Greater Gliders in the Urban Landscape

© Paul Revie

Home 9 Project 9 Greater Gliders in the Urban Landscape

About this project

In November 2023, Wildlife Queensland launched a Greater Glider Christmas Appeal to fund a critical project aimed at enhancing our understanding of greater glider behaviour, habitat preferences and movement patterns in South East Queensland.

The greater glider (Petauroides volans), uplisted to Endangered in 2022 under Australia’s national environmental law, inhabits old-growth forests. Their decline is driven by land clearing, forest degradation and climate change.

As urban expansion and other developments encroach on their habitat, greater gliders face severe population declines, reduced breeding opportunities, and loss of genetic diversity, pushing them to the brink of existence.

Focusing on spatial ecology, denning habits and preferred feed trees, the project will involve fitting gliders with radio-tracking collars to gain insights into their movements, home range, denning locations and dietary preferences. Additionally, it includes a detailed study of microhabitats to optimise nest box placement.

Key objectives

Phase one: Optimising environmental conditions:

The project’s first phase focuses on determining the ideal environmental conditions within greater glider hollows. Data loggers will be placed in their favoured trees, nest boxes and hollows to record temperature and humidity, with comparisons made across different seasons and populations.

Phase two: Understanding behaviour and habitat preferences:

The second phase involves identifying the preferred trees, hollows and nest boxes for greater gliders. Expert tree climbers and ecologists will capture individual gliders to study their travel distances and den-sharing patterns, with VHF collars attached to monitor their movements.

Greater glider© Josh Bowell

A white morph greater glider.

Brisbane - urban sprawl© Canva NFP

Urban sprawl — City of Brisbane. 

Acknowledgements

Thanks to the incredible generosity of our donors and supporters, we raised close to our goal of $100,000 for this vital project. We also extend our gratitude to the Australian Wildlife Society, who ran a successful fundraiser in support of our project, raising more than $10,000. Your contributions are making a significant difference in the fight to protect Queensland’s greater gliders.

Project progression: 2024

The Queensland Glider Network team kicked off August with a successful greater glider spotlighting and scat collection survey, collecting plenty of glider scat and enjoying fabulous sightings of a greater glider, koala and brushtail possum.

Ultimately, the project will give us the information we need to protect these arboreal marsupials in South East Queensland, ensuring greater gliders will always have a home in one of Australia’s fastest-growing regions.

Paul Revie

Projects Officer, Wildlife Queensland

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This