Leadbeater's possum
Enlarge text Shrink text- Work cat.: Leadbeater's possum p1987.
- Possums and gliders, 1984.
- Taylor, J.M. Oxford guide to mammals of Australia, 1984.
- Strahan, R. Dict. of Australian mammal names, 1981(Leadbeater's possum; fairy possum)
- Syn. liv. org.:v. 2, p. 1020 (Leadbeater's opossum; G. leadbeateri)
- Corbet, G.B. World list of mammalian species, 1991:p. 18 (G. leadbeateri; Leadbeater's possum)
Leadbeater's possum (Gymnobelideus leadbeateri) is a critically endangered possum largely restricted to small pockets of alpine ash, mountain ash, and snow gum forests in the Central Highlands of Victoria, Australia, north-east of Melbourne. It is primitive, relict, and non-gliding, and, as the only species in the petaurid genus Gymnobelideus, represents an ancestral form. Formerly, Leadbeater's possums were moderately common within the very small areas they inhabited; their requirement for year-round food supplies and tree-holes to take refuge in during the day restricts them to mixed-age wet sclerophyll forest with a dense mid-story of Acacia. The species was named in 1867 after John Leadbeater, the then taxidermist at the Museum Victoria. They also go by the common name of fairy possum. On 2 March 1971, the State of Victoria made the Leadbeater's possum its faunal emblem.
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