Quokkas graze; they feed on grasses, sedges, succulents, and foliage of shrubs. People sometimes feed them bread and other foods but this may kill the Quokka. Where they live on Rottnest Island, water is especially scarce during summer, meaning that the quokkas rely on succulents for their water needs - which is why bread and dry foods are so dangerous.
Quoll are carnivorous marsupials. They do not eat berries.
No. Unfortunately, however, Northern quolls eat cane toads. This results in them being poisoned by the toxins in the cane toad's skin.
Red foxes do eat northern quolls
No. Ocelots and quolls do not occupy the same continent.
Animals most likely to eat ring-tail possums include dingoes, quolls, goannas and introduced species such as foxes. Domestic dogs kill them but do not usually eat them.
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 are carnivorous and do not eat plants and vegetation. Lantana is, however, an invasive species that kills off native grasses and vegetation from which naive mammals and birds feed, hence reducing the number of animals for the Northern quoll to prey upon.
No. Spotted tailed quolls, also known as tiger quolls, are found only in Australia.
Northern quolls do not have wives: they have mates. Northern quolls are not monogamous, and will mate with more than one female.
Spotted tailed quolls eat small lizards and tree snakes but they prefer other meats such as rodents and other small mammals, roosting birds (including chickens), invertebrates and even cane toads - the latter being a common cause of quoll deaths.
No. Quolls are solitary animals, and they do not travel. They have a home range.