Listen to Numbats
Hear their story
What are numbats?
Scientific Name: Myrmecobius fasciatus
Conservation Status: Endangered
Body Length: 20–27 cm
Weight: 400–700 g
Gestation: 14 days
Number of young: 4
Distribution: South-west Western Australia
Habitat: Forests. woodlands
Description: Numbats are reddish-brown on their shoulders and head. This colour changes further down the body to black with white stripes. Their bushy tail is about 17 cm long.
Diet: Numbats are insectivores and eat an exclusive diet of termites. An adult Numbat requires up to 20,000 termites each day.
In the wild: They are not strong enough to break into termite mounds themselves, so they wait for termites to come into easy to reach places. For this reason, the Numbat’s lifestyle is very closely linked to termite movements. In summer, termites are out early in the day but retreat deeper into the soil as the day becomes hot. During that part of the day, Numbats retreat to the shelter of either a hollow log or burrow and wait for the cooler part of the afternoon to feed again. In winter, the termites are not active until late morning when the soil begins to warm but remain active until dusk. The Numbat is active at the same time to feed.
Threats: Numbats are threatened by loss of habitat through land clearing, fire and predation by feral predators including foxes and cats.
Distribution: South-west Western Australia
Habitat: Forests. woodlands
Description: Numbats are reddish-brown on their shoulders and head. This colour changes further down the body to black with white stripes. Their bushy tail is about 17 cm long.
Diet: Numbats are insectivores and eat an exclusive diet of termites. An adult Numbat requires up to 20,000 termites each day.
In the wild: They are not strong enough to break into termite mounds themselves, so they wait for termites to come into easy to reach places. For this reason, the Numbat’s lifestyle is very closely linked to termite movements. In summer, termites are out early in the day but retreat deeper into the soil as the day becomes hot. During that part of the day, Numbats retreat to the shelter of either a hollow log or burrow and wait for the cooler part of the afternoon to feed again. In winter, the termites are not active until late morning when the soil begins to warm but remain active until dusk. The Numbat is active at the same time to feed.
Threats: Numbats are threatened by loss of habitat through land clearing, fire and predation by feral predators including foxes and cats.
Save Numbats
Why?
- The Numbat helps to keep termite populations in check and without that check the balance of localised biodiversity will alter!
- If a one of a kind animal is worth preserving purely because it's unique and beautiful then that's a good enough reason in my opinion
- On our endangered list with less than 1,000 believed to exist
- Numbats are threatened by loss of habitat through land clearing, fire and predation by feral predators including foxes and cats
By Dominique A 6I