Australian Geographic

Brush-tailed rabbit-rat

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Conilurus penicillat­us M: 135-227mm F: same

IN THE KIMBERLEY’S remote Mitchell Plateau the brush-tailed rabbit-rat is faring well – good news for a species declining elsewhere in its range across north-western Australia. It emerges after dark from eucalypt hollows, logs or pandanus crowns to feed on seeds and occasional­ly fruits, grasses, tree leaves and termites. Its future can’t be taken for granted because a close relative, the white-footed rabbit-rat, once found widely in south-eastern Australia, hasn’t been seen alive since 1862. Cats and habitat loss are blamed.

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