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Posted: 2018-06-23 07:29:17

"But it's a very valid means to get a good idea of their diet."

Dr Woinarski's team has compiled the results of more than 10,000 dissections and examinations of cat scat, as well as new estimates of their population, to crunch the numbers of native animals falling prey to feral cats.

Last year they revealed that cats eat more than a million birds every day in Australia. But that figure has been eclipsed by the number of reptiles killed by feral cats.

The second part of the team's research, released this week, shows 1.8 million reptiles fall victim to the feline predators every day.

In years or abundance, feral cats alone could eat more than 3.5 billion reptiles in the wild.

And that figure tells only part of the story – it excludes reptiles eaten by house cats and stray cats, and those in modified environments such as dumps and piggeries, where felines abound.

A goanna foot found in a cat stomach. Slow moving, ground dwelling reptiles are particularly vulnerable to cat predation.

A goanna foot found in a cat stomach. Slow moving, ground dwelling reptiles are particularly vulnerable to cat predation.

Photo: Jaana Dillenberg

The number of mammals killed by cats will be revealed in coming months in the final part of the study.

But while the devastation wreaked by cats on native marsupials and birds is well recognised, Dr Woinarski said few people were aware of the plight of our reptiles – including some of the most "distinctive and unusual on Earth".

About one in 10 of the world's reptiles call Australia home and more than 90 per cent of those are found nowhere else in the world.

"The reptile species we're most worried about cat predation for are the relatively large, slow-moving, long-lived species that live on the ground," Dr John Woinarski said.

It's not just lizards, pythons and other snakes all fall prey to felines.

It's not just lizards, pythons and other snakes all fall prey to felines.

Photo: John Read

"Things like blue tongues, shinglebacks, frilled-neck lizards, thorny devils ... a whole group of those are probably declining, largely due to cat predation.

"When I was a boy I lived in the suburbs of Melbourne and we had blue-tongued lizards quite happily running around our garden – that's no longer the case that most people have that privilege."

The study found more than 250 Australian reptile species were known to be killed by feral cats, including 10 species listed as threatened.

The greatest number of feral cats – whose population fluctuates between 2 million and 6 million –were found in arid regions, where lizards abound.

The number of reptiles killed by cats each year, in natural environments throughout Australia.

The number of reptiles killed by cats each year, in natural environments throughout Australia.

Photo: NESP Threatened Species Recovery Hub

These distribution patterns put such species as the great desert skink in the firing line. But it isn't just lizards: threatened pygmy copperheads are among many species of snake in decline because of feral cats.

Another surprising find in the study was feral cats' tendency to "binge" on favoured species – one cat stomach yielded 40 lizards of the same species it ate that day.

Such focused hunting means local populations could be quickly wiped out.

While comparatively little is known about how Australian reptiles are faring against the onslaught of cat predation, the picture is set to become clearer this year when the International Union for Conservation of Nature releases the conservation status for every Australian reptile for the first time.

Joe Hinchliffe

Joe Hinchliffe reports breaking news for The Age.

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