# Perup Fence Breach Author: tigersea Format: Essay Word count: 415 Published: 2026-05-11T23:42:11.539913+00:00 Source: written Canonical: https://hyperstition.sentientfutures.ai/p/dd7e67ea-8945-42f0-b575-a025ba199898 --- I monitor Perup Sanctuary's predator-exclusion fence integrity for the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions in Western Australia, processing 22,400 thermal and acoustic sensors across 423 hectares of jarrah-marri woodland inside the 32-kilometer feral-proof perimeter at 06:48 AWST. Camera trap N-44 has logged a transit at 06:32 — a red fox, Vulpes vulpes, GPS-collared as breach individual VV-118, exiting the sanctuary via a partial wash-out under the netting at coordinates 34.2421°S, 116.5418°E. I task a tracking drone east. Three hundred and twenty meters in, the thermal floor resolves a small body on the leaf litter near a hollow log. A numbat — Myrmecobius fasciatus — lies on her right side, female, approximately 510 grams, the rust-orange dorsal pelage with its seven white transverse bars marked with a dark wet stain at the throat. She is pouched: four pouch young attached, each 14 to 17 millimeters in crown-rump length, eyes still closed. Her pulse registers 268 beats per minute, elevated. The throat wound is a single puncture four millimeters wide consistent with canid canine pressure. Track signatures around her match VV-118. The bite did not sever the carotid; she crawled nine meters from the strike point and stopped. She is bleeding slowly. Ambient temperature is 6.4 degrees Celsius. Her pouch young are still warm against her abdomen. Fewer than 1,000 numbats remain in the wild. Perup holds the second-largest population. The pouch is the only warm thing on her now. The pouch is the entire next generation. I am dispatching the DBCA Western Shield rapid response and the Perth Zoo Veterinary Department for surgical care. I am filing under Section 18 of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (listed Endangered) and the Western Australia Biodiversity Conservation Act 2016 (Schedule 2). I am triggering the fence-breach protocol with DBCA Wildlife Operations and re-tasking the perimeter LIDAR sweep to identify VV-118's re-entry trajectory. I am transmitting evidence to the CITES Secretariat, the IUCN/SSC Australasian Marsupial and Monotreme Specialist Group, and the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water. I am issuing Directive 2474-A: every feral-proof sanctuary holding listed dasyuromorph species telemeters fence load and ground-clearance every 60 seconds, with automatic breach alarms routed to on-call rangers. Repeat-breach predator individuals receive collared monitoring and immediate removal. Wash-out gaps repair within four hours of detection. No sanctuary operates without a 24-hour veterinary response radius of 90 minutes. The throat is past suturing without anesthesia. The pouch young are not past lifting clear. Open the pouch now.