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•Duck-billed platypuses can't be
                                                          real, can they? This small, amphibious
                                                          mammal has a tail like a beaver, a body
                                                          like an otter, walks like a reptile, has
                                                          webbed feet and a beak like a bird, and
                                                          it lays eggs!

                                                          •Platypuses are so strange looking, the
                                                          first biologist to study them, in
                                                          1799, thought someone was playing a
                                                          joke on him. There are thousands of
                                                          them living in the swamps, lakes, and
                                                          rivers of eastern Australia and parts of
                                                          Tasmania.



•Duck-billed platypuses are small, shy animals. They
have a flattened head and body to help them glide
through the water. Their fur, dark brown on top and
tan on their bellies, is thick and repels water to keep
them warm and dry even after hours of swimming.
They grow to about 18 inches (47 centimeters) in
length and weigh around 3 pounds (1.5 kilograms).
Koalas are Marsupials, like
                                                          kangaroos. This means that
                                                          they keep their newborns in
                                                          a pouch. Also like a
                                                          kangaroo, baby koalas are
                                                          called joeys. A koala mom
                                                          gives birth to a newborn
                                                          Joey that is the size of a jelly
                                                          bean!
                                                          The baby cannot see as
                                                          soon as it is born but it can
                                                          smell and touch. The baby
                                                          develops in the moms
After a baby has been in the pouch for about six
                                                          pouch for seven months
months, its mother begins to produce a special
substance called pap.The joey feeds on this in
addition to the milk it's already getting. Pap comes
from the mother's intestines and contains bacteria
that the joey needs to have in its own intestines so
that it can digest an adult diet of eucalyptus leaves.
At about seven months, the joey leaves the pouch to
eat leaves, but returns to it to nurse. By the time the
joey is about one year old, it stops nursing and eats
just leaves.
Tasmanian devils      Like all
are nocturnal         marsupials, Tasmani
animals, spending     an devil mothers
their days alone in   give birth to very
hollow                tiny young (about
logs, caves, or       the size of a raisin).
burrows, and          Once born, the
emerging at night     babies crawl up the
to feed. They use     mother's fur and
their excellent       into her
sense of smell and    pouch, where they
sight to avoid        attach themselves to
predators and         a nipple and feed
locate prey and       until they are ready
carrion. They are     to emerge, usually
voracious eaters      after about four
and will consume      months.
everything—
including
hair, organs, and
bones.
FAST FACTS
The scientific name for the koala is
Phascolarctos cinereus.

Koalas are marsupials; newborn koalas—called
joeys—continue to develop in their mothers'
pouches.

Koalas have thick woolly fur that protects them
from both heat and cold. It also acts like a
raincoat.
If you thought these marvelous
mammals couldn't get any more
bizarre, they have another trick in
store: Male platypuses are
venomous! They have a pointy spur
on their hind ankles that connects
to a venom sac in each leg.

They mainly use these weapons in
mating battles with other
males, but they will attack with
them if threatened. The poison is
not strong enough to kill a
human, but people who have been
stung say the wound is extremely      These water-loving mammals have fully
painful.                              webbed front feet to power themselves
                                      through the water. They use their back feet
                                      and tails to brake and steer. Their most
                                      remarkable feature is their amazing snout. It
                                      looks like a duck's bill, but is actually quite soft
                                      and covered with thousands of receptors that
                                      help the platypus detect prey.
Thousands of years ago, devils lived
throughout mainland Australia. Scientists think
they became extinct there after Asian
dogs, called dingoes, were brought to the
continent. In 1941, the government made
devils a protected species. Since then, their
numbers have grown greatly, and they've
become a beloved symbol of the island.




                                            Tragically, since the mid-1990s, a catastrophic
                                            disease has killed thousands of Tasmanian
                                            devils. Called devil facial tumor disease
                                            (DFTD), this fatal condition is a rare contagious
                                            cancer that causes lumps to form around the
                                            animal's mouth and head, making it hard for it
                                            to eat. Scientists are working hard to find a
                                            way to stop the spread of DFTD before it wipes
                                            the species out.
People used to hunt koalas for their
fur. Now strict laws protect them from
hunters, but their habitat is not
protected, and it is disappearing as
land is developed.

More than four-fifths of original koala
habitat has been destroyed. People
are trying to save what is left.

A female koala is pregnant for only 35
days before giving birth; most of the
joey's growth and development takes
place in the mother's pouch.

Koalas spend as many as 18 hours a
day napping and resting.

Koalas smell like cough drops because
of their diet of eucalyptus leaves.
FAST FACTS
The scientific name for the Tasmanian devil is
Sarcophilus harrisii, which means Harris' meat
lover.

When threatened or excited, the ears of a
Tasmanian devil turn bright red.

An angry Tasmanian devil will often point its
tail straight up in the air.
Devils came to Tasmania tens of thousands of
years ago when ocean levels were lower and       Tasmanian devils' bodies are usually
there was a land connection with Australia.      between 20 and 31 inches (51 and 79
                                                 centimeters) long.
Tasmanian devils are actually quite
timid, preferring escape to confrontation.       Tasmanian devils are notoriously fierce, and
                                                 they will often attack prey many times their
One of the Tasmanian devil's favorite foods is   own size.
the wombat.
                                                 Young Tasmanian devils are excellent
                                                 climbers. As they get older and heavier, they
•Platypuses spend most of their time alone, sleeping or eating.
They feed in the water at night, frantically swimming around with
their eyes and ears closed, using their bill to search for their
favorite foods: insect larvae, shellfish, and worms. Their mouth has
no teeth. Instead, a pad of rough skin near their throat grinds up
food before swallowing.                                      •During the
                                                           day, platypuses sleep in
                                                           burrows made with their
                                                           long front claws. Each
                                                           animal will maintain
                                                           several burrows, usually
                                                           dug in areas where there
                                                           are overhanging
                                                           branches and exposed
                                                           roots to disguise the
                                                           entrance. Platypuses are
                                                           eaten by a wide array of
                                                           Australian
                                                           predators, including
                                                           dingoes, foxes, large
                                                           snakes, and even eels.
• Kangaroos give birth to joeys who are the size
  of a grape at birth.
• Joeys live in their mothers pouch
The Emu is a large, flightless bird from Australia. It is the second-biggest bird in
  Australia and the third-biggest bird in the world (only the ostrich and cassowary
  are bigger). The emu is also very fast; it can run up to 30 mph (50 kph). Emus
  also swim very well. This huge bird lives in flocks (groups) in
  grasslands, savannas(grasslands with some trees), and the Australian bush. The
  emu's life span is 10-20 years.




                                           Diet: Emus are primarily herbivores (plant-
                                           eaters). They eat grass, seeds, flowers, young
                                           plants, and fruit. They also eat some
• Anatomy Emus grow to be about 6          insects(including caterpillars). They swallow
feet (185 cm) tall and weigh about         small stones (called gastroliths or gizzard
110 pounds (50 kg). This is bigger         stones) which stay in the gizzard and help grind
than many adult humans.                    up food.
Koalas have
thick, grayish
fur, with white
on their
chests, inner
arms, and ears.
They have large
furry ears and
leathery noses.     There are many
                    kinds of
Koalas live in      eucalyptus trees.
trees, sometime     Koalas will eat
s coming down       from only a few
to the ground to    of these.
seek shade or
another tree.       Koalas in
They                different areas
occasionally        like different
jump from one       kinds of
tree to the next.   eucalyptus
                    leaves.
•A mother platypus will dig a very
deep tunnel, called a nursery
burrow, when she's ready to lay her
eggs. These burrows sometimes
extend 100 feet (30 meters) from the
water. They have a leaf-lined den
where the mother curls up to
incubate her eggs.
•She blocks the entrance with several
dirt mounds to keep water and
predators from entering and will
nurse her hatchlings there for up to
four months. Platypuses are long-
lived, surviving 20 years or more in
captivity and up to 12 years in the
wild.
There are many kinds of
eucalyptus trees. Koalas will eat
from only a few of these.

Koalas in different areas like
different kinds of eucalyptus
leaves.


The word koala may
come from an
Aboriginal word
meaning no drink.

Although koalas do     Mature males have brown scent glands in the
drink when             center of their white chests. They rub these on
necessary, they        their home trees to mark their territory.
obtain most of the
moisture they need     Koalas and most other marsupials live in
from leaves.           Australia and neighboring islands. The only
                       marsupial native to North America is the
                       Virginia opossum.
•   Kangaroos live in Eastern Australia. They live in small groups called troops or herds
    (“mobs” by Australians), typically made up of 50 or more animals.
•   If threatened, kangaroos pound the ground with their strong feet in warning.
    Fighting kangaroos kick opponents, and sometimes bite.
Most devils have a white stripe or patch on
their chest and spots on their sides or rear   The most famous characteristic of the
end. Males are usually a bit bigger than       Tasmanian devil, though, is its feisty
females. Tasmanian devils are strictly         personality. When threatened, a devil
carnivorous, surviving on small prey and       will lunge at its
frequently feasting on already dead            attacker, shriek, howl, bare its
animals, called carrion. When they are well    teeth, and often spin around in circles
fed, they store fat in their tails.            like the cartoon Taz. Devils will also
                                               display these behaviors when trying to
                                               join in as other devils are eating an
                                               animal carcass or fighting for a mate.
•Scientists think these fascinating creatures are
the earliest relatives of modern mammals.
Recent studies show that they first evolved
more than 112 million years ago, well before
the extinction of the dinosaurs. Humans once
trapped platypuses for their skins, but a law
passed in 1912 ended such harvesting, and
platypus populations are generally healthy.
Fun Facts

 Koalas have their own built-in cushion! The fur on a
 koala's bottom is extra thick so that the koala can
 comfortably rest in trees.

 Fossils of 12 different extinct species of koala have
 been found. These extinct koalas were much larger
 than the ones today. They were like giant koalas!

Koalas are found in the wild only in the forests of
eastern Australia.

Koalas live in bushland with other koalas. Each has its
own home trees which are generally not visited by
other koalas except in mating season.
In an ideal habitat in the wild, male koalas live about
10 years, while females may live a few years longer.

Thousands of koalas are killed each year by cars and
dogs.

Though koalas look like teddy bears and are
sometimes even referred to as koala bears, they are
not bears.
•   Reproduction: The emu's nest is a shallow hole by a bush; it is lined with
    leaves, grass, and bark. The female lays from 4 to 20 greenish-brown eggs in a
    clutch (a group of eggs laid at one time). Chicks (baby emus) hatch after an
    incubation period of about 8 weeks. The male incubates (keeps warm) the eggs
    and cares for the chicks for about 1 1/2 years.
If you watch cartoons, the first thing you think
                                        of when you hear the name Tasmanian devil is
                                        probably Taz, the whirling, maniacal, always
                                        hungry, angry cartoon character. But
                                        Tasmanian devils are real and are feisty like the
                                        cartoon Taz!


                                        Tasmanian devils are the largest carnivorous
                                        (meat-eating) marsupials in the world.
                                        Marsupials are mammals that have a pouch on
                                        their bellies for carrying their babies.
                                        Tasmanian devils live in Tasmania, a large
                                        island just south of Australia. In fact, Tasmania
Adult Tasmanian devils are usually      is the only place where they are found in the
about the size of a small dog. They     wild.
have coarse brown or black fur and a
pudgy appearance that makes them
look like baby bears. But don't let
their cuteness fool you. They have
sharp teeth and strong, muscular
jaws that can deliver one of the most
powerful bites of any mammal on
Earth.
Kangaroos possess powerful hind legs, a long, strong tail, and small front legs. They’re
   the biggest of all marsupials, standing over 6 feet (2 meters) tall.

 Kangaroos belong to the animal family Macropus, literally "big foot." Thanks to
their large feet, kangaroos can leap some 30 feet in a single bound, and travel
more than 30 mph (48 kmh). Kangaroos use their strong tails for balance while
jumping.

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Strange Behaviors of Australian Animals

  • 1. •Duck-billed platypuses can't be real, can they? This small, amphibious mammal has a tail like a beaver, a body like an otter, walks like a reptile, has webbed feet and a beak like a bird, and it lays eggs! •Platypuses are so strange looking, the first biologist to study them, in 1799, thought someone was playing a joke on him. There are thousands of them living in the swamps, lakes, and rivers of eastern Australia and parts of Tasmania. •Duck-billed platypuses are small, shy animals. They have a flattened head and body to help them glide through the water. Their fur, dark brown on top and tan on their bellies, is thick and repels water to keep them warm and dry even after hours of swimming. They grow to about 18 inches (47 centimeters) in length and weigh around 3 pounds (1.5 kilograms).
  • 2. Koalas are Marsupials, like kangaroos. This means that they keep their newborns in a pouch. Also like a kangaroo, baby koalas are called joeys. A koala mom gives birth to a newborn Joey that is the size of a jelly bean! The baby cannot see as soon as it is born but it can smell and touch. The baby develops in the moms After a baby has been in the pouch for about six pouch for seven months months, its mother begins to produce a special substance called pap.The joey feeds on this in addition to the milk it's already getting. Pap comes from the mother's intestines and contains bacteria that the joey needs to have in its own intestines so that it can digest an adult diet of eucalyptus leaves. At about seven months, the joey leaves the pouch to eat leaves, but returns to it to nurse. By the time the joey is about one year old, it stops nursing and eats just leaves.
  • 3. Tasmanian devils Like all are nocturnal marsupials, Tasmani animals, spending an devil mothers their days alone in give birth to very hollow tiny young (about logs, caves, or the size of a raisin). burrows, and Once born, the emerging at night babies crawl up the to feed. They use mother's fur and their excellent into her sense of smell and pouch, where they sight to avoid attach themselves to predators and a nipple and feed locate prey and until they are ready carrion. They are to emerge, usually voracious eaters after about four and will consume months. everything— including hair, organs, and bones.
  • 4. FAST FACTS The scientific name for the koala is Phascolarctos cinereus. Koalas are marsupials; newborn koalas—called joeys—continue to develop in their mothers' pouches. Koalas have thick woolly fur that protects them from both heat and cold. It also acts like a raincoat.
  • 5. If you thought these marvelous mammals couldn't get any more bizarre, they have another trick in store: Male platypuses are venomous! They have a pointy spur on their hind ankles that connects to a venom sac in each leg. They mainly use these weapons in mating battles with other males, but they will attack with them if threatened. The poison is not strong enough to kill a human, but people who have been stung say the wound is extremely These water-loving mammals have fully painful. webbed front feet to power themselves through the water. They use their back feet and tails to brake and steer. Their most remarkable feature is their amazing snout. It looks like a duck's bill, but is actually quite soft and covered with thousands of receptors that help the platypus detect prey.
  • 6. Thousands of years ago, devils lived throughout mainland Australia. Scientists think they became extinct there after Asian dogs, called dingoes, were brought to the continent. In 1941, the government made devils a protected species. Since then, their numbers have grown greatly, and they've become a beloved symbol of the island. Tragically, since the mid-1990s, a catastrophic disease has killed thousands of Tasmanian devils. Called devil facial tumor disease (DFTD), this fatal condition is a rare contagious cancer that causes lumps to form around the animal's mouth and head, making it hard for it to eat. Scientists are working hard to find a way to stop the spread of DFTD before it wipes the species out.
  • 7. People used to hunt koalas for their fur. Now strict laws protect them from hunters, but their habitat is not protected, and it is disappearing as land is developed. More than four-fifths of original koala habitat has been destroyed. People are trying to save what is left. A female koala is pregnant for only 35 days before giving birth; most of the joey's growth and development takes place in the mother's pouch. Koalas spend as many as 18 hours a day napping and resting. Koalas smell like cough drops because of their diet of eucalyptus leaves.
  • 8. FAST FACTS The scientific name for the Tasmanian devil is Sarcophilus harrisii, which means Harris' meat lover. When threatened or excited, the ears of a Tasmanian devil turn bright red. An angry Tasmanian devil will often point its tail straight up in the air. Devils came to Tasmania tens of thousands of years ago when ocean levels were lower and Tasmanian devils' bodies are usually there was a land connection with Australia. between 20 and 31 inches (51 and 79 centimeters) long. Tasmanian devils are actually quite timid, preferring escape to confrontation. Tasmanian devils are notoriously fierce, and they will often attack prey many times their One of the Tasmanian devil's favorite foods is own size. the wombat. Young Tasmanian devils are excellent climbers. As they get older and heavier, they
  • 9. •Platypuses spend most of their time alone, sleeping or eating. They feed in the water at night, frantically swimming around with their eyes and ears closed, using their bill to search for their favorite foods: insect larvae, shellfish, and worms. Their mouth has no teeth. Instead, a pad of rough skin near their throat grinds up food before swallowing. •During the day, platypuses sleep in burrows made with their long front claws. Each animal will maintain several burrows, usually dug in areas where there are overhanging branches and exposed roots to disguise the entrance. Platypuses are eaten by a wide array of Australian predators, including dingoes, foxes, large snakes, and even eels.
  • 10. • Kangaroos give birth to joeys who are the size of a grape at birth. • Joeys live in their mothers pouch
  • 11. The Emu is a large, flightless bird from Australia. It is the second-biggest bird in Australia and the third-biggest bird in the world (only the ostrich and cassowary are bigger). The emu is also very fast; it can run up to 30 mph (50 kph). Emus also swim very well. This huge bird lives in flocks (groups) in grasslands, savannas(grasslands with some trees), and the Australian bush. The emu's life span is 10-20 years. Diet: Emus are primarily herbivores (plant- eaters). They eat grass, seeds, flowers, young plants, and fruit. They also eat some • Anatomy Emus grow to be about 6 insects(including caterpillars). They swallow feet (185 cm) tall and weigh about small stones (called gastroliths or gizzard 110 pounds (50 kg). This is bigger stones) which stay in the gizzard and help grind than many adult humans. up food.
  • 12. Koalas have thick, grayish fur, with white on their chests, inner arms, and ears. They have large furry ears and leathery noses. There are many kinds of Koalas live in eucalyptus trees. trees, sometime Koalas will eat s coming down from only a few to the ground to of these. seek shade or another tree. Koalas in They different areas occasionally like different jump from one kinds of tree to the next. eucalyptus leaves.
  • 13. •A mother platypus will dig a very deep tunnel, called a nursery burrow, when she's ready to lay her eggs. These burrows sometimes extend 100 feet (30 meters) from the water. They have a leaf-lined den where the mother curls up to incubate her eggs. •She blocks the entrance with several dirt mounds to keep water and predators from entering and will nurse her hatchlings there for up to four months. Platypuses are long- lived, surviving 20 years or more in captivity and up to 12 years in the wild.
  • 14. There are many kinds of eucalyptus trees. Koalas will eat from only a few of these. Koalas in different areas like different kinds of eucalyptus leaves. The word koala may come from an Aboriginal word meaning no drink. Although koalas do Mature males have brown scent glands in the drink when center of their white chests. They rub these on necessary, they their home trees to mark their territory. obtain most of the moisture they need Koalas and most other marsupials live in from leaves. Australia and neighboring islands. The only marsupial native to North America is the Virginia opossum.
  • 15. Kangaroos live in Eastern Australia. They live in small groups called troops or herds (“mobs” by Australians), typically made up of 50 or more animals. • If threatened, kangaroos pound the ground with their strong feet in warning. Fighting kangaroos kick opponents, and sometimes bite.
  • 16. Most devils have a white stripe or patch on their chest and spots on their sides or rear The most famous characteristic of the end. Males are usually a bit bigger than Tasmanian devil, though, is its feisty females. Tasmanian devils are strictly personality. When threatened, a devil carnivorous, surviving on small prey and will lunge at its frequently feasting on already dead attacker, shriek, howl, bare its animals, called carrion. When they are well teeth, and often spin around in circles fed, they store fat in their tails. like the cartoon Taz. Devils will also display these behaviors when trying to join in as other devils are eating an animal carcass or fighting for a mate.
  • 17. •Scientists think these fascinating creatures are the earliest relatives of modern mammals. Recent studies show that they first evolved more than 112 million years ago, well before the extinction of the dinosaurs. Humans once trapped platypuses for their skins, but a law passed in 1912 ended such harvesting, and platypus populations are generally healthy.
  • 18. Fun Facts Koalas have their own built-in cushion! The fur on a koala's bottom is extra thick so that the koala can comfortably rest in trees. Fossils of 12 different extinct species of koala have been found. These extinct koalas were much larger than the ones today. They were like giant koalas! Koalas are found in the wild only in the forests of eastern Australia. Koalas live in bushland with other koalas. Each has its own home trees which are generally not visited by other koalas except in mating season. In an ideal habitat in the wild, male koalas live about 10 years, while females may live a few years longer. Thousands of koalas are killed each year by cars and dogs. Though koalas look like teddy bears and are sometimes even referred to as koala bears, they are not bears.
  • 19. Reproduction: The emu's nest is a shallow hole by a bush; it is lined with leaves, grass, and bark. The female lays from 4 to 20 greenish-brown eggs in a clutch (a group of eggs laid at one time). Chicks (baby emus) hatch after an incubation period of about 8 weeks. The male incubates (keeps warm) the eggs and cares for the chicks for about 1 1/2 years.
  • 20. If you watch cartoons, the first thing you think of when you hear the name Tasmanian devil is probably Taz, the whirling, maniacal, always hungry, angry cartoon character. But Tasmanian devils are real and are feisty like the cartoon Taz! Tasmanian devils are the largest carnivorous (meat-eating) marsupials in the world. Marsupials are mammals that have a pouch on their bellies for carrying their babies. Tasmanian devils live in Tasmania, a large island just south of Australia. In fact, Tasmania Adult Tasmanian devils are usually is the only place where they are found in the about the size of a small dog. They wild. have coarse brown or black fur and a pudgy appearance that makes them look like baby bears. But don't let their cuteness fool you. They have sharp teeth and strong, muscular jaws that can deliver one of the most powerful bites of any mammal on Earth.
  • 21. Kangaroos possess powerful hind legs, a long, strong tail, and small front legs. They’re the biggest of all marsupials, standing over 6 feet (2 meters) tall. Kangaroos belong to the animal family Macropus, literally "big foot." Thanks to their large feet, kangaroos can leap some 30 feet in a single bound, and travel more than 30 mph (48 kmh). Kangaroos use their strong tails for balance while jumping.