2 5 o POUCHED MAMMALS. 



tive of the first of the four genera. The distinctive characters of the genns being 

 the long and slender form of the head, the few (three or four) perpendicular ridges 

 on the permanent premolar tooth in both jaws, the shortness of the foot, the naked 

 muzzle, ami the rather large ears. In the skull the auditory bulla is somewhat 

 swollen, and the unossified spaces in the palate are large. The figured species, 

 which is the largest of its genus, is confined to Eastern Australia and Tasmania, 

 and is variable both in size and colour ; the length is, however, frequently about 

 15 inches, exclusive of the tail. It is specially characterised by the great elonga- 

 tion of the muzzle ; the general colour of the coarse, long, and straight hair being 

 dark grizzle. 1 greyish brown, with a more or less marked tinge of rufous. The 





COMMON KAT KANGAROO (J Iiat. size). 



West Australian V'. </<76</7/' is a smaller allied form: while P. platyops, from the 

 same side of the continent, is still smaller, and has a broader and lorter muzzle. 

 Brush-tailed The brush-tailed rat-kangaroo (Bettongia penicillata), repre- 



Rat Kangaroo. se nted in the figure on p. 251, appears to be the commonest and 

 most widely spread of the group, and is one of four species having the following 

 characteristics in common. The head is comparatively short and wide, with very 

 small and rounded ears, and a naked muzzle : the foot is elongated ; and the 

 permanent premolar tooth (figure on p. 237) is characterised by its numerous 

 (fourteen or fifteen) and slightly oblique ridges. The tail is thickly furred, with 

 the hairs longer on the upper than on the lower surface, and somewhat prehensile. 

 In the skull the auditory bulla is generally much swollen: and the unossified 

 spaces in the palate are large. The figured species is a somewhat smaller animal 

 than the common rat-kangaroo: and is characterised by the great development of 

 the tuft of hair on the upper surface of the end of the tail, of which the under 

 surface is brown. It inhabits nearly all Australia, but is replaced in Tasmania by 

 the much larger jerboa-kangaroo (B. cunit u,ltls), in winch the tail-tuft is scarcely 

 developed. Lesueur's rat-kangaroo (B. lesvu wri), of which the skull is figured on 

 p. 239, is a South and West Australian species distinguished from the one here 

 figured by the small size of the tail-tuft, which is almost always white at the tip. 



