AUSSIE ANIMALS/WILDLIFE
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FOR INFO AND PICS SEE ALSO AUSTRALIAN ANIMALS PAGE AT Steve Wright's Website
http://members.lycos.co.uk/yidakisteve/animals.html
Dingo
Koala
Red necked Wallaby
termite
bilba
blackSwan
bandicoot
possum Black snake
Dingo's
Koala 
Echidna
Eels
Emu
Kangaroo boxing
Little penguin
Possum
Seals
sugar glider
Wallaby
Wombat
Yabby
Magpie
blood finch
EMU
curlew
fairy wren croc & frog
DINGO
kangaroo boxing
Koala
wonga pigeon
kookaburra
wonga pigeon
young Galah
TREE FROG
RINGTAIL TERMITE
Tasmanian Devil
Sydney Zoo's new star -- tiny koala
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-10-14 09:56
A tiny koala that could fit into the palm of an adult's hand has become the star attraction at a Sydney zoo after staff nursed him back from the brink of death.
 A tiny, seven-month-old koala joey named Koori peers out from a zookeeper's hands after regaining his health at Sydney's Taronga Zoo October 13, 2004. Three weeks ago veterinarians removed the baby Koala from his sick mother's pouch prematurely in an effort to save him from dehydration, malnutrition and an infection. [Reuters] |
Zookeeper Darrelyn Rainey kept the prematurely born marsupial named "Koori" beside her bed, feeding him every two hours for two weeks after he was rescued from his mother's pouch last month. Rainey said zoo staff had been very concerned about Koori's chances of survival.
"(It was a) two-hourly vigil for the first two weeks and now it's eased off and he's got into a good feeding pattern and he seems to be doing quite well," she told Reuters Television Wednesday.
Seven-month-old Koori weighed just 330 grams (11 ounces) and was in danger of being rejected by his real mother when he was given to his surrogate human mother.
He was extremely dehydrated, underweight and suffering from an infection common to koalas but has since put on an extra 40 grams and has become a boisterous joey.
Koori delighted staff when he took a few nibbles of gum (Eucalyptus) leaves, the koalas' staple diet. He will soon be weaned from his diet of specially formulated koala milk so he can rejoin his mother in the koala enclosure at Taronga Zoo, on the Sydney harbor shoreline.
The furry marsupials, a symbol of Australia, can live for up to 18 years but are fussy eaters and rely on the leaves from a few species of Eucalyptus for food.
They are a protected species but are so common in some parts of Australia that they are in danger of gobbling up the Eucalypt leaves in their habitats raising the risk of starvation.
There are about 100,000 koalas in Australia, down from the seven to 10 million estimate at the time of European settlement in 1788.