Error message
Unable to fetch location details at this time.
Common Brushtail Possum (juvenile)
Trichosurus vulpecula
-27.5084, 153.018
Field Notes
Description:
The Common Brushtail Possum (Trichosurus vulpecula, from the Greek for "furry tailed" and the Latin for "little fox", previously in the genus Phalangista) is a nocturnal, semi-arboreal marsupial of the family Phalangeridae. It is native to Australia, and the largest of the possums.
Like most possums, the Common Brushtail Possum is nocturnal. It is mainly a folivore, but has been known to eat small mammals such as rats. In most Australian habitats, leaves of eucalyptus are a significant part of the diet but rarely the sole item eaten. The tail is prehensile and naked on its lower underside. There are four colour variations: silver-grey, brown, black and gold.
It is the Australian marsupial most often seen by city-dwellers, as it is one of few that thrive in cities, as well as a wide range of natural and human-modified environments. Around human habitations, Common Brushtails are inventive and determined foragers with a liking for fruit trees, vegetable gardens, and kitchen raids.
Habitat:
Brushtail Possums have proven highly adaptable to urban environments using trees, wildlife corridors, natural gullies, roofs and wall cavities, often moving via telegraph poles, cabling and fences for travelling and foraging. Cities and towns provide abundant warm, dry shelters, lots of available food plants from manufactured gardens and opportunity to scavenge from litter and rubbish bins. Hand feeding by residents and leaving domestic pet-food outside can also assist possums. Densities are much higher now due to high availability of food and suitable refugia.
Notes:
I've been seeing this little one with its mother each evening. They come down to feed on the fruit of a native Lippi Pilli tree. This juvenile is about half the size of a fully grown adult. I might add there has also been a Flying Fox feeding in the same tree, but it will not stay if the possums are present. Here's some info on the tree itself - http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/94416007 ... and the bat - http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/87816090
Comments (27)