- Southern Brown Bandicoot
Taxobox
name = Southern Brown BandicootMSW3 Groves|pages=39]
status = LC
status_system = iucn3.1
status_ref = IUCN2006 | assessors = Australasian Marsupial & Monotreme Specialist Group | year = 1996 | title = Isoodon obesulus | id = 40553 | downloaded =2007-07-23 ]
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis =Mammal ia
infraclassis =Marsupialia
ordo =Peramelemorphia
familia =Peramelidae
genus = "Isoodon "
species = "I. obesulus"
binomial = "Isoodon obesulus"
binomial_authority = (Shaw, 1797)The Southern Brown Bandicoot ("Isoodon obesulus"), also known as the Quenda from the local
Noongar tongue, is ashort-nosed bandicoot found mostly in southern Australia.cite web | title = Quenda | accessdate = 2007-07-23 | url = http://www.naturebase.net/pdf/plants_animals/living_with_wildlife/quendas.pdf | format = PDF]This
bandicoot shows somesexual dimorphism , with females being sightly smaller than males. The average male length is 330 mm, with a tail of 120 mm. Females are about 30 mm shorter, with a 10 mm shorter tail. Males weigh an average of 0.9 kg, females 0.7. The fur of thismarsupial is coarse and colored a dark greyish to yellowish brown, with the undersides a creamy-white. It has short, round ears.Reproduction is closely linked to local rainfall pattern, and many brown bandicoots breed all year around. A litter of up to 5 young is born after an 11-day gestation and is weaned at 2 months. [cite book | author = Whitfield, Philip | title = The Simon & Schuster Encyclopedia of Animals | location = New York | publisher = Marshall Editions Development Limited | year = 1998 | pages = pg 24]
While some authorities list as many as five subspecies ("I. o. fusciventer", "I. o. obesulus", "I. o. peninsulae", "I. o. affinus", "I. o. nauticus"), the most recent edition of Mammal Species of the World only lists "I. o. nauticus" as a valid subspecies, aside from the nominate; the others are given synonym status.
References
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