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Southern brown bandicoot

The southern brown bandicoot is a short-nosed bandicoot, a type of marsupial, found mostly in southern Australia. A subspecies in Western Australia is also known as the quenda in South Western Australia. This subspecies was elevated to species in 2018.

Taxonomy
The species was first described as Didelphis obesula by George Shaw in 1797. There are three subspecies recognised by the Atlas of Living Australia: • Isoodon obesulus affinus – Tasmania and Bass Strait Islands • Isoodon obesulus nauticus – Restricted to the Nuyts ArchipelagoIsoodon obesulus obesulus – NSW, Victoria, SA The quenda (Isoodon fusciventer) and the Cape York brown bandicoot (Isoodon peninsulae) were previously considered subspecies of the southern brown bandicoot before being elevated to full species status. ==Description==
Description
Southern brown bandicoots have a stocky body with a short snout and short, rounded ears. They show sexual dimorphism, with females being smaller than males. On average, males measure in total length, and weigh up to , while females measure and weigh no more than . They have coarse, bristly hair that is grizzled and coloured a dark greyish to yellowish brown, with the undersides a creamy-white or yellowish grey. The tail is relatively short, measuring about in length, and is brown above and white below. There are five toes on each foot, although, as in many other marsupials, they are syndactylous, with the second and third toes of the hind foot are fused along almost their entire length. The toes end in sturdy claws, except for the first digits of the fore feet and the fifth digits of the hind feet, which are tiny and vestigial. The pouch in females opens to the rear, and contains eight teats arranged in a partial circle. == Distribution and habitat ==
Distribution and habitat
Once common throughout many parts of coastal Australia, today southern brown bandicoots have a more limited distribution. An isolated population exists at the north-eastern part of the Cape York Peninsula in Queensland, but all other surviving animals are found in the southern half of the country. In New South Wales they are considered rare, and are primarily restricted to the extreme south-east of the state and to two national parks north of Sydney. In Victoria, they are more common, being found along the whole length of the coast and at up to in the Grampian and Dandenong mountains. Isolated and increasingly restricted populations are known from south-western Western Australia. I. o. obesulus has shown a preference for the margins of artificial waterways over drier habitats. ==Biology and behaviour==
Biology and behaviour
Southern brown bandicoots are nocturnal and omnivorous, feeding on insects, spiders, worms, plant roots, ferns, and fungi. Although their native predators include barn owls, tiger snakes, and quolls, the bandicoots do not avoid the odour of these animals, which may make them vulnerable to predation. They do, however, typically avoid one another, living solitary lives in non-overlapping home ranges that typically vary from , depending on the local conditions. If males encounter one another, the more dominant individual leaps onto the back of the other, scratching with its claws. Because the skin of bandicoots is unusually thick, this results in hair loss, but little permanent injury to the defeated male. They spend the day sleeping in well-concealed nests of shredded vegetation. The Southern brown bandicoot is a host of the Acanthocephalan intestinal parasite Australiformis semoni. Life history Reproduction is closely linked to local rainfall pattern, and many brown bandicoots breed all year around, giving birth to up to four litters a year. Gestation lasts less than fifteen days, and perhaps as few as twelve, and typically results in the birth of two or three young, although litters of up to five have been reported; The young weigh just at birth, remain in the pouch for about the first 53 days of life, and are fully weaned at around 60 days. Growth and maturation is relatively rapid among marsupials, with females becoming sexually mature at four to five months of age, and males at six or seven months. Lifespan in the wild is probably no more than four years. ==Conservation status==
Conservation status
The southern brown bandicoot is currently classified as Least Concern by the IUCN. ==References==
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