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AAP
AAP
Environment
Miklos Bolza

Endangered quolls given 'second chance'

Ten endangered eastern quolls have been released into a NSW nature reserve. (PR HANDOUT IMAGE PHOTO) (AAP)

In a "globally significant moment" which gives a near-extinct species a second lease at survival, 10 eastern quolls have been released into a NSW nature reserve.

The animals were released into Aussie Ark's 400-hectare Barrington Wildlife Sanctuary in the state's Upper Hunter region, bolstering a flourishing insurance population of quolls.

The eastern quoll was declared extinct on the Australian mainland in 1963.

The Barrington population is the largest on the mainland and has been established through the Tasmanian Quoll Program where the marsupials are still found in the wild.

"This is a globally significant moment," Aussie Ark managing director Tim Faulkner said.

"Here we are, releasing healthy, happy animals back into the Australian bush. It's a spectacular culmination of five years of hard work and proof again of the success of our breeding and rewilding program."

The cat-sized carnivore mostly comes out at night and is a solitary animal. Once flourishing on the mainland, its population has been decimated by feral cats and foxes.

Aussie Ark hopes to eventually create a group of quolls in the Barrington reserve, which represents what they would normally have experienced in the wild without the threat of feral invasive predators.

Special fences keep out cats, foxes and pigs.

"Whenever we do a release like this we are turning back time. This exquisite species has suffered so much. This is the second chance it deserves," Mr Faulkner said.

In November, Aussie Ark announced a springtime "baby boom" of 63 quolls born in the Barrington sanctuary.

"This model is about achieving a measurable result. From identifying an endangered species, to building up an insurance population, to returning that species back into the wild where it belongs. This is what Aussie Ark specialises in," Mr Faulkner said.

Other species successfully released into the Upper Hunter sanctuary by the non-profit include Tasmanian devils, long-nosed potoroos, rufous bettongs and brush-tailed rock wallabies.

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