The common ringtail possum is nocturnal and well adapted to arboreal life. It relies on its prehensile tail and sometimes will descend to the ground.
Diet and foraging The common ringtail possum feeds on a wide variety of plants in the family
Myrtaceae including the foliage, flowers and fruits from shrubs and lower canopy. Some populations are also known to feed on the leaves of cypress pine (
Callitris), wattles (
Acacia spp.) and plant gum or resins. When foraging, ringtail possums prefer young leaves over old ones. One study found the emergence of young possums from their pouches corresponds to the flowering and fruiting of the tea-tree,
Leptospermum and the peak of fresh plant growth. When feeding, the possum's molars slice through the leaves, slitting them into pieces. The possum's gastrointestinal tract sends the fine particles to the caecum and the coarse ones to the colon. What distinguishes the digestive system of the common ringtail possum from that of the koala and the greater glider is the caecal contents are expelled as
caecotropes, reingested and passed into the stomach. Because of this, the ringtail possum is able to gain more protein.
Metabolism The re-ingestion of caecotropes also serves to maintain the ringtail possum's energy balance. Ringtail possums gain much of their gross energy from reingestion. The common ringtail possum has a daily maintenance nitrogen requirement (MNR) of 290 mg N/kg0.75. Common ringtail possums gain much of their MNR from consuming their nitrogen-rich caecotropes. They would have to gain 620 mg N/kg0.75 otherwise. It has been found that at higher temperatures, the common ringtail possum consumes less food due to a limited ability to metabolize
toxins found in their diet. Because 55% of their water intake comes from the leaves and foliage they consume, their
metabolic rate must remain low and stable while facing water loss. In response to this challenge, common ringtail possums can control their body temperature and conserve water by using facultative hyperthermia to temporarily raise their internal body temperature, ranging from . Ringtail possums build nests from tree branches and use tree hollows. A communal nest is made up of an adult female and an adult male, their dependant offspring and immature offspring of the previous year. During the second phase of lactation, more solid foods are eaten, especially when the young first emerges from the pouch. During this time, the concentration of carbohydrates fall, while those of proteins and lipids reach their highest. The long lactation of the ringtail possums may give the young more time to learn skills in the communal nest as well as to climb and forage in the trees. The young are first able to vocalise and open their eyes between 90 and 106 days of age. They leave their mother's pouch at 120–130 days. However, lactation usually continues until 180–220 days after birth but sometimes ends by 145 days. Both sexes become sexually mature in the first mating season after their birth. ==Status==