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Encyclopedia > Pygmy Planigale
Common Planigale
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Subclass: Marsupialia
Order: Dasyuromorphia
Family: Dasyuridae
Subfamily: Planigalinae
Genus: Planigale
Species: maculata
Binomial name
Planigale maculata
(Gould, 1851)

The Common Planigale (Planigale maculata), also known as the Pygmy Planigale, is an ferocious predator on a tiny scale: one of the many little-known small marsupial carnivores which, if seen at all, are usually thought to be simply mice.


It is unusual amongst planigales in that it is relatively common, rather large by planigale standards at about 10 to 12 grams, has a head that is only moderately flattened, and occupies a broad range of habitats: from the upper Hunter River valley not far north of Sydney along the coast and hinterland to Cape York, and across the Top End of Australia to the Kimberley and a little beyond. Its range takes in sclerophyll forest, rainforest, marshlands, grasslands and even the outer suburbs of Brisbane.


Although the Common Planigale was first described in 1851, little is known of its behaviour. In captivity, it eats a wide range of foods including insects, eggs, meat, and honey, and females make small, saucer-shaped nests out of bark and grass. It is assumed that they do this in the wild.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Pygmy Planigale - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (776 words)
The Pygmy Planigale is found from the upper Hunter River valley not far north of Sydney along the coast and hinterland to Cape York, and across the Top End of Australia to the Kimberley and a little beyond.
As a "marsupial mouse," Planigale maculata lies somewhere halfway between a mouse and a shrew in shape.
The Pygmy Planigale was first described by John Gould in 1851.
Genus Planigale or planigales (257 words)
Common Planigale Common Planigale The Common Planigale (Planigale maculata), also known as the Pygmy Planigale, is an ferocious predator.
The long-tailed planigale is the smallest of all marsupials and it is the rarest of the planigale species.
The shrew-like long-tailed planigale is one of the world’s smallest mammals with an adult weight of less than 6g, and has a remarkably compressed head, ideal for probing among the crack network.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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