The 'Thylacine' (''Thylacinus cynocephalus'') was the largest known
carnivorous marsupial of
modern times. Native to
Australia and
New Guinea, it is thought to have become
extinct in the 20th century. It is commonly known as the 'Tasmanian Tiger' (due to its striped back), and also known as the 'Tasmanian Wolf', and
colloquially the 'Tassie (or Tazzy) Tiger' or simply the 'Tiger'. It was the last extant member of its
genus, ''
Thylacinus'', although a number of related species have been found in the fossil record dating back to the early
Miocene.
The Thylacine became extinct on the
Australian mainland thousands of years before
European settlement of the continent, but survived on the island of
Tasmania along with a number of other
endemic species such as the
Tasmanian Devil. Intensive hunting encouraged by
bounties is generally blamed for its extinction, but other contributory factors may have been disease, the introduction of dogs, and human encroachment into its habitat. Despite being officially classified as extinct, sightings are still reported.
Like the
tigers and
wolves of the Northern Hemisphere, from which it inherited two of its common names, the Thylacine was a
top-level predator. As a marsupial, it was not related to these
placental mammals, but due to
convergent evolution it displayed the same general form and
adaptations. Its closest living relative is the
Tasmanian Devil.
Evolution

Illustration of the Powerful Thylacine, ''Thylacinus potens'', which existed during the Miocene. It is the Thylacine's largest known relative.
The modern Thylacine first appeared about 4 million years ago. Species of the Thylacinidae family date back to the beginning of the Miocene; since the early 1990s, at least seven fossil species have been uncovered at
Riversleigh, part of
Lawn Hill National Park in north-west
Queensland.
[1][2]
Dickson's Thylacine (''Nimbacinus dicksoni''), is the oldest of the seven discovered fossil species, dating back to 23 million years ago. This
thylacinid was much smaller than its more recent relatives.
[3] The largest species, the Powerful Thylacine (''
Thylacinus potens'') which grew to the size of a wolf, was the only species to survive into the late Miocene.
[4] In late
Pleistocene and early
Holocene times, the modern Thylacine was widespread (although never numerous) throughout Australia and New Guinea.
[5]
The Thylacine showed many similarities to the members of the
Canidae (dog) family of the Northern Hemisphere: sharp teeth, powerful jaws,
raised heels and the same general body form. This is an example of convergent evolution. Since the Thylacine filled the same
ecological niche in Australia as the dog family did elsewhere, it developed many of the same features. Despite this, it is unrelated to any of the Northern Hemisphere predators — its closest living relative is the Tasmanian Devil (''Sarcophilus harrisii'').
[6]
Discovery and taxonomy
The
indigenous peoples of Australia made first contact with the Thylacine. Numerous examples of Thylacine engravings and
rock art have been found dating back to at least 1000 BCE.
[7] Petroglyph images of the Thylacine can be found at the Dampier Rock Art Precinct on the
Burrup Peninsula in
Western Australia. By the time the first explorers arrived, the animal was already rare in Tasmania. Europeans may have encountered it as far back as 1642 when
Abel Tasman first arrived in Tasmania. His shore party reported seeing the footprints of "wild beasts having claws like a "''Tyger''".
[8] Marc-Joseph Marion du Fresne, arriving with the ''Mascarin'' in 1772, reported seeing a "tiger cat".
[9] Positive identification of the Thylacine as the animal encountered cannot be made from this report since the
Tiger Quoll (''Dasyurus maculatus'') is similarly described. The first definitive encounter was by French explorers on
13 May 1792, as noted by the naturalist
Jacques Labillardière, in his journal from the expedition led by
D'Entrecasteaux. However, it was not until 1805 that
William Paterson, the Lieutenant Governor of Tasmania, sent a detailed description for publication in the ''
Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser''.
[10]

An original 19th century print of a Thylacine. This depiction is not anatomically accurate.
The first detailed scientific description was made by Tasmania's Deputy Surveyor-General,
George Harris in 1808, five years after first settlement of the island.
[ Information sheet:Thylacine ''Thylacinus cynocephalus'' ] Harris originally placed the Thylacine in the genus ''
Didelphis'', which had been created by
Linnaeus for the American
opossums, describing it as ''Didelphis cynocephala'', the "dog-headed opossum". Recognition that the Australian marsupials were fundamentally different from the known mammal genera led to the establishment of the modern classification scheme, and in 1796
Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire created the genus ''
Dasyurus'' where he placed the Thylacine in 1810. To resolve the mixture of Greek and Latin nomenclature the species name was altered to ''cynocephalus''. In 1824, it was separated out into its own genus, ''Thylacinus'', by
Temminck.
[11] The common name derives directly from the genus name, originally from the Greek θύλακος (thylakos), meaning pouch or sack.
[12]
Description
Descriptions of the Thylacine vary, as evidence is restricted to preserved
joey specimens; fossil records; skins and skeletal remains; black and white photographs and film of the animal in captivity; and accounts from the field.
The Thylacine resembled a large, short-haired dog with a stiff tail which smoothly extended from the body in a similar way to that of a
kangaroo. Many European settlers drew direct comparisons with the
Hyena, due to its unusual stance and general demeanour.
6 Its yellow-brown coat featured 13 to 21 distinctive dark stripes across its back, rump and the base of its tail, which earned the animal the nickname, "Tiger". The stripes were more marked in younger specimens, fading as the animal got older.
[13] One of the stripes extended down the outside of the rear thigh. Its body hair was dense and soft, up to 15 mm (0.6 inches) in length; in juveniles the tip of the tail had a crest. Its rounded, erect ears were about 8 cm (3.1 inches) long and covered with short fur.
[14] Colouration varied from light fawn to a dark brown; the belly was cream-coloured.
[15]

The gape of the Thylacine's jaws was much wider than the placental carnivores'. The yawn could be used as a threat display similar to that of the Tasmanian Devil.
The mature Thylacine ranged from 100 to 180 cm (39–71 in) long, including a tail of around 50 to 65 cm (19.6–25.5 in).
[16] The largest measured specimen was 290 cm (9 ft 6 in) from nose to tail.
15 Adults stood about 60 cm (23.6 in) at the shoulder and weighed 20 to 30 kg (44–66 lb).
16 There was slight
sexual dimorphism with the adult females being smaller than the males on average.
[17]
The female Thylacine had a pouch with four
teats, but unlike many other marsupials, the pouch opened to the rear of its body. Males had a scrotal pouch, unique amongst the Australian marsupials, into which they could withdraw their
scrotal sac.
13
The Thylacine was able to open its jaws to an unusual extent: up to 120 degrees. This capability can be seen in part in
David Fleay's short black-and-white film sequence of a captive Thylacine from 1933. The jaws were muscular and powerful and had 46 teeth.
14
Thylacine footprints could be distinguished from other native or introduced animals; unlike foxes, cats, dogs,
wombats or Tasmanian Devils, Thylacines had a very large rear pad and four obvious front pads, arranged in almost a straight line.
[18] The hindfeet were similar to the forefeet but had four digits rather than five. Their claws were non-retractable.
13

The Thylacine's footprint is easy to distinguish from those of native and introduced species.
The early scientific studies suggested it possessed an acute sense of smell which enabled it to track prey,
18 but analysis of its brain structure revealed that its
olfactory bulbs were not well developed. It is likely to have relied on sight and hearing when hunting instead.
13 Some observers described it having a strong and distinctive smell, others described a faint, clean, animal odour, and some no odour at all. It is possible that the Thylacine, like its relative, the Tasmanian Devil, gave off an odour when agitated.
[19]
The Thylacine was noted as having a stiff and somewhat awkward
gait, making it unable to run at high speed. It could also perform a bipedal hop, in a similar fashion to a kangaroo — demonstrated at various times by captive specimens.
13 Guiler speculates that this was used as an accelerated form of motion when the animal became alarmed. The animal was also able to balance on its hind legs and stand upright for brief periods.
[20]
Although there are no recordings of Thylacine vocalisations, observers of the animal in the wild and in captivity noted that it would growl and hiss when agitated, often accompanied by a threat-yawn. During hunting it would emit a series of rapidly repeated guttural
cough-like barks (described as "yip-yap", "cay-yip" or "hop-hop-hop"), probably for communication between the family pack members.
[21] It also had a long whining cry, probably for identification at distance, and a low snuffling noise used for communication between family members.
[22]
Ecology and behaviour
Little is known about the behaviour or habitat of the Thylacine. A few observations were made of the animal in captivity, but only limited, anecdotal evidence exists of the animal's behaviour in the wild. Most observations were made during the day whereas the Thylacine was naturally nocturnal. Those observations made in the 20th century may have been atypical as they were of a species already under the stresses that would soon lead to its extinction. Some behavioural characteristics have been extrapolated from the behaviour of its close relative, the Tasmanian Devil.

The Thylacine is believed to have preferred the woodlands and coastal heath. The striped pattern may have provided camouflage in woodland conditions,
13 but it may have also served for identification purposes.
[23]
The Thylacine probably preferred the dry
eucalyptus forests, wetlands, and grasslands in
continental Australia.
18 Indigenous Australian rock paintings indicate that the Thylacine lived throughout mainland Australia and
New Guinea. Proof of the animal's existence in mainland Australia came from a desiccated carcass that was discovered in a cave in the
Nullarbor Plain in
Western Australia in 1990;
carbon dating revealed it to be around 3,300 years old.
[24]
In Tasmania it preferred the woodlands of the midlands and coastal
heath, which eventually became the primary focus of British settlers seeking grazing properties for their
livestock.
[25] The animal had a typical home range of between 40 and 80 km².
15 It appears to have kept to its home range without being territorial; groups too large to be a family unit were sometimes observed together.
[26]
The Thylacine was a
nocturnal and
crepuscular hunter, spending the daylight hours in small caves or hollow tree trunks in a nest of twigs, bark or fern fronds. It tended to retreat to the hills and forest for shelter during the day and hunted in the open heath at night. Early observers noted that the animal was typically shy and secretive, with awareness to the presence of humans and generally avoiding contact, though it occasionally showed inquisitive traits.
21
There is evidence for at least some year-round breeding (cull records show joeys discovered in the pouch at all times of the year), although the peak breeding season was in
winter and
spring.
13 They would produce up to four cubs per litter (typically two or three), carrying the young in a pouch for up to three months and protecting them until at they were a least half adult size. Early pouch young were hairless and blind, but they had their eyes open and were fully furred by the time they left the pouch.
13 After leaving the pouch, and until they were developed enough to assist, the juveniles would remain in the lair while the female hunted.
[27] Thylacines only once bred successfully in captivity, in
Melbourne Zoo in 1899.
[28] Their life expectancy in the wild is estimated to have been 5 to 7 years, although captive specimens survived up to 9 years.
18
Diet

Analysis of the skeleton suggests that, when hunting, the Thylacine relied on stamina rather than speed in the chase.
The Thylacine was exclusively carnivorous. Its stomach was muscular with an ability to distend to allow the animal to eat large amounts of food at one time, probably an adaptation to compensate for long periods when hunting was unsuccessful and food scarce.
13 Analysis of the skeletal frame and observations of it in captivity point to it singling out a target animal and pursuing it until it was exhausted. Some studies conclude that the animal may have hunted in small family groups, with the main group herding prey in the general direction of an individual waiting in ambush.
Trappers reported it as an ambush predator.
13
Prey included kangaroos,
wallabies, wombats, birds and small animals such as
potoroos and
possums. A favourite prey animal may have been the once common
Tasmanian Emu. The emu was a large, flightless bird which shared the habitat of the Thylacine and was hunted to extinction around 1850, possibly coinciding with the decline in Thylacine numbers.
[29] Both
Dingos
[30] and foxes
[31] have been noted to hunt the
emu on the mainland. Throughout the 20th century, the Thylacine was often characterised as primarily a blood drinker, but little reference is now made to this trait; its popularity seems to have originated from a single second-hand account.
[32] European settlers believed the Thylacine to have preyed upon farmers'
sheep and
poultry. In captivity, Thylacines were fed a wide variety of foods, including dead rabbits and wallabies as well as beef, mutton, and horseflesh and occasionally poultry.
[33]
Extinction
The Thylacine is likely to have become extinct in mainland Australia about 2,000 years ago (possibly earlier in New Guinea). The extinction is attributed to competition from indigenous humans and
invasive Dingos. Doubts exist over the impact of the Dingo, however, as the two species would not have been in direct competition with one another. The Dingo is a primarily
diurnal predator, while it is thought the Thylacine hunted mostly at night. In addition, the Thylacine had a more powerful build, which would have given it an advantage in one-to-one encounters.
[34]
Rock paintings from the
Kakadu National Park clearly show that Thylacines were hunted by early humans,
[35] and it is believed that Dingos and Thylacines may have competed for the same prey. Their environments clearly overlapped: Thylacine sub-fossil remains have been discovered in proximity to those of Dingos. The adoption of the Dingo as a hunting companion by the indigenous peoples would have put the Thylacine under increased pressure.
5

This 1921 photo by
Henry Burrell of a Thylacine with a chicken was widely distributed and may have helped secure the animal's reputation as a poultry thief.
In fact the image is cropped to hide the fenced run and housing, and analysis by one researcher has concluded that this Thylacine is a mounted specimen, posed for the camera.
[36]
Although long extinct on the Australian mainland by the time the European settlers arrived, the Thylacine survived into the 1930s in
Tasmania. At the time of the first settlement, the heaviest distributions were in the north-east, north-west and north-midland regions.
25 From the early days of European settlement they were rarely sighted, but slowly began to be credited with numerous attacks on sheep; this led to the establishment of bounty schemes in an attempt to control their numbers. The
Van Diemen's Land Company introduced bounties on the Thylacine from as early as 1830 and between 1888 and 1909 the
Tasmanian government paid £1 a head for the animal (10
shillings for pups). In all they paid out 2,184 bounties, but it is thought that many more Thylacines were killed than were claimed for.
18 Its extinction is popularly attributed to these relentless efforts by
farmers and
bounty hunters.
18 However, it is likely that multiple factors led to its decline and eventual extinction, including competition with wild dogs (introduced by settlers),
[37] erosion of habitat, the concurrent extinction of prey species, and a
distemper-like disease that also affected many captive specimens at the time.
15[38]
Whatever the reason, the animal had become extremely rare in the wild by the late
1920s. There were several efforts to save the species from extinction. Records of the
Wilsons Promontory management committee dating to 1908 included recommendations for Thylacines to be reintroduced to several suitable locations on the Victorian mainland. In 1928, the Tasmanian Advisory Committee for Native Fauna had recommended a reserve to protect any remaining Thylacines, with potential sites of suitable habitat including the
Arthur-
Pieman area of western Tasmania.
[39]
The last known wild Thylacine to be killed was shot in 1930, by farmer Wilf Batty in
Mawbanna, in the North East of the state. The animal (believed to be a male) had been seen round Batty's hen houses for several weeks.
[40]

The last known Thylacine photographed at Hobart (formerly Beaumaris) Zoo in 1933. A scrotal sac is not visible in this or any other of the photos or film taken, leading to the supposition that "Benjamin" was a female, but the existence of a scrotal pouch in the Thylacine makes it impossible to be certain.
Benjamin and searches
The last Thylacine, later referred to as ''Benjamin'' (although its gender has never been confirmed) was captured in 1933 and sent to the
Hobart Zoo where it lived for three years. It died on
7 September 1936. It is believed to have died as the result of neglect — locked out of its sheltered sleeping quarters, it was exposed to a rare occurrence of extreme Tasmanian weather: baking heat in the day and freezing temperatures at night.
[41]
The last known motion picture footage taken of a living thylacine, 62 seconds of black-and-white footage of ''Benjamin'' pacing backwards and forwards in its enclosure, was taken in 1933.
[42] National Threatened Species Day is held annually on
7 September in Australia, to commemorate the death of Benjamin. It has been held since 1996.
[43]
Although there had been a conservation movement pressing for the Thylacine's protection since 1901, driven in part by the increasing difficulty in obtaining specimens for overseas collections, political difficulties prevented any form of protection coming into force until 1936. Official protection of the species by the Tasmanian government was introduced on
10 July 1936, 59 days before the last known specimen died in captivity.
[44]
The results of subsequent searches indicated a strong possibility of the survival of the species in Tasmania into the 1960s. Searches by
Dr. Eric Guiler and
David Fleay in the north-west of Tasmania found footprints and scats that may have belonged to the animal, heard vocalisations matching the description of those of the Thylacine, and collected anecdotal evidence from people reported to have sighted the animal. Despite the searches, no conclusive evidence was found to point to its continued existence in the wild.
6
The Thylacine held the status of "
endangered species" until 1986. International standards state that any animal for which no specimens have been recorded for 50 years is to be declared extinct. Since no definitive proof of the Thylacine's existence had been found since Benjamin died in 1936, it now met that official criterion and was declared officially extinct by the
IUCN.
The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (
CITES) is more cautious, listing it as "possibly extinct".
[45]
Unconfirmed sightings
Although the Thylacine is formally extinct, many people believe the animal still exists. Sightings are regularly claimed in Tasmania, other parts of
Australia and even in the
Irian Jaya area of
Indonesia, near the
Papua New Guinea border. The Australian Rare Fauna Research Association reports having 3,800 sightings on file from mainland Australia since the 1936 extinction date,
[46] whilst the Mystery Animal Research Centre of Australia recorded 138 up to 1998, and the Department of Conservation and Land Management recorded 65 over the same period.
21 Independent Thylacine researchers Buck and Joan Emburg of Tasmania report 360 Tasmanian and 269 mainland post-extinction 20th century sightings, figures compiled from a number of sources.
[47] On the mainland, sightings are most frequently reported in Southern Victoria.
[48]

An artist's depiction of two Thylacines from 1883.
Sightings of the
Red Fox (first introduced as early as 1864 and again in around 2000)
[49][50] in Tasmania are taken very seriously, despite only minimal evidence of the presence of the species on the island.
[51][52] While the Fox Free Tasmanian Taskforce receives government funding, there is no longer any funding for searches for the Thylacine. The difficulty of locating foxes in the Tasmanian wilderness points to some chance of the Thylacine's survival away from human contact.
49
Despite many sightings being instantly dismissed, some have generated a large amount of publicity. In 1982 a researcher with the
Tasmania Parks and Wildlife Service, Hans Narding, observed what he believed to be a Thylacine for three minutes during the night at a site near Arthur River in the north west of the state. The sighting led to an extensive year-long government-funded search.
[53] In January 1995, a Parks and Wildlife officer reported observing a Thylacine in the
Pyengana region of North Eastern Tasmania in the early hours of the morning. Later searches revealed no trace of the animal.
[54] In 1997, it was reported that locals and missionaries near
Mount Cartenz in
Irian Jaya, had sighted Thylacines. The locals had apparently known about them for many years but had not made an official report.
[55]
In February 2005 Klaus Emmerichs, a
German tourist, claimed to have taken
digital photographs of a Thylacine he saw near the
Lake St Clair National Park, but the authenticity of the photographs has not been established.
[56]
The photos were not published until April 2006, fourteen months after the sighting. The photographs, which showed only the back of the animal, were said, by those who studied them, to be inconclusive as evidence of the Thylacine's continued existence.
[57][58]
Rewards
In 1983,
Ted Turner offered a $100,000 reward for proof of the continued existence of the Thylacine.
[59]
However, a letter sent in response to an inquiry by a Thylacine-searcher, Murray McAllister, in 2000 indicated that the reward had been withdrawn.
[60] In March 2005, Australian news magazine ''
The Bulletin'', as part of its 125th anniversary celebrations, offered a $1.25 million reward for the safe capture of a live Thylacine. When the offer closed at the end of June 2005 no one had produced any evidence of the animal's existence. An offer of $1.75 million has subsequently been offered by a Tasmanian tour operator, Stewart Malcolm.
57 Trapping is illegal under the terms of the Thylacine's protection, so any reward made for its capture is invalid, as a trapping licence would not be issued.
59
Modern research and projects

Skull detail from a complete skeleton at Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery,
Hobart,
Tasmania.
Records of all specimens, many of which are in European collections, are now held in the
International Thylacine Specimen Database.
The
Australian Museum in
Sydney began a
cloning project in 1999.
[61] The goal was to use
genetic material from specimens taken and preserved in the early 20th century to
clone new individuals and restore the species from extinction. Several serious microbiologists have dismissed the project as a PR stunt and its chief proponent, Professor Mike Archer, received a 2002 nomination for the Australian Skeptics
Bent Spoon Award for "the perpetrator of the most preposterous piece of paranormal or pseudo-scientific piffle".
[62]
In late 2002 the researchers had some success as they were able to extract replicable
DNA from the specimens.
[63] On
15 February 2005, the museum announced that it was stopping the project after tests showed the DNA retrieved from the specimens had been too badly degraded to be usable.
[64][65] In May 2005, Professor Michael Archer, the
University of New South Wales Dean of Science, former director of the
Australian Museum and evolutionary biologist, announced that the project was being restarted by a group of interested universities and a research institute.
57[66]
The
International Thylacine Specimen Database (ITSD) was completed in April 2005 and is the culmination of a four-year research project to catalog and digitally photograph, if possible, all known surviving Thylacine specimen material held within museum, university and private collections. The master records are held by the
Zoological Society of London.
Cultural references

The Tasmanian Coat of Arms features Thylacines as supporters.
The Thylacine has been used extensively as a symbol of Tasmania. The animal is featured on the official
Tasmanian Coat of Arms. It is used in the official logos of
Tourism Tasmania and the
Launceston City Council. Since 1998, it has been prominently displayed on
Tasmanian vehicle license plates.
The plight of the Thylacine was featured in a campaign for
The Wilderness Society entitled ''We used to hunt Thylacines''. The animal is featured on
Cascade Brewery beer products and in their television advertisements. In video games,
Ty the Tasmanian Tiger is the star of his own trilogy and
Tiny Tiger is an antagonist in the
''Crash Bandicoot'' series. In the early 1990s' Cartoon TV show "
Taz-Mania" the character, Wendell T. Wolf, was supposedly the last surviving Tasmanian wolf.
Tiger Tale is a children's book based on an Aboriginal myth about how the Thylacine got its stripes. The Thylacine is the mascot for
Tasmanian Tigers state cricket team and has also appeared in postage stamps from Australia,
Equatorial Guinea, and
Micronesia.
[67]
See also
★
Cryptozoology
★ List of
extinct Australian animals
★
Fauna of Australia
Notes
'a.' As well as the common alternative names, the Thylacine was referred to by a range of other names, which often makes clear identification of the species in records difficult. Other names by which it is occasionally identified include Marsupial Wolf, Hyena, Zebra Wolf, Kangaroo Wolf, Zebra Opossum, Marsupial Tiger, Tiger Cat, Tasmanian Pouched Wolf and Hyena Opussum.
'b.' The scrotal pouch is almost unique within the marsupials — the only other marsupial species to have this feature is the
Water Opossum, ''Chironectes minimus'' which is found in
Mexico,
Central and
South America.
'c.' Some writers go further to postulate that the mature Thylacine's jaw and bipedal hop were specialised for hunting the emu and either breaking its neck or severing the jugular vein.
'd.' Based on the lack of reliable first hand accounts, Robert Paddle argues that the predation on sheep and poultry may have been exaggerated, suggesting the Thylacine was used as a convenient scapegoat for the mismanagement of the sheep farms, and the image of it as a poultry killer impressed on the public consciousness by a striking photo taken by Henry Burrell in 1921.
[68]
'e.' Accounts of Thylacine survival in southern Australia persisted into the 1840s from both Indigenous and European sources.
[69]
'f.' Frank Darby, who claimed to have been a keeper at Hobart Zoo, suggested ''Benjamin'' as having been the animal's pet name in a newspaper article of May 1968. However, no documentation exists to suggest that it ever had a pet name and Alison Reid (the ''de facto'' curator at the zoo at the time) and Michael Sharland (the then publicist for the zoo) denied that Frank Darby had ever worked at the zoo or that the name ''Benjamin'' was ever used for the animal. Darby also appears to be the source for the claim that the last Thylacine was a male.
[70]
'g.' The photographer, the naturalist David Fleay, was bitten on the buttock whilst shooting the film, having ignored the threat yawn and hissing vocalizations made by the animal.
42
'h.' Four fox carcasses, a scat sample and some possible footprints have been discovered on the island since 2001.
'i.' Dingos, the Thylacine's possible competitor, are now rare, if not extinct, in Irian Jaya.
[71]
'j.' Skins occasionally turn up in private ownership, such as the Wilson skin purchased by the National Museum of Australia in 1987.
39
Citations
1. Riversleigh
2. Is there a fossil Thylacine?
3. Lost Kingdoms: Dickson's Thylacine (''Nimbacinus dicksoni'')
4. Lost Kingdoms: Powerful Thylacine (''Thylacinus potens'')
5. Causes of extinction of vertebrates during the Holocene of mainland Australia: arrival of the dingo, or human impact?, C.N. Johnson and S, Wroe, , , The Holocene,
6. Threatened Species: Thylacine - Tasmanian tiger, ''Thylacinus cynocephalus''
7. Rock art shows attempts to save thylacine Anna Salleh
8. Rembrants. D. (1682). "A short relation out of the journal of Captain Abel Jansen Tasman, upon the discovery of the ''South Terra incognita''; not long since published in the Low Dutch". ''Philosophical Collections of the Royal Society of London'', (6), 179-86. Quoted in Paddle (2000) p.4
9. Roth H.L. (1891). "Crozet's Voyage to Tasmania, New Zealand, etc....1771–1772.". London. Truslove and Shirley. Quoted in Paddle (2000) p.4
10. The Last Tasmanian Tiger: The History and Extinction of the Thylacine, Robert Paddle, , , Cambridge University Press, , ISBN 0-521-53154-3
11. The Last Tasmanian Tiger: The History and Extinction of the Thylacine, Robert Paddle, , , Cambridge University Press, , ISBN 0-521-53154-3
12. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology, T. F. Hoad (Ed.), , , Oxford University Press, , ISBN 0-19-863120-0
13. Fauna of Australia chap.20 vol.1b Joan Dixon
14. Australia's Thylacine: What did the Thylacine look like?
15. Profile - Thylacine Dr. Eric Guiler
16. Tasmania's Threatened Fauna Handbook, Sally Bryant and Jean Jackson Threatened Species Unit, Parks and Wildlife Service, Tasmania, , , Bryant and Jackson, , ISBN 0-7246-6223-5
17. Character displacement in Australian dasyurid carnivores: size relationships and prey size patterns, Menna Jones, , , Ecology,
18. Wildlife of Tasmania: Mammals of Tasmania: Thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger, ''Thylacinus cynocephalus''
19. Paddle (2000). p.49
20. Tasmanian Tiger
21. Reports of alleged thylacine sightings in Western Australia, Greg Heberle, , , Conservation Science W. Aust.,
22. Paddle (2000). p.65–66
23. Paddle (2000). p.42–43
24. Mummified thylacine has national message
25. Australia's Thylacine: Where did the Thylacine live?
26. Paddle (2000). p.38–39
27. Paddle (2000). p.60
28. Paddle (2000). p.228–231
29. Paddle (2000). p.81
30.
31. Emu
32. Paddle (2000). p.29–35
33. Paddle (2000). p.96
34. Introducing the Thylacine
35. Paddle (2000) Plate 2.1 p.19
36. Is this picture worth a thousand words? An analysis of Henry Burrell's photograph of a thylacine with a chicken, Carol Freeman, , , Australian Zoologist,
37. Canine Revolution: The Social and Environmental Impact of the Introduction of the Dog to Tasmania, James Boyce, , , Environmental History,
38. Paddle (2000). p.202–203
39. Tasmanian tiger skin: Charles Selby Wilson collection
40. Additional Thylacine Topics: Persecution
41. Paddle (2000). p195
42. Rough Justice Leigh Dayton
43. National Threatened Species Day
44. Paddle (2000). p.184
45. Appendices I, II and III
46. The Tasmanian Tiger: ''Thylacinus cynocephalus''
47. Thylacine Sightings Map Buck Emburg and Joan Emburg
48. Thyla seen near CBD?
49. Foxes in Tasmania: A Report on the Incursion of an Invasive Species G. Saunders, C. Lane, S. Harris, and C. Dickman
50. European red fox (Vulpes vulpes)
51. Hard Evidence of Foxes Discovered in Tasmania
52. The Fox Free Tasmania Taskforce
53. Mystery that burns so bright
54. New bush sighting puts tiger hunter back in business James Woodford
55. Tassie tiger sighting claim in Irian Jaya Louise Williams
56. Tourist claims to have snapped Tasmanian tiger
57. Researchers revive plan to clone the Tassie tiger Daniel Dasey
58. Tourist claims to have snapped Tasmanian tiger
59. Extinct or not, the story won't die Jason Steger
60. Reward Monies Withdrawn Murray McAllister
61. Back from the dead Julia Leigh
62. Tasmanian tiger clone a fantasy: scientist
63. Attempting to make a genomic library of an extinct animal
64. Museum ditches thylacine cloning project
65. Tassie tiger cloning 'pie-in-the-sky science' Deborah Smith
66. Thylacine cloning project dumped Judy Skatssoon
67. Thylacine Stamps Philip R. Burns
68. Paddle (2000) p.79–138
69. Paddle (2000) p.23–24
70. Paddle (2000) p.198–201
71. IUCN Red List: Canis lupus ssp. dingo Corbett, L.K
References
★ Guiler, E. (1985). ''Thylacine: The Tragedy of The Tasmanian Tiger.'' Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-554603-2
★ Guiler, E. & Godard, P. (1998). ''Tasmanian Tiger: A lesson to be learnt.'' Abrolhos Publishing. ISBN 0-9585791-0-5
★ Guiler, E. R. (1961a). "Breeding season of the Thylacine." ''Journal of Mammalogy'' '42'(3): 396–397.
★ Guiler, E. R. (1961b). "The former distribution and decline of the Thylacine." ''Australian Journal of Science'' '23'(7): 207–210.
★ Lord, C. (1927). "Existing Tasmanian marsupials." ''Papers and Procedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania'' '61': 17–24.
★ Lowry, D. C. (1967). "Discovery of a Thylacine (Tasmanian Tiger) Carcase In a Cave Near Eucla, Western Australia." Helictite.
★ Paddle, R. (2000). ''The Last Tasmanian Tiger: The History and Extinction of the Thylacine.'' Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-53154-3
★ Park, A. (1986). "A Tasmanian Tiger Extinct or Merely Elusive." ''Australian Geographic'' '1'(3): 66–83.
★ Pearce, R (1976). "Thylacines in Tasmania." ''Australian Mammal Society Bulletin'' '3': 58.
★ Smith, S. J. (1980). "The Tasmanian Tiger - 1980. A report on an investigation of the current status of thylacine ''Thylacinus cynocephalus'', funded by the World Wildlife Fund Australia." Hobart: National Parks and Wildlife Service, Tasmania.
External links
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Photographs and movies of the Thylacine
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Seven short movies of the Thylacine
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Australian Megafauna