Phascogale tapoatafa
SUBFAMILY
Dasyurinae
TAXONOMY
Phascogale tapoatafa (F. Meyer, 1793), Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: Tuan, common wambenger, black-tailed phascogale.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Length 5.8–10.3 in (148–261 mm). Uniform grizzled gray above, cream to white below, with large, naked ears, and conspicuous black brush tail with hairs up to 2.1 in (55 mm) long.
DISTRIBUTION
Mesic coastal and hinterland areas of southeastern and southwestern Australia (P. t. tapoatafa). Monsoonal northern Australia (P. t. pirata).
HABITAT
Dry eucalypt forest and woodlands with open under-story in temperate and tropical Australia.
BEHAVIOR
One of most arboreal of the dasyurids; very agile hunter aboveground. Nesting and mating in tree hollows.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Nectar, large insects, spiders, and small vertebrates. Forages by tearing away bark and probing into crevices.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Semelparous with complete male die-off after a synchronized three-week mating season. Probably promiscuous.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Lower Risk (Least Concern: P. t. tapoatafa and Near Threatened: P. t. pirata).
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
Occasionally takes penned poultry.




