A giant kangaroo so big that it had to walk, not hop, a two-tonne wombat and a two-metre tall bird — they may sound like formidable animals, but they never stood a chance.

For years scientists have debated whether human hunting or climate change was the reason for the demise of the astonishing ‘megafauna’ that once inhabited Australia.

Now a new study claims to have finally settled the debate after showing the huge animals were able to survive the increasingly dry climate, but disappeared within a few thousand years of the arrival of the first people.

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However, this was no endless slaughter by hunters intent on destruction.

Instead, the researchers concluded the loss of such wonders of the natural world came about through what they described as “imperceptible overkill”. The occasional killing of a young animal was all that it took to tip their populations over the edge and into extinction.

This is a factor in the decline of orangutans today. They are only rarely killed by local people in places like Borneo, giving them the impression that this cannot be a problem. But conservationists have warned it is having a significant effect on the slow-breeding primates, who are also having to cope with the loss of their habitats to agriculture, logging and mining.

The researchers behind the new study, based in the US, Australia and Germany, used an ingenious method to work out what happened to Australia’s megafauna.

Shape Created with Sketch. Animals in decline Show all 8 left Created with Sketch. right Created with Sketch. Shape Created with Sketch. Animals in decline 1/8 Harbour seal (Phoca vitulina) Where: Orkney Islands. What: Between 2001-2006, numbers in Orkney declined by 40 per cent. Why: epidemics of the phocine distemper virus are thought to have caused major declines, but the killing of seals in the Moray Firth to protect salmon farms may have an impact. Alamy 2/8 African lion (Panthera leo) Where: Ghana. What: In Ghana’s Mole National Park, lion numbers have declined by more than 90 per cent in 40 years. Why: local conflicts are thought to have contributed to the slaughter of lions and are a worrying example of the status of the animal in Western and Central Africa. 3/8 Leatherback turtle (Dermochelys coriacea) Where: Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, Costa Rica. What: Numbers are down in both the Atlantic and Pacific. It declined by 95 per cent between 1989-2002 in Costa Rica. Why: mainly due to them being caught as bycatch, but they’ve also been affected by local developments. Alamy 4/8 Wandering albatross (Diomedea exulans) Where: South Atlantic. What: A rapid decline. One population, from Bird Island, South Georgia, declined by 50 per cent between 1972-2010, according to the British Antarctic Survey. Why: being caught in various commercial longline fisheries. Alamy 5/8 Saiga Antelope (Saiga tatarica) Where: Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Russia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan. What: fall in populations has been dramatic. In the early 1990s numbers were over a million, but are now estimated to be around 50,000. Why: the break up of the former USSR led to uncontrolled hunting. Increased rural poverty means the species is hunted for its meat 6/8 Swordfish (Xiphias gladius) Where: found worldwide in tropical, subtropical and temperate seas. Why: at risk from overfishing and as a target in recreational fishing. A significant number of swordfish are also caught by illegal driftnet fisheries in the Mediterranean 7/8 Argali Sheep (Ovis mammon) Where: Central and Southern Asian mountains,usually at 3,000-5,000 metres altitude. Why: domesticated herds of sheep competing for grazing grounds. Over-hunting and poaching. 8/8 Humphead Wrasse (Cheilinus undulatus) Where: the Indo-Pacific, from the Red Sea to South Africa and to the Tuamoto Islands (Polynesia), north to the Ryukyu Islands (south-west Japan), and south to New Caledonia. Why: Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported (IUU) fishing and trading of the species 1/8 Harbour seal (Phoca vitulina) Where: Orkney Islands. What: Between 2001-2006, numbers in Orkney declined by 40 per cent. Why: epidemics of the phocine distemper virus are thought to have caused major declines, but the killing of seals in the Moray Firth to protect salmon farms may have an impact. Alamy 2/8 African lion (Panthera leo) Where: Ghana. What: In Ghana’s Mole National Park, lion numbers have declined by more than 90 per cent in 40 years. Why: local conflicts are thought to have contributed to the slaughter of lions and are a worrying example of the status of the animal in Western and Central Africa. 3/8 Leatherback turtle (Dermochelys coriacea) Where: Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, Costa Rica. What: Numbers are down in both the Atlantic and Pacific. It declined by 95 per cent between 1989-2002 in Costa Rica. Why: mainly due to them being caught as bycatch, but they’ve also been affected by local developments. Alamy 4/8 Wandering albatross (Diomedea exulans) Where: South Atlantic. What: A rapid decline. One population, from Bird Island, South Georgia, declined by 50 per cent between 1972-2010, according to the British Antarctic Survey. Why: being caught in various commercial longline fisheries. Alamy 5/8 Saiga Antelope (Saiga tatarica) Where: Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Russia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan. What: fall in populations has been dramatic. In the early 1990s numbers were over a million, but are now estimated to be around 50,000. Why: the break up of the former USSR led to uncontrolled hunting. Increased rural poverty means the species is hunted for its meat 6/8 Swordfish (Xiphias gladius) Where: found worldwide in tropical, subtropical and temperate seas. Why: at risk from overfishing and as a target in recreational fishing. A significant number of swordfish are also caught by illegal driftnet fisheries in the Mediterranean 7/8 Argali Sheep (Ovis mammon) Where: Central and Southern Asian mountains,usually at 3,000-5,000 metres altitude. Why: domesticated herds of sheep competing for grazing grounds. Over-hunting and poaching. 8/8 Humphead Wrasse (Cheilinus undulatus) Where: the Indo-Pacific, from the Red Sea to South Africa and to the Tuamoto Islands (Polynesia), north to the Ryukyu Islands (south-west Japan), and south to New Caledonia. Why: Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported (IUU) fishing and trading of the species

Instead of looking for remains on the land, they examined sediments taken from the ocean.

These contained chronological layers of material blown into the sea, including dust, pollen, ash and spores from a fungus that grew on the dung of plant-eating mammals.

From these sediments, they were able to tell what the climate was like and also how much dung was being produced.

And, as one of the researchers, Professor Gifford Miller, of Colorado University, explained, the “abundance of these spores is good evidence for a lot of large mammals on the southwestern Australian landscape up until about 45,000 years ago”.

“Then, in a window of time lasting just a few thousand years, the megafauna population collapsed,” he said.

This sudden decline of large animals in south-western Australia happened about 2,000 years after humans dispersed across the continent, a paper about the research in the journal Nature Communications noted.

This could have been coincidence, but the only other explanation put forward to explain what happened — climate change — appeared to be contradicted by the scientists’ other main finding.

While the climate became drier about 70,000 years ago, prompting a shift from dense eucalyptus woodlands to a more open shrubland, this did not have a noticeable effect on the production of fungus spores.

“We therefore conclude there is no temporal association between climatically driven environmental changes and megafaunal extinction in the south-west region,” the paper said.

“There is also no indication in our data that the megafauna suffered a slow demise commensurate with increases in aridity.”

Human hunting may bring to mind the mass, wanton slaughter of buffaloes after Europeans arrived on the Great Plains of America with powerful rifles and the chance to make a fortune from the animals’ hides.

But the researchers suggested that what happened in Australia would have been barely noticeable to the people responsible.

“It has been estimated that low intensity hunting, such as the killing of just one juvenile per person per decade, could result in a species being extinguished over a few hundred years,” they wrote.

“Such selective, low-level hunting would be virtually imperceptible in the archaeological record, accounting for the lack of reported kill sites.

“In this scenario, all species of megafauna could have been lost from the entire continent within a few thousand years.

“We conclude our results are consistent with extinction being driven by such ‘imperceptible overkill.’”

Among the animals lost to the world during this period was Genyornis newtoni, a flightless bird that stood up to two metres tall.

Last year Professor Miller found the first direct evidence that humans preyed on Australian megafauna — fragments of burned Genyornis eggshells.

The Sthenurus kangaroo — whose appearance has been likened to the White Rabbit from Alice in Wonderland — weighed up to 240kg and walked on two legs, rather than routinely hopping, like its relatives today.

The two-tonne wombat, Diprotodon optatum, is believed to have been the world’s largest marsupial. It was three metres long and two metres high and had pillar-like legs and broad footpads like an elephant. It also had strong claws on its front feet.

Dr Sander van der Kaars, of Australia’s Monash University, who led the research, said: “The results of this study are of significant interest across the archaeological and Earth science communities and to the general public who remain fascinated by the menagerie of now extinct giant animals that roamed the planet — and the cause of their extinction — as our own species began its persistent colonisation of Earth.”

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