Bridled nail tail wallabies breed around April - May. They are, however, able to breed all year round. Their gestation period is 23-24 days.
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 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.
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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.
yes
The Bridled nail-tail wallaby feeds on grasses, forbs and tubers.
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.
yes, i think so. its full name is a bridled nail - tail wallaby marsupial
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.
The bridled nailtail wallaby's favoured foods are non-woody broad-leafed plants, chenopods (low-growing succulents such as pigweed), flowering plants and grasses.
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The Crescent Nailtail wallaby is extinct. Prior to its extinction, it was widespread across the arid and semi-arid scrublands and woodlands of central and southern Australia.