The history of Australia’s animals over the past 50,000 years has been largely one of extinction. The time has been too short for new species of large animals to evolve and, over this period, nearly one-third of Australia’s mammal species have become extinct, along with nearly all the large reptiles and many of the flightless birds. The cause of these extinctions is still hotly debated. One school of thought suggests that humans caused the extinctions, and another that they were due to climate. The greatest problem in evaluating these theories is that we do not know exactly when these animals became extinct.
One certainty is that Australia’s climate has changed greatly over the past 40,000 years. Between 25,000 and 15,000 years ago, the sea level dropped by more than 100 metres and the continent experienced an extremely arid phase. Clearly, the timing of the extinctions is of critical importance. If they can be shown to coincide with the arrival of humans, about 50,000 years ago, then circumstantial evidence would point to humans as the cause. If, however, the giant marsupials survived until 25,000 years ago, the increased aridity would seem to be the more likely cause.
Before these extinctions, Australia was a very different place. Naturally occurring fires were probably less frequent than they are now, because large marsupial herbivores (of which there were about forty species) reduced the standing crop of vegetation. Rainforest plants were widespread in the parts of Australia which are now very dry.
Studies have shown that when humans or other predators arrive in areas where there have previously been no ecologically equivalent species, they invariably have a profound impact. For example, over the past 1,000 years, Polynesians in Hawaii have destroyed more than 70% of the bird species, and, during the 1800s, hunters on islands close to Antarctica severely depleted many seal species.
Questions
1. The failure of a new species of large mammals to evolve
2. The extinction date of the large Australian animals
3. A reduction in the number of forest fires
4. The arrival of humans in a previously uninhabited area