The swamp wallaby ( Wallabia bicolor) is a small Macropodidae marsupial of eastern Australia. This wallaby is also commonly known as the black wallaby, with other names including black-tailed wallaby, fern wallaby, black pademelon, stinker (in Queensland), and black stinker (in New South Wales) on account of its characteristic swampy odour.
The swamp wallaby is the monotypic taxon of the genus Wallabia.
It inhabits thick undergrowth in and , or shelters during the day in thick grass or , emerging at night to feed. They have been found to inhabit diverse habitats such as open farmland, mallee woodland, and sandhill. Brigalow scrub in Queensland is a particularly favoured habitat.
The swamp wallaby also has a rare 'golden' morph, found on the North and South Stradbroke islands and adjacent mainland. It is a yellow color with a white muzzle. The nose and paws could be pink or black.
The gait differs from other wallabies, with the swamp wallaby carrying its head low and its tail out straight.
The average length is for males, and for females (excluding the tail). The tail in both sexes is approximately equal in length to the rest of the body. Average weight for males is , females averaging .
The swamp wallaby has seven carpal bones in the wrist (humans have eight).
The swamp wallaby exhibits an unusual form of embryonic diapause, differing from other marsupials in having its gestation period longer than its Estrous cycle. This timing makes it possible for swamp wallaby females to overlap two pregnancies, gestating both an embryo and a fetus at the same time. The swamp wallaby ovulates, mates, conceives and forms a new embryo one to two days before the birth of their full-term fetus. Consequently, females are continuously pregnant throughout their reproductive life.
The swamp wallaby is notable for having a distinct sex-chromosome system from most other therian mammals (the subclass that includes marsupials and placental mammals). Females are characterized by the XX pair typical of therians, but males have one X chromosome and two non-sequence homology Y chromosomes. This system is thought to arise from a series of chromosomal fusions over the last 6 million years.
The ideal diet appears to involve browsing on and bushes, rather than grazing on grasses. This is unusual in wallabies and other macropods, which typically prefer grazing. Tooth structure reflects this preference for browsing, with the shape of the molars differing from other wallabies. The fourth premolar is retained through life, and is shaped for cutting through coarse plant material.
There is evidence that the swamp wallaby is an opportunist taking advantage of food sources when they become available, such as fungi, bark and algae. There is also one reported case of the consumption of carrion.
Other sources of threat for the swamp wallaby are their predators, which include dingoes, eagles and wild dogs.
Description
Reproduction
Feeding
Taxonomy
Threats
External links
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