
a i i7
ON Y CH O GALEA LUNATA, Gouid.
Lunated Nail-tailed Kangaroo.
Macropus lunatus, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., Part V III. p. 93.—Gray, List of Mamm. in Brit. Mus., p. 88.—
Waterh. Nat. Hist, of Mamm., vol. i. p. 79.
W h e n writing upon the Birds of Australia I frequently had occasion to allude to the very remarkable
manner in which different species of the same form represent each other on opposite parts of the continent
; and that a similar law of representation exists among the Mammals, is evidenced by the present and
preceding species, which, although most nearly allied, inhabit portions of the country as widely apart as if
seas had flowed between, as at some distant period was probably the case. We have no evidence that they
approach each other in the interior of the country, as neither of them have yet been discovered within the
limits of the intervening colony of South Australia; consequently they must be regarded as beautiful representatives
of each other in the respective countries they inhabit.
Although assimilating in form and markings to the Onychogalea frasnata, the present species is certainly
less ornamental, and is also much smaller in all its dimensions. The habits and economy of the two species
are very similar; both exhibit a remarkable degree of shyness and timidity, and seek safety in flight upon
the slightest alarm. I had no opportunity of observing it in a state of nature myself, but Mr. Gilbert’s notes
inform me that “ the Waurong,” by which name it is known to the natives, “ is found in the gum forests
of the interior of Western Australia, where there are patches of thick scrub and dense thickets, in the open
glades intervening between which it is occasionally seen sunning itself, but at the slightest alarm immediately
betakes itself to the shelter of the thick scrub; the dogs sometimes succeed in driving it out to the
open spots, when, like the Kangaroo rats, it runs to the nearest hollow log, and is then easily captured. I
remarked, that when sitting quietly cleaning itself, there was a constant twitching of the tail in an upward
direction; an action which I have never seen performed by any other Kangaroo. I was not sufficiently near
to ascertain whether this motion of the tail had any connection with the claw or nail at its extremity, but I
think it not improbable. The Waurong makes no nest, but forms a hollow in the soft ground beneath a
thick brush in which it lies during the heat of the day.”
Fur soft and of moderate length; general tint ashy grey, finely pencilled with dusky and yellowish white;
back of the neck and shoulders vinous rust-colour; a short distance behind the base of the fore-leg a
distinct curved white mark; under surface of the body pale grey, the hairs tipped with dirty white; on the
sides of the body a faint rusty tint, more distinct in some specimens than in others; around the eye a ring
of pale rust-colour, and the /nuzzle suffused with the same tin t; ear clothed with long white hairs within,
and externally with very minute dusky hairs finely freckled with yellowish white; on the hinder half the
hairs are longer and almost white, at the apex a delicate fringe of blackish hairs; fore-feet in some specimens
brown, in others dirty white; tarsi chiefly dirty white, but the sides of the toes suffused with pale
brown; tail clothed for the most part with short adpressed hairs, having a general greyish tin t; on the
upper surface the hairs are somewhat lengthened, and on the apical portion they form a slight crest which
is usually blackish; at the tip of the tail is a small conical horny appendage like a nail, of about an eighth
of an inch in length.
Male.
Length from the nose to the root of the t a i l ........................................... 8
,, of the t a i l .......................................................................................... q §11|§
„ „ tarsus and toes including the n a i l s ....................................... o 4a.
„ „ arm and hand including the nails . ................................ o 31
„ „ face from the tip of the nose to the base of the e a r . . 0 3
’ e a r o 2*
It is to be regretted that this as well as all other Kangaroos lose the delicate tints of their colouring on
exposure to light; so much so in the present instance, that Museum and recent specimens could scarcely
be considered as identical.
The Plate represents the two sexes rather under the natural size.