Rare white platypus spotted in northern NSW: I didnt think anyone would believe me | Austra

Researcher shares images of an ultra-rare platypus possibly the first ever documented - observed in the Northern Tablelands Researchers hunting for an endangered turtle have discovered something even rarer a white platypus frolicking in a New South Wales stream.

This article is more than 2 months old

Rare white platypus spotted in northern NSW: ‘I didn’t think anyone would believe me’

This article is more than 2 months old

Researcher shares images of an ultra-rare platypus – possibly the first ever documented - observed in the Northern Tablelands

Researchers hunting for an endangered turtle have discovered something even rarer – a white platypus frolicking in a New South Wales stream.

Photos and footage of the extraordinary creature have been published in a scientific journal after several encounters over the past two years or so.

The University of New England PhD student Lou Streeting was searching a Northern Tablelands stream for endangered western saw-shelled turtles when she first spotted the conspicuous enigma in early 2021.

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UNE researchers have discovered a rare white platypus living in a stream in northern NSW.

“It surfaced literally a few metres away from us and we were like ‘Wow, did we just see a white platypus?’” Streeting says.

“I was glad I caught it on video because I didn’t think anyone would believe me otherwise.”

She has seen the platypus a number of times since then, most recently three months ago, showing it is coping with its lack of camouflage.

A platypus with a point of difference

White platypuses have been documented in the past, but this one has a point of difference.

It’s not an albino because only part of its body is affected by an absence of melanin – a pigment that gives colour to fur, skin and eyes.

“It does have some pigmentation. It has a black bill, and it has black feet and a little bit of colour on its tail. So we’ve said it’s a leucistic platypus.”

And it’s possibly the first one ever documented.

The ultra-rare platypus has a white body, a black bill, black feet and a little bit of colour on its tail. Photograph: Lou Streeting/PR Image

“Our search of scientific literature, newspapers, and databases yielded 12 individual records of albino or atypically white platypus dating back to the first record in 1835, and our observation likely represents the only known record of a leucistic platypus.”

Streeting hopes the intriguing discovery will remind everyone of the need to protect the treasure trove of native species in the nation’s waterways.

“These environments are not just home to endangered species like the western saw-shelled turtle, but also to other truly unique and extraordinary creatures like this rare white platypus.”

Habitat destruction fuels decline in numbers

The Australian Conservation Foundation says platypus numbers are in decline, with the duck-billed, egg-laying, milk-producing yet nippleless peculiarity losing roughly a quarter of its habitat during the past 30 years.

Despite the downward trajectory, there’s a lack of good data and only broad estimates of how many are left.

In an effort to plug the gaps, the ACF has partnered with the University of NSW’s Centre for Ecosystem Science on a citizen science initiative called the Platy-project.

The platypus isn’t an albino because only part of its body is affected by a lack of melanin.

It encourages Australians to look for them in local creeks and rivers, and share the details of any sightings.

Could platypuses disappear in Australia?

The UNSW conservation ecologist Gilad Bino worked on a 2021 national assessment of the conservation status of the platypus and says there’s much uncertainty about how many are left.

It could sit anywhere between 50,000 and 300,000.

There are no national or state-level monitoring frameworks for the species despite evidence of shrinking populations in places such as greater Melbourne.

“That would be true for all urban areas, but we don’t have the data,” he says.

Populations are also in decline in parts of the Murray-Darling river system, and there have been localised extinctions in Brisbane.

“In South Australia, they are pretty much extinct except for an introduced population on Kangaroo Island and even they’ve been impacted by bushfires and drought,” he says.

“I don’t think platypuses are going to disappear – and I hope I’m right – in the next several decades. But what I do fear is that for many people across Australia, they’re going to see them disappear from their local rivers.”

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