The quoll is sometimes incorrectly referred to as a native cat.
There is no other name for most species of quoll. The alternative name for the Western quoll is the chuditch.
No. Quolls do not die after mating.
Tiger quolls are solitary, living alone. However, their territory overlaps with that of other tiger quolls, and where there are numerous quolls in proximity to each other, it is known as a colony.
Northern quolls do not have wives: they have mates. Northern quolls are not monogamous, and will mate with more than one female.
No. Spotted tailed quolls, also known as tiger quolls, are found only in Australia.
No. Quolls are solitary animals, and they do not travel. They have a home range.
No. Male quolls have no part in helping to raise the young quolls. It is the female alone who nurtures and rears the joeys.
Not at all. Quolls are arboreal (tree-dwelling) marsupials, as they are nimble climbers.
Yes, quolls are predators. They belong to a group of animals known as the dasyurids, which are carnivorous marsupials. Quolls prey on smaller mammals and marsupials, birds, lizards and smaller snakes.
Yes: quolls are marsupials. They are dasyurids, or carnivorous marsupials, feeding on birds and smaller mammals.
No. Quolls are native to Australia and New Guinea. Texas is in North America.
Tiger quolls are neither "good" nor "bad", as these are terms describing human qualities. Tiger quolls are carnivorous marsupials. They keep to themselves, and hunt in order to survive.
Pouched mammals are known as marsupials. They include such animals as kangaroos, wallabies, koalas, wombats, possums, Tasmanian devils, bilbies, bandicoots, quolls and gliders, just to name a few.