Geographic Range
Greater bilbies were historically found over 70% of continental Australia with populations
throughout South Australia, Western Australia, the Northern Territory, and New South
Wales. Limited populations were also found in southwestern Queensland.
Upon the introduction of feral cats (
Felis silvestris
), red foxes (
Vulpes vulpes
), and rabbits
Oryctolagus cuniculus
by Europeans, the home range of
Macrotis lagotis
was greatly reduced. Today, bilbies are limited to 20 to 30% of their original territory.
Macrotis lagotis
is found in Great Sandy, Tanami, and Gibson deserts in northwest Australia and the
south west tip of Queensland. Greater bilbies are now considered extinct in South
Australia.
Reintroduction programs have begun in southern South Australia, southwestern Queensland,
western New South Wales, and areas of Western Australia with some success due to the
addition of predator-proof enclosures and intense monitoring of reintroduced populations.
- Biogeographic Regions
- australian
Habitat
Greater bilbies are commonly found in dry, hot areas including deserts, dunes, and
grasslands. There are three main vegetation types commonly associated with bilby habitat.
These are tussock grassland commonly found on the hills and uplands, mulga woodlands
and shrublands, and hummlock grasslands found on dunes and sandy plains. Greater bilbies
are fossorial, found in areas of rocky and clayey soil.
- Habitat Regions
- terrestrial
- Terrestrial Biomes
- desert or dune
- savanna or grassland
Physical Description
Greater bilbies are known for their large, relatively hairless, rabbit-like ears,
and long pointed snouts with sensory vibrissae and a hairless pink nose. Their fur
is soft, silky and bluish grey in color with a mix of fawn over the majority of the
body. The belly is covered in white or cream fur. The first part of the tail is the
same bluish grey as the body with the remainder of it being black and the final 40%
being pure white. The pouch of females opens to the rear so as to avoid filling with
soil when the animal is burrowing. The forelimbs are strong and consist of three clawed
digits and two clawless digits. Greater bilby hind limbs are slender and similar to
those of
kangaroos
. Rather than hopping, bilbies use their legs to gallop around the desert. Their tongues
are long, sticky, and slender, making it easy to catch termites. Males and females
are sexual dimorphic, with the male's body mass being twice that of females (800 to
2500 g for males relative to 600 to 1100 g for females). Along with being larger,
males also have enlarged foreheads and longer canines (
National Recovery Plan for the Greater Bilby
).
- Other Physical Features
- endothermic
- homoiothermic
- bilateral symmetry
- Sexual Dimorphism
- male larger
Reproduction
Greater bilbies have a polygynous mating system in which the most dominant male will
mate with the most dominate female and additional females while lower males will mate
with females equal or below them in the social hierarchy.
Males initiate sexual interactions by approaching and following a female. This is
followed by the male sniffing the female around her face, shoulders, flanks, or under
the tail as well as licking the female’s urogenital opening. Females may also sniff
the male. Females may aggressively rebuff the advances of lower-ranked males. Copulation
seems to take place underground with the longest mating sessions recorded taking place
for around 18 hours. There is no evidence of pair bonding, though males will often
scent mark the burrow after mating with a female. This is thought to ward off lower-ranked
males. These results were observed in a study of captive bilbies. Little has been
recorded about bilby mating in the wild due to their decreasing numbers and semi-fossorial,
nocturnal lifestyle.
- Mating System
- polygynous
Greater bilbies have the ability to breed throughout the year, whether breeding occurs
depends on environmental conditions. In their arid environments, females may delay
mating until conditions are appropriate to support the nutritional demands of lactation
and independence of the young. When environmental conditions are favorable, a female
bilby may produce up to 4 litters a year, each typically consisting of 1 to 2 offspring,
though up to 4 offspring have been reported.
Female greater bilbies reach sexual maturity at around 5 months old (or 560 g) while
males take around 8 months (or at a weight of 800 g) to reach maturity. The female
oestrus cycle lasts around 21 days. Greater bilbies have one of the shortest gestation
periods of all mammals, only 14 days. After gestation, the tiny, premature offspring
climbs into its mother's pouch, attaches itself to a nipple and remains in the pouch
for around 75 days. The young are cared for by the mother for an additional 14 days.
After that, the young will leave their mother's burrow and be left to fend for themselves.
- Key Reproductive Features
- iteroparous
- year-round breeding
- gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate)
- sexual
- viviparous
Females are the only caregivers of young. After their short gestation, young greater
bilbies climb into their mother’s pouch where they remain for the majority of their
time with their mother. During the 75 days the young bilbies remain in the pouch,
the babies continue to grow at a very fast rate, reaching 200 g by the time they leave
the pouch. While in the pouch, the offspring obtain all of their nourishment from
mother’s milk. Bilby females have nipples both deep inside the pouch and nipples that
hang outside the pouch. Each type of nipple provides a different type of milk for
the offspring living outside the pouch versus inside the pouch.
Once the young emerge from their mothers pouch, they do not return. Many times, the
female has already mated and a new neonate enters the pouch soon after the previous
litter has left. These young juveniles are cached by the mother in one of her burrows
where she returns regularly over the next two weeks to allow her babies to suckle.
After these two weeks, the young leave the burrow and must fend for themselves with
no additional parental care. It is estimated that only 25% of offspring produced will
reach adulthood while the rest will become prey for predators or succumb to the elements.
- Parental Investment
- altricial
- female parental care
-
pre-fertilization
- provisioning
-
protecting
- female
-
pre-hatching/birth
-
provisioning
- female
-
protecting
- female
-
provisioning
-
pre-weaning/fledging
-
provisioning
- female
-
protecting
- female
-
provisioning
-
pre-independence
-
provisioning
- female
-
provisioning
Lifespan/Longevity
The oldest greater bilby in captivity lived about 10 years, although 6 to 7 years
of age is a typical maximum lifespan in captivity. The lifespan of greater bilbies
in the wild is unknown.
Behavior
Greater bilbies tend to live solitary lives, though some may live together in pairs
(usually two females). Greater bilbies are semi-fossorial, digging slightly spiraling
burrows about 2 meters deep and up to 3 meters in length. These burrows may have multiple
exits, which are particularly important if a burrow is invaded by a predator. A single
bilby may have several burrows scattered through its home range. These burrows serve
as protection from predators as well as from the harsh sun and other environmental
conditions. They also serve as a safe place to cache young while adults are foraging.
As the sun sets, nocturnal greater bilbies leave their burrows to forage and search
for mating opportunities. Greater bilbies may return to their burrow periodically
throughout the night to rest or if threatened by a predator.
Home ranges of males, females, and juveniles are likely to over lap, but not much
social contact is made with the exception of mating. However, male greater bilbies
in captivity seem to possess a linear social hierarchy. Unlike
bandicoots
, this hierarchy is not maintained by high levels of aggression. Scent markings outside
of burrows seem to signal where an animal is in the dominance hierarchy.
- Key Behaviors
- fossorial
- saltatorial
- nocturnal
- motile
- sedentary
- solitary
- dominance hierarchies
Home Range
Home range sizes of male greater bilbies are usually much larger than those of females.
Female home ranges are from 0.18 to 1.5 square km while males have home ranges of
between 1.5 to 3.16 square km.
Communication and Perception
Greater bilbies have poor eyesight and mainly rely on hearing and olfaction for perceiving
their environment. They have a keen sense of smell, which is used to sniff out food
buried underground as well as perceive scent markings of other individuals. With their
enormous ears, greater bilbies also listen for insects underground as well as predators.
However, hearing seems much less important than olfaction. The ears of greater bilbies
are also used to help regulate body temperature.
Communication between males usually occurs through scent markings. Males mark the
outside of their burrows by rubbing their urogenital area along the burrow entrance.
Males may also mark burrows where they have mated with a female. Scent marking seems
directly correlated to dominance; dominant males mark over areas less dominant males
have previously marked. Also, less dominant males tend to avoid entering burrows of
dominant males.
Females rarely scent mark their territories. Scent marks by males have little effect
on the females since males are rarely, if ever, aggressive towards females.
- Communication Channels
- chemical
- Other Communication Modes
- scent marks
Food Habits
Greater bilbies do not drink water, they obtain water from their food. They have an
opportunistic diet consisting of seeds, especially those of the grasses
Dactyloctenium radulans
and
Yakirra australiense
, bulbs, larvae,
termites
,
ants
,
spiders
, fruit, fungi,
lizards
and occasionally eggs, snails, or small mammals. The proportion of insect to plant
material that makes up their diet depends on the habitat and the season.
Along with a keen sense of smell, greater bilbies have excellent hearing. Placing
their enormous ears against the ground, greater bilbies are able to hear termites
and other insects burrowing underground. They then use their sharp claws and strong
forelimbs to dig up insects, bulbs, and other buried food. Since greater bilbies have
soft fur that does not protect their bodies well from termite bites, they dig tunnels
leading to termite chambers and lap them up with their long, slender tongues. Unfortunately,
this method of feeding leads to a large consumption of soil and sand as well.
Controlled fires are actually important to greater bilbies because fire promotes growth
and seed production of preferred food plants.
- Primary Diet
- omnivore
- Animal Foods
- mammals
- reptiles
- eggs
- insects
- terrestrial non-insect arthropods
- mollusks
- Plant Foods
- roots and tubers
- seeds, grains, and nuts
- fruit
- Other Foods
- fungus
Predation
While native species such as carpet pythons (
Morelia spilota
), monitor lizards (
Varanidae
), and some raptors (
Accipitridae
) are potential predators of greater bilbies, the most common and destructive predators
are introduced species. Non-native species that prey on greater bilbies include
dingos
(thought to have been introduced in Australia about 3500 years ago),
red foxes
, and
feral cats
.
Red foxes
were brought to Australia for the purpose of recreational hunting in 1855 by European
settlers. Within 100 years of their introduction, red foxes spread across continental
Australia and currently inhabits all regions of the continent with the exception of
the tropical northern region of Australia.
Domestic cats
were originally released throughout Australia around 1855 to control the population
of another invasive species,
European rabbits
, as well as
mice
and
rat
populations. Domestic cats quickly expanded over the entire continent of Australia,
killing many native species.
Ecosystem Roles
While they are a source of food for a number of predators, both native and introduced,
the most important role played by
Macrotis lagotis
is that of an “ecosystem engineer.” Ecosystem engineers are “organisms that modify,
maintain, create or destroy structure within the physical environment” (Eldridge and
James, 2007). As greater bilbies forage for bulbs, seeds, and insects, they dig pits
up to 25 cm deep that are then abandoned. These pits become areas where seeds, water,
and other organic matter settle and begin to decompose. Greater bilby pits become
“fertile patches” in the Australian desert where some seeds are provided the extra
fertilization to germinate in an otherwise extremely difficult environment.
Studies compared environments without greater bilbies and a similar, native fossorial
group, bettongs (
Bettongia
) to those where these two native species are present. It was concluded that environments
without these native fossorial animals suffered from devastating losses of native
Australian fauna despite the presence of
rabbits
, which also dig burrows.
Economic Importance for Humans: Positive
Greater bilbies were once a favorite traditional food and source of fur for Aboriginal
peoples of Australia. The rarity and protected status of greater bilbies means this
practice has been all but abandoned. Greater bilbies are promoted as a mascot for
the Commonwealth of Australia Endangered Species Program. They are also replacing
rabbits as the Australian symbol of Easter, with chocolate bilbies are being sold
as an alternative to chocolate bunnies.
- Positive Impacts
- food
- body parts are source of valuable material
Economic Importance for Humans: Negative
There are no known adverse effects of Macrotis lagotis on humans.
Conservation Status
Greater bilbies are listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN red list, endangered under the
U.S. Endangered Species List, and are on Appendix I of CITES. The conservation status
in each of the Australian territories is as follows: Queensland - extinct, Northern
Territory - threatened, Western Australia - vulnerable, South Australia - endangered,
New South Wales - presumed extinct.
Greater bilbies are the only extant member of
Thylacomyidae
after their closest relative, lesser bilbies (
Macrotis leucura
), became extinct between the 1930's and 1960's. Like
M. leucura
, greater bilbies have suffered a significant drop in population over the past 200
years due to the introduction of invasive predators such as dingos, red foxes, and
feral cats, and invasive herbivores such as European rabbits.
Along with the introduction of invasive species, a number of new diseases have also
been brought to Australia. Greater bilbies are highly susceptible to the parasites
and diseases of introduced animals and are commonly infected when they come into contact
with feces of introduced species while digging. Without immunities to fight these
parasites and diseases, many die as a result.
The introduction of both
European rabbits
and livestock has greatly reduced the abundance of grasses, seeds, and other plant
matter typically fed upon by native greater bilbies. As well as the reduction of plants
through feeding, grazing has also led to the degradation of bilby habitat.
Greater bilby habitat is also being destroyed as a result of human development and
they are hit by cars along roads. Greater bilbies are protected under Australian law.
A number of breeding and reintroduction projects are underway, as well as projects
to control populations of harmful invasive species.
Since the 1990's, greater bilby conservation groups have promoted the idea of replacing
the Easter Bunny with the Easter Bilby. Chocolate shops around Australia began selling
chocolate bilbies with a portion of the profit going to help fund bilby conservation.
Greater bilbies have their own Australian holiday, National Bilby Day, anually held
in mid-September in hopes of raising funds and educating the public on bilby conservation.
Additional Links
Contributors
Emily Brown (author), University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, Phil Myers (editor, instructor), University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, Tanya Dewey (editor), University of Michigan-Ann Arbor.
- Australian
-
Living in Australia, New Zealand, Tasmania, New Guinea and associated islands.
- native range
-
the area in which the animal is naturally found, the region in which it is endemic.
- terrestrial
-
Living on the ground.
- desert or dunes
-
in deserts low (less than 30 cm per year) and unpredictable rainfall results in landscapes dominated by plants and animals adapted to aridity. Vegetation is typically sparse, though spectacular blooms may occur following rain. Deserts can be cold or warm and daily temperates typically fluctuate. In dune areas vegetation is also sparse and conditions are dry. This is because sand does not hold water well so little is available to plants. In dunes near seas and oceans this is compounded by the influence of salt in the air and soil. Salt limits the ability of plants to take up water through their roots.
- tropical savanna and grassland
-
A terrestrial biome. Savannas are grasslands with scattered individual trees that do not form a closed canopy. Extensive savannas are found in parts of subtropical and tropical Africa and South America, and in Australia.
- savanna
-
A grassland with scattered trees or scattered clumps of trees, a type of community intermediate between grassland and forest. See also Tropical savanna and grassland biome.
- temperate grassland
-
A terrestrial biome found in temperate latitudes (>23.5° N or S latitude). Vegetation is made up mostly of grasses, the height and species diversity of which depend largely on the amount of moisture available. Fire and grazing are important in the long-term maintenance of grasslands.
- endothermic
-
animals that use metabolically generated heat to regulate body temperature independently of ambient temperature. Endothermy is a synapomorphy of the Mammalia, although it may have arisen in a (now extinct) synapsid ancestor; the fossil record does not distinguish these possibilities. Convergent in birds.
- bilateral symmetry
-
having body symmetry such that the animal can be divided in one plane into two mirror-image halves. Animals with bilateral symmetry have dorsal and ventral sides, as well as anterior and posterior ends. Synapomorphy of the Bilateria.
- polygynous
-
having more than one female as a mate at one time
- iteroparous
-
offspring are produced in more than one group (litters, clutches, etc.) and across multiple seasons (or other periods hospitable to reproduction). Iteroparous animals must, by definition, survive over multiple seasons (or periodic condition changes).
- year-round breeding
-
breeding takes place throughout the year
- sexual
-
reproduction that includes combining the genetic contribution of two individuals, a male and a female
- viviparous
-
reproduction in which fertilization and development take place within the female body and the developing embryo derives nourishment from the female.
- altricial
-
young are born in a relatively underdeveloped state; they are unable to feed or care for themselves or locomote independently for a period of time after birth/hatching. In birds, naked and helpless after hatching.
- female parental care
-
parental care is carried out by females
- fossorial
-
Referring to a burrowing life-style or behavior, specialized for digging or burrowing.
- saltatorial
-
specialized for leaping or bounding locomotion; jumps or hops.
- nocturnal
-
active during the night
- motile
-
having the capacity to move from one place to another.
- sedentary
-
remains in the same area
- solitary
-
lives alone
- dominance hierarchies
-
ranking system or pecking order among members of a long-term social group, where dominance status affects access to resources or mates
- chemical
-
uses smells or other chemicals to communicate
- scent marks
-
communicates by producing scents from special gland(s) and placing them on a surface whether others can smell or taste them
- visual
-
uses sight to communicate
- tactile
-
uses touch to communicate
- acoustic
-
uses sound to communicate
- chemical
-
uses smells or other chemicals to communicate
- food
-
A substance that provides both nutrients and energy to a living thing.
- omnivore
-
an animal that mainly eats all kinds of things, including plants and animals
References
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Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts, 2009. "Bilby ( Macrotis lagotis )" (On-line). Australian Government Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts. Accessed March 19, 2009 at http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/threatened/publications/bilby.html .
Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage, and the Arts, 2004. "European red fox -Invasive Species fact page" (On-line). Australian Government Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage, and the Arts. Accessed March 21, 2009 at http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/invasive/publications/pubs/european-red-fox.pdf .
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Department of Environment and Conservation. National Recovery Plan for the Greater Bilby Macrotis lagotis . 2129. Northern Territory: Australian Government, Department of Natural Resources, Environment, and the Arts. 2006. Accessed March 19, 2009 at http://www.epa.qld.gov.au/publications/p02129aa.pdf/National_recovery_plan_for_the_Greater_Bilby_emMacrotis_lagotis/em_/_prepared_by_Northern_Territory_Department_of_Natural_Resources_Environment_and_the_Arts.pdf .