Episode 154: Some Australian animals and how to help

Published: Jan. 13, 2020, 7 a.m.

This week let's learn about some lesser-known Australian animals. A heat wave and dry conditions have led to many terrible bush fires in Australia, with many animals and people left hurt, killed, and homeless. Fortunately, there are ways you can help!\n\nCheck out the Animal Rescue Craft Guild for patterns and other information about crafting pouches, beds, and other items needed for injured and orphaned animals, and where to send the items you make.\n\nAnimals to the Max has a great episode about the fires and a long list of places where you can donate money where it's needed most.\n\nSome rescued joeys chilling in their donated pouches:\n\n\n\nAn Eastern banded bandicoot:\n\n\n\nA bilby:\n\n\n\nA long-nosed potoroo:\n\n\n\nThe woylie, or brush-tailed bettong:\n\n\n\nThe numbat:\n\n\n\nShow transcript:\n\nWelcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I\u2019m your host, Kate Shaw.\n\nAs you\u2019ve probably heard, there are terrible fires sweeping through many parts of Australia right now amid a record-breaking heat wave. Both the fires and the heat have killed an estimated half a billion animals in the last few months. This week we\u2019re going to learn about some lesser-known Australian animals and also talk about ways you can help the people in Australia who are helping animals, even if you don\u2019t have any money to spare.\n\nA Facebook group called the Animal Rescue Craft Guild is the resource for anyone who wants to make needed items for injured or orphaned animals. I\u2019ll put a link in the show notes. The group shares what items are needed, patterns to make them, information about what fabrics and what fibers are appropriate for which items, and where to send them.\n\nIn the last week I\u2019ve been knitting and crocheting nests for small animals, and this weekend my aunt Janice and I will be sewing pouches for larger animals. Well, Janice will be doing the sewing, I\u2019ll cut out the cloth pieces for her to use. Many of the animals rescued from the fires are young marsupials, called joeys, whose mothers died, so the pouches are for joeys to live in until they\u2019re old enough to be on their own. Being in a pouch makes the joey feel safe because it feels like being in its mother\u2019s pouch. Rescue groups in Australia need all sizes and kinds of pouches, because there are so many different species of marsupial animals in Australia. So let\u2019s learn about a few you may not have heard of.\n\nOne Australian marsupial that a lot of people don\u2019t know much about is the bandicoot. There are a number of different species that live in parts of Australia and New Guinea. Some are exclusively herbivorous while some are omnivores. For instance, the Eastern barred bandicoot lives on the island of Tasmania and has recently been reintroduced into its historic range in Victoria in southeastern Australia. It\u2019s still quite rare and threatened by introduced predators like foxes and by diseases. It\u2019s an active animal and a fast runner, and makes a happy grunting noise when it finds food.\n\nThe Eastern barred bandicoot is about the size and shape of a rabbit but with shorter ears and a long nose that it uses to probe into the soil to find worms and other small animals that it then digs up. You can tell where one has been because it leaves a series of little holes in the ground called snout pokes. It\u2019s light brown with darker and lighter stripes on its rounded rump, and has a short mouse-like tail. The Western barred bandicoot is a little smaller than the eastern but looks and acts very similar. Both are nocturnal and solitary, and spend the day sleeping in a nest lined with grass and leaves. When it rains, the bandicoot pushes dirt over its nest to help keep it dry. It eats plant material like seeds and roots as well as small animals like insects, worms, and snails. If something startles it, it will give a big jump, and as soon as it comes down it digs a burrow to hide in. Its pouch faces backwards so dirt won\u2019t get into it when it digs.