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- © The District Bulletin 2024
IF YOU’VE BEEN following the bushfire crisis on social media and elsewhere, you may have seen reports of benevolent wombats herding other animals to shelter into their fire-proof burrows.
These stories went quickly viral — probably reflecting the appetite for good news after the horrors of the bushfire crisis. However the accounts are not entirely accurate.
Wombats do not heroically round up helpless animals during a bushfire and lead them to safety. But wombats do help other animals in a different way — even if it’s not their intention.
ABOVE: Wombats may not usher other animals into their burrows, but their warrens still protect other species in bushfires. Liv Falvey/Shutterstock
Wombats can emerge as accidental heroes during a bushfire, by providing a safe refuge underground for other wildlife.
Wombat warrens — networks of interconnecting burrows — are large and complex, and considerably shielded from the above-ground environment. Small mammals are known to use wombat burrows to survive an inferno.
One study of the southern hairy-nosed wombat, for instance, found warrens with 28 entrances and nearly 90 metres of tunnels.
This means, at times, other species may not need to share burrows with wombats at all. It’s vacant real estate.
So how might a wombat react to an uninvited guest? This is difficult to know, and likely depends on who’s visiting. Wombats prefer not to share burrows with other wombats, although burrow sharing can be common when wombat populations are very high in one place.
In her book Wombats, Barbara Triggs recalls a fox being chased from a burrow by an angry wombat. Meanwhile, the crushed skulls of foxes and dogs in wombat burrows suggest not all intruders are welcome.
That a suite of species use wombat burrows suggests wombats may not notice or care about squatters — so long as they don’t pose a threat. But more research is needed on the fascinating interactions that take place in wombat burrows, particularly during fire.
While empirical studies are needed, the available evidence suggests wombats may well provide an important refuge for other wildlife during fire.
In any case, it’s important to recognise that surviving fire is only half the battle.
Wombats and their house guests face a medley of challenges post-fire – not least avoiding predators in a barren landscape and eking out a living in a landscape with scarce food.
Read more:
Animal response to a bushfire is astounding. These are the tricks they use to survive
— Dale Nimmo, Associate professor/ARC DECRA fellow, Charles Sturt University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.