Wombat | The wombat is a medium sized marsupial that
is found only in Australia and it's surrounding islands. Wombats are
burrowing mammals that spend most of the day under ground, coming out at
night to feed. The common wombat is thought to be a descendant
of the giant wombat that existed around 50 million years ago. The giant
wombat's extinction is said to be caused by hunting and changes to their
environment including pollution and habitat loss.
The common wombat is a nocturnal herbivore and
gets to about 26 years old in the wild although some wombat individuals
have been known to live for longer in captivity. Wombats eats grasses,
shoots and bark which the wombat needs to keep gnawing on in order to
keep it's continuously growing teeth at a manageable size. Like all
other marsupials, the female wombat has a warm pouch on it's
belly in which the wombat babies are nurtured for the first few months
of life. When the baby wombats are first born they are very small and undeveloped and crawl into the mother wombat's pouch almost immediately. The baby wombat stays in the pouch of the mother wombat until the baby wombat is around 5 months old. By the time the baby wombat is roughly 7 months old, it is able to care for itself.
Wombats have long claws which they use to dig burrows. Wombat burrows can easily become an extensive network of underground tunnels leading
to small chambers. Most wombats are solitary animals but some wombats
have been known to form underground colonies with other wombats.
Wombats have a few
natural predators including foxes and dingos. Although the wombat is
relatively defenceless when it is out and about, wombats are generally
well protected in their underground burrows as many predators cannot
follow the wombat into the narrow, complex tunnels. Today the wombat is
considered to be an endangered species of animal. Wombat numbers have
been decreasing rapidly due to habitat loss and hunting by humans who
believe the wombat and it's network of underground tunnels to be an
agricultural pest.
No comments:
Post a Comment