Neha Patil (Editor)

Broad faced potoroo

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Infraclass
  
Marsupialia

Family
  
Potoroidae

Scientific name
  
Potorous platyops

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Chordata

Order
  
Diprotodontia

Genus
  
Potorous

Higher classification
  
Potoroo

Broad-faced potoroo cdn2arkiveorgmedia90904BA5CC9A4A4F8D8FDF3

Similar
  
Potoroo, Mammal, Desert rat‑kangaroo, Desert bandicoot, Eastern hare‑wallaby

Broad faced potoroo top 7 facts


The broad-faced potoroo (Potorous platyops) is an extinct species of marsupial that once lived in Australia. The first specimen was collected in 1839 and described by John Gould in 1844, but even then it was rare and only a handful of specimens were ever collected, the last in 1875. Subfossil remains indicate that it originally had an extensive distribution from the semiarid coastal districts of South Australia to the Western Australian coast, and possibly as far north as North West Cape.

The habits of the broad-faced potoroo are almost entirely unknown. It clearly avoided the fertile forested areas that its relatives the long-nosed and long-footed potoroos inhabit. It is unusual amongst recently extinct Australian vertebrates in that it appears to have declined significantly before the European settlement of Australia.

Preserved specimens indicate that it was smaller than the other potoroos at around 24 cm long with an 18-cm tail. The coat was grizzled grey above and dirty white below, the body similar in shape to that of a large rat. The ears were small and rounded, the muzzle was fairly short, and the cheeks were notably puffy.

References

Broad-faced potoroo Wikipedia