Very little is known of the habits of two species of
Notoryctes, they are presumed to live a solitary existence. It is thought that they only emerge from the sand in wet weather. When moving on the surface of the ground, their motion is sinewy and the belly leaves a slightly winding trail; the marks of the appendages leave light impressions on the sand at the side of this furrow and appear more reptilian than mammalian. They enter the sandy soil at a shallow depth, but may tunnel deeply. A specimen was lost immediately after being placed on the ground, despite several people digging over the area to recover the animal. Their natural
habitat is the hot and arid north-western
deserts of country. The diet consists of insect
pupae and
larvae. The species eats the larvae and pupae of ants, beetles and other insects. It catches and eats them underground and therefore rarely comes to the surface. It is commonly preyed upon by the introduced
red fox and
feral cats, and remains have been found in the scats of the
dingo as well as some birds of prey, snakes and
goannas. Large numbers of specimens were collected in the early twentieth century, and informal reports of a fur trade using the pelt of the animal are noted. The effect on the ecology is largely unknown, but it is presumed to affect the populations of the small invertebrates in its diet. The impact of the subterranean activity on soil turnover is also presumed to be significant, the species does not build burrows as the soil it lives in is too soft and they instead 'swim' in the soil in a reptilian fashion. The tunnelling of the species while foraging causes the sand to shift as it falls behind them, the course of these has been measured at sites as moving in a criss-cross path of 30 to 60 kilometres per hectare that displaces 40 to 80 m3 of sand. As no member of this species has been successfully held in captivity for an extended period of time, very little is known about the breeding and reproduction habits of the
N. caurinus. However they have been recorded as having one or two offspring at a time. An early attempt to maintain a live specimen had it placed in a container of sand and fed on pieces of bread, but this died within a day. The behaviour and whereabouts of both species of
Notoryctes were well known to the inhabitants who lived in the same regions, often incorporated into myth and referred to by a variety of names. Since the earliest published description, local peoples have provided information and have been involved in their collection for curious visitors. The genus
Notoryctes closely resembles a
placental mammal found in Africa, known as the golden mole, and this is thought to be an example of convergent, rather than parallel, evolution. The features and tubular form of the body somewhat resemble the family
Talpidae, referred to as moles, an animal that excavates tunnels rather than swimming through sand. ==Conservation ==