
The REAL Tasmanian Devil
Tasmanian devils are one of the most hated
and feared animals in the world. Although a lot of terrifying stories
have been told about how devils chase and kill humans, they are not true.
These bumbling hunters look and sound a lot more fierce than they really
are and the devils' bad reputation is largely undeserved. Tasmanian
Devils
DO have bad tempers. All Tassie devils are naturally
ill-tempered and aggressive. Some, like the cartoon Taz, fly into
violent rages for no apparent reason.
Devil
Facts
Common Name: Tasmanian devil
No special names for males, females, or babies.
No special name for groups.
Scientific Name: Sarcophilus harrisii
(sometimes
listed as Sarcophilus ursinus)
Size: Adult male: average height
at shoulder 12 inches; average length of body, 2 feet plus a 1-foot tail.
Weight range: 12-25 pounds. Adult females about 15 percent smaller
than males.
Color: Black, usually with white
chest band and small white patches on the shoulders and above the tail.
Occasionally albino (solid white) or all black.
Behavior: Nocturnal. Solitary.
Savage.
Habitat/Range: Tasmania (an island
off the south coast of Australia). Wide variety of habitats including
forest, meadow, seashore, and around human settlements.
Food: Primarily meat, including carrion.
Diet also includes insects, fruits, seeds, eggs, and garbage.
Life Span: Six years in captivity.
Unknown in wild.
Gestation: Three weeks. Up
to four young suckle in pouch for fifteen weeks, then live in nest and
nurse another fifteen weeks.
Predators: Humans.
Population: Actual numbers unknown.
Common in some areas.

Tasmanian Devils are marsupials. They have
a pouch like kangaroos. Marsupials have a single lower body opening,
called a cloaca. It is used for waste disposal, for mating, and as
a birth canal. All marsupials have a short gestation (time babies
grow inside the mother's body) and give birth to tiny, partially formed
young that finish developing outside the mother's body.
Devils and all the other carnivorous marsupials
are experts at conserving energy. Devils can, instantly and at will,
cut their energy use in half. To do it, they go into torpor, a state
that is similar to hibernation. Their body temperature drops from
100 degree F to 88 degree F, and their breathing rate and pulse are cut
so drastically that devils in torpor lie in a death-like trance.
But unlike a hibernating animal, devils can zip between activity and torpor
and back again in a matter of seconds.
Only one out of ten Tasmanian Devils will grow
to adulthood. Accidents and disease account for a few deaths, but
the number-one killer of baby devils is other devils. Unlike most
animals, these mean little marsupials fight to the death with their own
kind. The winner then eats the loser. Devils are cannibals!!!
When they leave the pouch, they are equipped with
a full set of teeth. These are not temporary "baby teeth," but the
42 slashing, grinding, crushing weapons of an adult devil. The nestings
have only a brief time to practice using these teeth. When they've
been out of the pouch just three months, the mother devil stops feeding
and guarding her young. Then they have to defend themselves, even
against their own mother!!! She becomes an enemy, attacking and killing
her own babies.
If you want to know more about the nasty Tasmanian
Devil, go to your
school or public library and read a book about
them. I got "Tasmanian Devil on Location" from my public library.
Taken from the book "Tasmanian Devil
on Location"
Text copyright 1992 by Kathy Darling
Photographs copyright 1992 by Tara
Darling
"Tasmanian Devil on Location" published
by Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Books, a division of William Morrow &
Company, Inc., 1350 Avenue of the Americas, New
York, New York, 10019

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