Monitoring cameras are rolling on properties involved in the Defending Dryandra Project and we have been out checking these cameras over the past month.

We’ve captured a number of feral cats, foxes, sheep and kangaroo on the monitoring cameras to date. These images will help to determine where we install the 4G monitoring cameras which we have received and will install next month. We will then start to receive real time data on feral cat activity allowing for more targeted feral cat control by our pest animal control contractor.

To date the pest animal control contractor has culled 13 feral cats near Dryandra Woodland National Park on properties involved in the Defending Dryandra Project helping to reduce the threat of predation to threatened species including numbats, woylies and chuditch. The pest animal control contractor will continue to conduct 20 hours of feral cat control until the completion of the project at the end of 2026.

We have been surprised by the number of feral cats and foxes captured on the monitoring cameras to date. We have also spotted 2 feral cats while checking the cameras, one was hiding high in a sheoak tree overlooking a rabbit warren and another was walking by the side road. One of our aims by the end of the project is to better understand the density of feral cats on properties near Dryandra Woodland National Park.

A big thank you to our work experience student for her help servicing the cameras at one of the properties and to all of the landholders involved in the project.

This Defending Dryandra – Feral Hotspots Project is supported by funding from the Western Australian Government

We acknowledge the Noongar people as Traditional Custodians of this land and pay our respects to all Elders past and present