Whatever that is, it’s scary
By Susan Milius
After 9,000 years of thriving in the absence of mammalian predators, tammar wallabies still startle at some signs of dangerous mammals, according to an Australian study.
No mammal has threatened the wallabies Macropus eugenii on the unsettled part of Kangaroo Island since the island separated from the Australian mainland. The scientists presented caged wallabies with sights and sounds that might signal unfamiliar but dangerous predators.
The sight of a taxidermist-prepared fox stopped the wallabies from foraging and sent them into a frenzy of thumping their hind feet and peering around. The sight of a similarly stuffed cat likewise interrupted dinner and provoked vigilance, report Daniel T. Blumstein and Christopher S. Evans of Macquarie University in Sydney and their coauthors in the September Behavioral Ecology.