Numbats are insectivores and subsist on a diet of termites (of the genera
Heterotermes,
Coptotermes,
Amitermes,
Microcerotermes,
Termes,
Paracapritermes,
Nasutitermes,
Tumulitermes, and
Occasitermes). An adult numbat requires up to 20,000 termites each day. The only marsupial fully active by day, the numbat spends most of its time searching for termites. It digs them up from loose earth with its front claws and captures them with its long, sticky tongue. Because termites have a high water content Numbats obtain most of their water needs directly from their food, allowing them to survive in dry Australian habitats. Known native predators include various
reptiles and
raptors, such as the
carpet python,
sand goanna,
wedge-tailed eagle,
collared sparrowhawk,
brown goshawk, and the
little eagle. They are also preyed upon by
invasive red foxes and
feral cats. Adult numbats are
solitary and territorial; an individual male or female establishes a territory of up to 1.5 square km (370
acres) early in life, and defends it from others of the same sex. The animal generally remains within that territory from then on; male and female territories overlap, and in the breeding season, males will venture outside their normal home ranges to find mates. While the numbat has relatively powerful
claws for its size, it is not strong enough to get at termites inside their concrete-like mounds, and so must wait until the termites are active. It uses a well-developed sense of smell to locate the shallow and unfortified underground galleries that termites construct between the nest and their feeding sites; these are usually only a short distance below the surface of the soil, and vulnerable to the numbat's digging claws. The numbat synchronises its day with termite activity, which is temperature dependent: in winter, it feeds from midmorning to midafternoon; in summer, it rises earlier, takes shelter during the heat of the day, and feeds again in the late afternoon. Numbats can enter a state of
torpor, which may last up to fifteen hours a day during the winter months. At night, the numbat retreats to a nest, which can be in a log or
tree hollow, or in a
burrow, typically a narrow shaft long which terminates in a spherical chamber lined with soft plant material: grass, leaves, flowers, and shredded bark. The numbat is able to block the opening of its
nest, with the thick hide of its rump to prevent a predator being able to accessing the burrow. Numbats have relatively few
vocalisations, but have been reported to hiss, growl, or make a repetitive 'tut' sound when disturbed.
Reproduction Numbats breed in February and March (late austral summer), normally producing one
litter a year. They can produce a second if the first is lost.
Gestation lasts 15 days, and results in the birth of four young. Unusual for marsupials, female numbats have no
pouch, although the four
teats are protected by a patch of crimped, golden hair and by the swelling of the surrounding abdomen and thighs during
lactation. The young are long at birth. They crawl immediately to the teats and remain attached until late July or early August, by which time they have grown to . They are long when they first develop fur, and the patterning of the adult begins to appear once they reach . The young are left in a nest or carried on the mother's back after
weaning, becoming fully independent by November. Females are
sexually mature by the following summer, but males do not reach maturity for another year. ==Relation to humans==