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Common ringtail possum are considered a pest in Australia and are active at night.
Tasmanian Tranquility: A Captivating Portrait of a Wallaby in the Wilderness
Oriental short-clawed otter,in a pebbly enclosure
Squirrel on a tree on a beach in Costa Rica, Guanacaste.
Close-up photo of leopard slug, also known as Limax Maximus. High resolution photo. Full depth of field.
Juvenile Bat-eared fox (Otocyon megalotis). Ndutu region of Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania, Africa
Indian spectacled cobra showing spectacle marks on back of the hood, Naja naja, Satara, Maharashtra,  India
A young pademelon in the rainforest in Springbrook National Park
ring-tailed gray lemur in natural environment in private park Madagascar. Close-up cute primate. Funny cute smal animal
Wild Swamp Wallaby in New South Wales,  Eastern Australia
Brush-tailed Rock Wallaby (Petrogale penicillata) at Mt Rothwell
Two striped mongooses lying on each other
Male Sugar glider on white background
Corn Snake
Common European Adder (Vipera berus)
Single swamp wallaby in the bush
Sugar Glider on white background
Wild Swamp Wallaby in New South Wales,  Eastern Australia
An Australian Lace Monitor Lizard climbing a tree
Zootoca vivipara Viviparous Lizard Reptile. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Couple of beautiful yellow-footed rock wallabies. Australian kangaroos, cute animals in nature. Close-up. High quality photo
Baby crested gecko on isolated white background
Five striped palm squirrel in a park in Delhi
The North American Porcupine (Erethizon dorsatum) is the second largest rodent in North America, after the North American Beaver (Castor canadensis).  The porcupine is distinguished by its coat of about 30,000 quills that covers all of its body except underbelly, face and feet.  The quills are sharp, barbed and hollow hairs that are used primarily for defense and insulation.  When used for defense, the quills can lodge in the flesh of a victim and are difficult and painful to remove.  The porcupine’s summer diet includes twigs, roots, stems, berries, and other vegetation. In the winter, they mainly eat conifer needles and tree bark.  Porcupines are a slow-moving creature with poor distance vision.  They are nocturnal, spending their days resting in trees.  The porcupine does not hibernate in winter, preferring to stay close and sleep in their dens.  This porcupine was photographed in the woods near Williams, Arizona, USA.
Selective focus of banded mongose standing in the wild.
Wild Swamp Wallaby in New South Wales,  Eastern Australia
Bristle spined rat photographed in Guarapari, Espirito Santo. Southeast of Brazil. Atlantic Forest Biome. Picture made in 2007.
Single swamp wallaby standing in the middle of a rural road
Flying Lemur (Galeopterus variegatus) clings to a tree and rests during the day (nocturnal animal), in Mu Ko Surin National Park, Thailand
The wild dog, Lycaon pictus,  is a canid native to Sub-Saharan Africa. Ol Pejeta Conservancy, Kenya.
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