Numbat
Apperance
The Numbat is a animal and has a reddish brown coat banded with white stripes and a paler underbelly. Numbats have a pointed snout, short ears and black stripes which run from mid snout to the base of their ear which passes through the eye, on a delicate tapering head, The Numbat has a prominent bushy tail, which is often carried erect with the hair fluffed out like a bottle brush. Numbats legs are rather small and delicate, and the claws of its feet are not very large The Numbat has a long tongue for eating termites that can stretch out to half the length of its body. It has 52 teeth that are all different to each other in size and shape.
Weight
Lenght
The Numbat is small 35-45
cm.
Eating and diet
habits
Numbats use their long snouts
to "snuffle" the ground in search of food, and then they use their front feet to
dig for the termites in the soil and extract them with their long, sticky
tongue. A numbat eats 10,000 + termites each
day.
Breeding
habits
Sexual
maturity is reached at about 11 months to a year in Numbats. Mating occurs from
December to February and 4 young are usually produced a year. Numbats do not
have a pouch, for nurturing their young so the young, born blind and hairless,
must simply cling to the belly fur of their mother while feeding from their
mothers 4 teats for 6 months. After six months, the young numbats are left in a
burrow when the mother goes out to feed. From 6 to 10 months the numbat will
carry them clinging to her back.
Predators and dangers
The numbat is under risk from many
predators like feral cats and dogs, Sparrow Hawks, Eagles and Carpet
Pythons.
Enviroment
Numbats like to stay in area's of open
woodlands that are dominated by Wandoo which is a Eucalyptus that termites like
to feed on. They need hollow fallen logs to shelter in at night and for nesting
and protection against predators.
Remaining Locations
The numbat survives only
in a small area in the wild only in area of Wandoo woodland which is a type
of Eucalyptus woodland and they also survive in Jarrah forest. They survive
in the southwest corner of Western Australia near Narrogin which is 170km
south east of Perth.
Numbers
Problems
Solutions
revegetate cleared land with indigenous plants.
Secure the habitat from further destruction.