lbs in weight.
Description: Brownish black fur; long white patches on chest, sides and rump; pinkish snout; broad, massive head; powerful jaws with sharp, sturdy teeth; thickset, squat build; short, thick tail.
Cool Facts: If threatened, it will open its enormous mouth in a wide, gaping yawn and may produce a strong odor when under stress.
Conservation Status: Not listed by the IUCN.
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