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Climate change
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Is extinct Australian rodent species the first climate change victim? Scientists say rising sea level ‘almost certainly’ the cause

Ocean inundation over last decade likely to have led to extinction of Bramble Cay melomys, researchers say

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The Bramble Cay melomys, an Australian Great Barrier Reef rodent, has become extinct, scientists say. Photo: Queensland government.
Agence France-Presse

Climate change appears to have driven to extinction an Australian Great Barrier Reef rodent, according to a new study, which suggests the species may be the first mammal lost to the global phenomenon.

Extensive searches for the Bramble Cay melomys, a small rat-like animal, have failed to find a single specimen from its only known habitat on a sandy island in far northern Australia.

Researchers said the key factor behind the extinction was “almost certainly” ocean inundation of the low-lying cay, likely on several occasions, over the last decade which resulted in dramatic habitat loss.

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Available data on sea-level rise and weather events in the Torres Strait region “point to human-induced climate change being the root cause of the loss of the Bramble Cay melomys”, added the Queensland state government and University of Queensland study.

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The Melomys rubicola, considered the Great Barrier Reef’s only endemic (found nowhere else) mammal species, was first discovered on the cay in 1845 by Europeans who shot the “large rats” for sport. But the last known sighting, by a professional fisherman, was in 2009.

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