Baby bilbies are known as joeys, and female bilbies can give birth to two or three joeys at a time. The birthing process is much like that of puppies in that they do not lay eggs. They are pouch producing mammals.
Bilbies sleep in burrows. They tend to sleep sitting back on their tails, with their head tucked down between their front paws and their ears folded along their face. They are usually solitary, so are more likely to sleep alone, but sometimes live in groups of three or four.
Bilbies reach reproductive age at six months, and they breed any time throughout the year. They often have two joeys in their pouch at the same time.
Bilbies are not restricted to any specific breeding season. They are able to breed all year around.
bilbie's stick together and dig for their food (berries, leaves, nuts and grass.
Bilbies are marsupials, so like all other mammals, they reproduce sexually.
They communicate by facial expressions
No. Bilbies are not aggressive.
Bilbies do not migrate.
Yes Bilbies do have pouches.
Bilbies are marsupials. Rabbits are not.
Baby bilbies are known as joeys.
Yes. Bilbies are nocturnal.
Yes. Dingoes are predators of bilbies.
No. Bilbies dig burrows in the ground.
When frightened, bilbies hide in the burrows they dig.
Bilbies are completely Australian, endemic to that continent alone.
Like most marsupials, bilbies are nocturnal. This means they are more active at night. Therefore, bilbies hunt during the night.
No. Bilbies are protected animals, and endangered. They may not be hunted.