The desert rat-kangaroo, or ‘ngudlukanta’, has been listed as extinct since 1994.  Historic photos taken by Hedley Herbert Finlayson, who rediscovered the ngudlukanta in the 1930s.
The desert rat-kangaroo, or ‘ngudlukanta’, has been listed as extinct since 1994. Historic photos taken by Hedley Herbert Finlayson, who rediscovered the ngudlukanta in the 1930s.

Bite-size clues give direction to finding the missing desert rat-kangaroo

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Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

An intriguing native Australian rat-kangaroo, thought to be probably extinct, may still be running around in the inhospitable remote Sturt Stony Desert – and Flinders University researchers have discovered new details about its feeding habits that might help find it. The experts in marsupial evolution and ecology have compared the biting ability of different small animal skulls to understand the kinds of food the desert rat-kangaroo ate, thus narrowing down the best areas to monitor for the little animal.

Journal/conference: Journal of Experimental Biology

Research: Paper

Organisation/s: Flinders University, ARC Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage (CABAH), The University of New England, Western Australian Museum

Funder: Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage (grant no. CE170100015) and an ARC Future Fellowship (FT180100634) to VW. The authors acknowledge the assistance of Microscopy Australia and the Australian National Fabrication Facility (ANFF) under the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy, at the South Australian Regional Facility, Flinders Microscopy and Microanalysis, Flinders University.

Media release

From: Flinders University

An intriguing native Australian rat-kangaroo, thought to be probably extinct, may still be running around in the inhospitable remote Sturt Stony Desert – and Flinders University researchers have discovered new details about its feeding habits that might help find it.

The experts in marsupial evolution and ecology have compared the biting ability of different small animal skulls to understand the kinds of food the desert rat-kangaroo ate, thus narrowing down the best areas to monitor for the little animal.

“Rat-kangaroos like bettongs and potoroos are an ideal group of animals for testing skull biomechanics because they each have different shaped skulls and specialise on very different food groups,” says Dr Rex Mitchell, lead author of a new article published in the Journal of Experimental Biology.

“We were surprised to find the heftier skull of the desert rat-kangaroo isn’t necessarily adapted for biting into harder foods. When we included the animal’s smaller size into the analysis, the robust features of the desert rat-kangaroo’s skull were only found to be effective enough to handle eating a softer range of foods.”

The latest research could help efforts to ‘rediscover’ the desert rat-kangaroo, known as “ngudlukanta” to the traditional custodians of that Country, the Wangkangurru Yarluyandi people. Particularly after unsubstantiated reports of a distinctively small, short-faced, hopping animal in the vicinity of their home range in the Lake Eyre Basin in remote far north-east South Australia into adjacent Queensland.

Predation by foxes and cats and competition with rabbits, overstocking with cattle and sheep, and poor fire management have pushed it to extinction. The small desert-dwelling potoroid marsupial is now known from only a handful of museum specimens that were gathered in inaccessible areas of South Australia.

The small marsupial was declared extinct in 1994 after the last specimen was collected in 1930 but monitoring for the rare animal continues.

“It is plausible that a small, nocturnal species could be evading detection in the vast inland desert. In fact, this species was previously a resurrected ‘Lazarus’ species after its rediscovery in the 1930s,” says senior author of the study, Associate Professor Weisbecker.

“So regardless of whether or not the species persists in the Sturt Stony Desert or elsewhere, the story of the desert rat-kangaroo serves as an ongoing reminder that extinction declarations might not always the end of the story.”

This new-found evidence of its feeding habits could help to focus search efforts on specific regions where these plants grow.

The desert rat-kangaroo was known to eat mostly leaves of plants, but its short round face led previous researchers to suggest that it could eat harder foods as well if needed, such as seeds and twigs.

“Finetuning the search through understanding the animals’ diet better might just resurrect the little desert survivor once more,” adds Dr Mitchell.

Using computer models of historic skeleton specimens, the new study uses a method called Finite Element Analysis (FEA) to test the skull’s ability to handle the forces that happen during biting.

The skull of the desert rat-kangaroo was compared with the skulls of short-faced specialists of harder foods like the burrowing bettong, or boodie, and the specialists of softer fungi like the long-nosed potoroo.

The researchers say these kinds of studies give valuable insights into the relationship between skull shape and biting ability, with applications towards animal behaviour, conservation, ecology, evolution and palaeontology.

The paper, ‘Testing hypotheses of skull function with comparative finite element analysis: three methods reveal contrasting results’ (2025) by D Rex Mitchell, Stephen Wroe (University of New England), Meg Martin (also WA Museum) and Vera Weisbecker (also affiliated with ARC CABAH, Wollongong) has been published in the Journal of Experimental Biology DOI:10.1242/jeb.249747.

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  • desert rat-kangaroo
    desert rat-kangaroo

    The desert bettong, or ‘ngudlukanta’, has been listed as extinct since 1994. It was previously found by Hedley Herbert Finlayson in the 1930s.

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    Attribution: Photo of a desert rat-kangaroo found by Hedley Herbert Finlayson in the 1930s.

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  • Dr Rex Mitchell
    Dr Rex Mitchell

    Flinders University researcher Dr Rex Mitchell compared the biting ability of a desert rat-kangaroo with a bettong and potoroo.

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  • computer modelling
    computer modelling

    Models comparing the stress of each skull during biting with the front teeth. The stress in the desert rat-kangaroo is more similar to the burrowing bettong when not including its small size in the models. But its stress levels are more like the long-nosed potoroo when including its small size.

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