The bilby is another name for the rabbit-eared bandicoot.
Yes; the rabbit eared bandicoot is the common name for a bilby, which is a member of the bandicoot family.
The correct name for the so-called "rabbit eared bandicoot" is Bilby.
There is no species called the "rabbit bandicoot". "Rabbit-eared bandicoot" is an alternative name for the Bilby. Figures are uncertain, but some sources estimated that there are only 600-700 wild bilbies left.
The bilby of Australia may also be known as the "rabbit eared bandicoot".
The Bilby, also known as the Rabbit-Eared Bandicoot, has the scientific name of Macrotis lagotis.
The bilby has only ever been known as the bilby. Its nickname is "rabbit eared bandicoot", because it is a member of the bandicoot family, and it has particularly long ears.
Yes. The bilby is a type of bandicoot, so all members of the bandicoot family are related to the bilby. The bilby is sometimes even called the "rabbit-eared bandicoot" because of its long ears.
bilby, dingo, kangaroo, marsupial mole, quokka, rabbit-eared bandicoot, etc.
"Bilby" is the only proper name for the bilby. They are sometimes known as the "rabbit-eared bandicoot" but this is certainly not the common name.
The proper name for the rabbit-eared bandicoot is bilby.Bilbies can only be found in isolated areas of the Simpson Desert in far western Queensland and the Northern Territory, and areas of the Great Sandy Desert, Pilbara and Kimberley areas of Western Australia. In Queensland, they may be seen in a protected area near Charleville, in the west.
The scientific name of the Great Bilby is Macrotis Lagotis.The Lesser Bilby, which is now extinct, has the scientific name of Macrotis leucura.