Common Wombat
Vombatus ursinus
The common wombat (Vombatus ursinus) is a stocky, burrowing marsupial native to southeastern Australia and Tasmania, with smaller island populations in Bass Strait. It is the familiar bare-nosed wombat, separated from the hairy-nosed wombats by its naked muzzle, rounded ears, and coarse brown to gray fur. Adults have powerful shoulders, broad paws, and chisel-like incisors for cutting grasses, sedges, roots, and bark. They spend much of the day in extensive burrow systems and come out mostly at night or in cool weather; the backward-facing pouch keeps soil off the young while the female digs.
Common wombats are not suitable private pets and are usually encountered through wildlife parks, licensed rehabilitation, research, or managed reserves. Captive and rescue care needs heavy-duty barriers, deep diggable substrate or artificial burrows, quiet dens, and a high-fiber diet that avoids rich fruit and concentrated feeds. Road trauma and sarcoptic mange are major reasons wombats enter rehabilitation in parts of their range, so release planning often includes site choice and disease follow-up. On rural land, coexistence may require wombat-friendly fencing and awareness of active burrows rather than simple removal.
Colors: Black, Brown, Cream, Gray, Tan, White, Wild Type