Eastern Quoll

from $25.00

Sponsoring an Eastern Quoll is a powerful way to help protect one of Tasmania’s rare and lesser-known native marsupials. Once widespread across mainland Australia, Eastern Quolls are now extinct on the mainland and survive only in Tasmania, where they still face threats from habitat loss, road accidents, and introduced predators.

Funds from sponsorship directly support their care and conservation. This includes daily feeding, veterinary treatment, habitat enrichment, and the maintenance of secure enclosures that allow populations to be managed and protected. Sponsorship also contributes to breeding programs aimed at strengthening healthy populations, as well as ongoing research into their behaviour, ecology, and long-term survival needs. Education and awareness programs are another key area, helping people understand the importance of protecting this unique species.

By sponsoring an Eastern Quoll, you are helping ensure this small but remarkable predator continues to have a future in Tasmania’s wild landscapes.

Value:

Sponsoring an Eastern Quoll is a powerful way to help protect one of Tasmania’s rare and lesser-known native marsupials. Once widespread across mainland Australia, Eastern Quolls are now extinct on the mainland and survive only in Tasmania, where they still face threats from habitat loss, road accidents, and introduced predators.

Funds from sponsorship directly support their care and conservation. This includes daily feeding, veterinary treatment, habitat enrichment, and the maintenance of secure enclosures that allow populations to be managed and protected. Sponsorship also contributes to breeding programs aimed at strengthening healthy populations, as well as ongoing research into their behaviour, ecology, and long-term survival needs. Education and awareness programs are another key area, helping people understand the importance of protecting this unique species.

By sponsoring an Eastern Quoll, you are helping ensure this small but remarkable predator continues to have a future in Tasmania’s wild landscapes.