• 9 months ago
Scientists re-homing a group of platypuses in the Royal National Park, south of Sydney, have located a new six-month-old baby platypus.

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00:00 A mere 850 grams of semi-aquatic perfection.
00:07 This is the first known platypus juvenile to be born in the waterways of the Royal National
00:12 Park since they disappeared over 50 years ago.
00:19 We were like over the moon.
00:21 It was just amazing and it was so rewarding and so again, like very humbling to be part
00:26 of this mammoth effort.
00:29 She's believed to be a child of one of the six female and four male platypuses rehomed
00:34 into the Hacking River last May as part of the state's first ever translocation project.
00:41 Before this project started we confirmed that there weren't any platypuses here.
00:45 She's here to call the Royal National Park her home.
00:50 Hopeful of a successful breeding season last year, researchers conducted a weekend of night
00:56 time surveys, but finding the mammal is no small task.
01:00 It's really looking for a needle in a haystack.
01:03 Last August, thick black sediment from metropolitan colliery contaminated Camp Gully Creek upstream,
01:10 threatening the park's biodiversity.
01:12 Fortunately there was no immediate harm to the platypuses.
01:16 We have this terrible irony here where we have the oldest running coal mine in Australia
01:22 operating right next to Australia's oldest national park.
01:26 At some point we have to ask ourselves, which do we value more?
01:30 The proof is in this project that the water quality is better than it was and that it
01:35 is able to hold and look after platypus in the wild.
01:41 That's why this project is so important.
01:43 The government says it will legislate stronger powers for the environmental watchdog, which
01:48 can't come soon enough for the state's future puggle population.
01:52 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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