Woolley's False Antechinus Pseudantechinus woolleyae
A small carnivorous marsupial found in the Australian state of Western Australia. They inhabit rocky hillsides, usually vegetated with acacia scrub or spinifex grass.
img source
seen from Uruguay
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Angola
seen from United States
seen from Singapore
seen from Canada
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from China
Woolley's False Antechinus Pseudantechinus woolleyae
A small carnivorous marsupial found in the Australian state of Western Australia. They inhabit rocky hillsides, usually vegetated with acacia scrub or spinifex grass.
img source
Sandstone dibbler (Pseudantechinus bilarni) Also known as: Northern dibbler, sandstone false antechinus, sandstone pseudantechinus
The sandstone false antechinus was discovered in 1948 and described in 1954, when it was given the species name bilarni, which reflects the Aboriginal pronunciation of Bill Harney, an Australian writer and naturalist who accompanied the expedition that originally found it. It is an insectivorous species that, like many other dasyurids, so exhausts itself in the breeding season that most of the males die, although unlike some other species, about 25% of both sexes survive to a second year.
Classification Animalia - Chordata - Mammalia - Metatheria - Marsupialia - Australidelphia - Dasyuromorphia - Dasyuridae - Dasyurinae - Dasyurini - Pseudantechinus - P. bilarni
Images: [x] [x] [x] Source: [x]