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Wednesday, April 7, 2010
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi3RdMvPUWZN03JEq1l_hGhwiyqhSqKrqXyGxJU0bt0L1DRLTDhDqQ0NZmA5ChnyAZngsVF2QKiOq6kmP01Tt564EcsmmcEG0Ajnzu6HLIXl1Iyvsi4TkHZ7AXmr8eRMavSZtGjR79PSc_S/s320/strange+australian+animal.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhjvIpNJ9yyW5uWfQSuW2xDOwLwyYfdKEvT1YanladUEeK3GXUsRiF9fVbPkgsAQOc4a1bGKtORLZ_EhtxS9t0pB5XC528mqBt5VPEbOlP0_xzRLuRmbySSo6DWDtqHeqr_4IEU0HjMr6Iu/s320/australian+marsupial+wombat.jpg)
Wombats use their claws to dig burrows in open grasslands and eucalyptus forests. They live in these burrows, which can become extensive tunnel-and-chamber complexes. Common wombats are solitary and inhabit their own burrows, while other species may be more social and live together in larger burrow groups called colonies.
Wombats are nocturnal and emerge to feed at night on grasses, roots, and bark. They have rodentlike incisors that never stop growing and are gnawed down on some of their tougher vegetarian fare.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiaH11BupTwYtg-TCUwOqf94QhWPZZaxCvGfLAO0mZmM-f_EMXtwVt4INw6FohkS_NVnnWX5HZNcN8JyRP6zFuQiTjh9uyIh2hj7ens3MVoT_X8mG_ygBzdtlp5GnM2IZGxzDiuO0sxhOEq/s320/adult+wombat.png)
The field and pasture damage caused by wombat burrowing can be a destructive nuisance to ranchers and farmers. Wombats have been hunted for this behavior, as well as for their fur and simply for sport. Some species (the northern hairy-nosed wombats) are now critically endangered, while others (the common or coarse-haired wombat) are still hunted as vermin. Space for all wombats is at a premium as farm and ranch lands increasingly replace natural space.
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