An artist’s impression of the Western Australian koalaWA Museum

Australia was once home to a second species of koala that lived only in the west of the continent, where it became extinct around 30,000 years ago.

Today, there is only one koala species: Phascolarctos cinereus. It is found almost exclusively in eucalyptus forests in eastern Australia and is threatened by habitat loss, disease, collisions with cars and predation by introduced species.

Numerous koala fossils, aged between 137,000 and 31,000 years old, have been collected in Western Australian caves over the past century. Until now, however, there wasn’t enough material to conclude that the remains were from a different species.

In the past 25 years, more fossils have become available to researchers, including skulls donated by the family of late speleologist Lindsay Hatcher, who discovered numerous ancient remains during his expeditions in caves in the south-west of Western Australia.