No - producers are organisms that create their own food (such as plants). All animals are consumers, they must eat other organisms to obtain energy.
The scientific name of the Bridled Nail-Tailed Wallaby is Onychogalea fraenata.
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The Bridled Nailtail Wallaby - Onychogalea fraenata The Northern Nailtail Wallaby - Onychogalea unguifera
The Bridled nail-tail wallaby feeds on grasses, forbs and tubers.
There is no common name for the bridled nailtail wallaby. It is occasionally known as "flashjack" or "merrin", but neither of these names is well-known, let alone common.
An Australian 1993 1/4 ounce Proof gold nugget (Nailtailed wallaby), in absolute mint condition and its original packaging, could fetch up to $330 AUD. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
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The bridled nailtail wallaby's favoured foods are non-woody broad-leafed plants, chenopods (low-growing succulents such as pigweed), flowering plants and grasses.
None. There were 201 1992 Australian 1/4 ounce $25 Proof gold nuggets featuring the Nailtailed Wallaby minted. There were 210 1993 Australian 1/4 ounce $25 Proof gold nuggets featuring the Whiptail Wallaby minted.
The Bridled Nailtail wallaby is restricted to just one area of brigalow scrub near Dingo in central Queensland. There are believed to be about 200 of these wallabies in the area. Prior to European settlement, the Bridled Nailtail wallaby was found through eastern Australia from Charters Towers in central north Queensland right down to northern Victoria.
The Bridled nail-tail wallaby lives in areas in Australia where there is a mixture of dense acacia bushland and scrubby grassland. Originally its range was right along the eastern seaboard of Australia, but it is now endangered, and survives in just a few pockets along the coast. There is a nature refuge south of Emerald, Queensland where around 100 bridled nail tail wallabies are kept in protective captivity.
The highly endangered bridled nail tail wallaby is now restricted to a protected reserve near the town of Dingo in central Queensland. There is also a breeding colony at the Dubbo zoo.