Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, 130 Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720, U.S.A.
Ardenna Research, Potton, Sandy, Bedfordshire SG19 2QA, U.K.
Conserv Biol. 2018 Apr;32(2):477-483. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13037. Epub 2018 Feb 13.
The thylacine (Thylacinus cynocephalus), one of Australia's most characteristic megafauna, was the largest marsupial carnivore until hunting, and potentially disease, drove it to extinction in 1936. Although thylacines were restricted to Tasmania for 2 millennia prior to their extinction, recent so-called plausible sightings on the Cape York Peninsula in northern Queensland have emerged, leading some to speculate the species may have persisted undetected. We compiled a data set that included physical evidence, expert-validated sightings, and unconfirmed sightings up to the present day and implemented a range of extinction models (focusing on a Bayesian approach that incorporates all 3 types of data by modeling valid and invalid sightings as independent processes) to evaluate the likelihood of the thylacine's persistence. Although the last captive individual died in September 1936, our results suggested that the most likely extinction date would be 1940. Our other extinction models estimated the thylacine's extinction date between 1936 and 1943, and the most optimistic scenario indicated that the species did not persist beyond 1956. The search for the thylacine, much like similar efforts to rediscover other recently extinct charismatic taxa, is likely to be fruitless, especially given that persistence on Tasmania would have been no guarantee the species could reappear in regions that had been unoccupied for millennia. The search for the thylacine may become a rallying point for conservation and wildlife biology and could indirectly help fund and support critical research in understudied areas such as Cape York. However, our results suggest that attempts to rediscover the thylacine will be unsuccessful and that the continued survival of the thylacine is entirely implausible based on most current mathematical theories of extinction.
袋狼(Thylacinus cynocephalus)是澳大利亚最具特色的巨型动物之一,是最大的有袋类食肉动物,直到 1936 年,狩猎和潜在的疾病导致其灭绝。尽管袋狼在灭绝前的 2000 年里一直局限于塔斯马尼亚岛,但最近在昆士兰州北部的约克角半岛出现了所谓的可信目击事件,这导致一些人推测该物种可能在未被发现的情况下幸存下来。我们收集了一个数据集,其中包括实物证据、经过专家验证的目击事件和至今未得到证实的目击事件,并实施了一系列灭绝模型(重点采用贝叶斯方法,通过将有效和无效目击事件建模为独立过程来整合所有 3 种类型的数据)来评估袋狼持续存在的可能性。尽管最后一只圈养个体于 1936 年 9 月死亡,但我们的结果表明,最有可能的灭绝日期是 1940 年。我们的其他灭绝模型估计袋狼的灭绝日期在 1936 年至 1943 年之间,最乐观的情况表明,该物种在 1956 年之后没有存活下来。寻找袋狼,就像重新发现其他最近灭绝的有魅力的分类群一样,很可能是徒劳的,尤其是因为在塔斯马尼亚岛的生存并不能保证该物种能够在几千年未被占领的地区重新出现。寻找袋狼可能成为保护和野生动物生物学的一个焦点,并可能间接地帮助为约克角等研究不足的地区提供和支持关键研究提供资金。然而,我们的结果表明,重新发现袋狼的尝试将是不成功的,而且根据大多数当前的灭绝数学理论,袋狼的持续生存完全是不可信的。