Leadbeater's possum

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Leadbeater's possum
Other forms of name
Bass River possum
Fairy possum
Gymnobelideus leadbeateri
See Also From tracing topical name
Gymnobelideus
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q301042
Library of congress: sh 92004700
Sources of Information
  • 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)
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Wikipedia description:

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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