Discover why these marsupials are beloved icons of Australian wildlife.

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Published: Wednesday, 10 April 2024 at 13:42 PM


Australia is packed with small and intriguing marsupials, and wombats are one of the more familiar. Australia’s other marsupials include koalas and kangaroos.

What are wombats?

Wombats are a mostly nocturnal marsupial, endemic to Australia.

How big are wombats?

Wombats aren’t exactly small, being up to a metre long and weighing up to 40kg.

However, today’s wombats would have been dwarfed by their enormous ancestor, Diprotodon optatum, which roamed during the Pleistocene Epoch and finally died out about 12,000 years ago.

Giant wombats, as they were known, are thought to be the largest marsupial to have existed, growing to 1.8m at the shoulder and 4m in length, and clocking up almost 3 tonnes in weight. 

Where do wombats live?

The Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat (Lasiorhinus latifrons). Credit: Getty

Flinders Island wombats, a subspecies of common wombats, are numerous across Tasmania and parts of south-east mainland Australia.

Other species include the southern hairy-nosed, found in a region of Australia’s south-central mainland; and the northern hairy-nosed, confined to two locations in Queensland. With just a few hundred individuals left, the latter is now considered one of the rarest land mammals on Earth. 

How big are wombat burrows?

wombat
A Single wombat (Vombatus ursinus tasmaniensis), the largest burrowing mammal, coming out of its burrow near Bischeno, Tasmania.

Wombats are in fact the planet’s largest burrowing herbivores. They dig using their front claws and push soil backwards with their hind feet and rump. They create subterranean systems up to 30m long and several metres deep, and feature various entrances.

The burrows are used to rest, hide from predators, and keep warm in winter and cool in summer. Wombats tend to have overlapped home ranges with multiple burrows, so these dwellings are often shared.

Wombats are mainly solitary – Groups, when they do occur, are known as ‘wisdoms’.

Wombat poop

Wombats famously pass cube-shaped stools, as many as 100 of which can be excreted in one night. Stacked in a manner reminiscent of stone-balancing, these deposits are used to mark territories and attract members of the opposite sex.