So, there was a bounty on the thylacine and it was hunted to extinction about 70 years because it liked a feed of mutton.
New research suggests it ate nothing bigger than bandicoots and possums.
So, there was a bounty on the thylacine and it was hunted to extinction about 70 years because it liked a feed of mutton.
New research suggests it ate nothing bigger than bandicoots and possums.
Well, computer models and all are very well and good, but I can’t believe that in a hundred years of European settlement shepherds or farmers never SAW a thylacine take down or at least hunt for a sheep.
Amen. Talk about too little, too late.
Not that the Van Diemen’s Land Co. would care if that information had been presented to them at the time. By the 1820s Tadmanian farmers knew, for the most part, that wild dogs were to blame for their livestock losses. Didn’t matter. The bounty stayed in place.
Sad.
Given thylacines were (semi) nocturnal they would have heard the flock being disturbed and certainly saw livestock carcases that Tassie tigers (and devils) had partially consumed, but the question is whether they actually killed or were just scavenging.
So I see th Tasmanian Tiger lobby got to you huh?