Wallabia bicolor

4 Swamp Wallaby at Oakdale, NSW

Wallabia bicolor at Oakdale, NSW - 11 Feb 2023
Wallabia bicolor at Oakdale, NSW - 11 Feb 2023
Request use of media

Identification history

Wallabia bicolor 12 Feb 2023 MichaelBedingfield
Wallabia bicolor 11 Feb 2023 CarbonAI
Unidentified 11 Feb 2023 bufferzone

Identify this sighting


Please Login or Register to identify this sighting.

User's notes

Black eastern Wallaroo I have a few picks of Males Females and females with Joeys I dont Know yet how to place multiple pictures onto Nature map

13 comments

AaronClausen wrote:
   12 Feb 2023
Hi @michaelb @MichaelMulvaney do you guys know what this is? A wallaroo?
bufferzone wrote:
   12 Feb 2023
Wish I had Hair like that?
bufferzone wrote:
   12 Feb 2023
Thankyou @michaelb
bufferzone wrote:
   2 Mar 2023
Can some one explain please google states that swamp wallabies are small, ""They are small in stature, standing just 65 to 85 centimetres (2 to 2.5 feet) tall, and weighing up to 15 kilograms (33 pounds). " the one in this picture is well over 1 meter tall as is its partner, well above the sizes stated on the internet? that trail Camera behind him is set at 1 meter 3 feet above the ground making this fella at least 1.5 meters, 4 foot 11 inches almost 5 feet tall, are there different species of bush wallbies?
bufferzone wrote:
   2 Mar 2023
@michaelb this one? is about 5 feet plus tall,
   2 Mar 2023
To put extra photos on a sighting, click on "Edit" at the top of the page. Then you can slide them into the media box. PS there is no way that this is a male Wallaroo, which I have seen up close. Visit Osphranter robustus robustus (Eastern Wallaroo)
bufferzone wrote:
   2 Mar 2023
So its a giant Swamp wallaby?
AaronClausen wrote:
   2 Mar 2023
He's certainly a very big boy! I reckon it looks like a BIG wallabia bicolor.
   2 Mar 2023
Hi @DonFletcher can you please have a look at this sighting
bufferzone wrote:
   2 Mar 2023
thank you all for your help Its just that he is a big wallaby and definitely too big when reading swamp wallaby descriptions,
DonFletcher wrote:
   2 Mar 2023
Hi all. This is a guaranteed Wallabia bicolor i.e. Black Wallaby (aka Swamp Wallaby, but the Victorian common name 'Black' is far more appropriate as they do not live in swamps and are the darkest of wallaby species). The quotation obtained with Google is misleading as the males normally grow bigger than indicated. However they are quite noticeably smaller than any local kangaroo species such as a Wallaroo. I doubt the accuracy of the height estimate 'almost 5 feet tall' but this is clearly a very male individual (look at his forearms, muzzle and testes) and might well be bigger than average. Various books I consulted give the same identical size range of males (so they are copying each other) up to 20kg and Head-body length 847mm. I think I encountered bigger ones than that at Tidbinbilla. It's not surprising to see such undersized figures in otherwise reliable text books. For example the text books persist in quoting an old figure that Eastern Grey Kangaroo males grow up to 60 kg but when I worked on EGKs near Canberra we weighed plenty that were over 70kg and two over 100 kg.
bufferzone wrote:
   2 Mar 2023
Thank you DonFletcher, The Camera behind it is at approx 1 Meter is there a method of actually placing a Height scale in the area? I am sure I can make one and as this seems a regular place for this fella and his wife I may get a more exacting Height picture with a Measurer, This photo was from a trail Camera so not a perfect Photo but definitely a big animal in Comparison to others I have seen and Photographed in the area, so I am surprised at the Height difference as his mate is also Tall although smaller than he is,
   2 Mar 2023
Thanks Don

Please Login or Register to comment.

Location information

Sighting information

Additional information

  • Mixed Gender
  • Dependent young Breeding behaviour
  • Alive / healthy Animal health

Species information

  • Wallabia bicolor Scientific name
  • Swamp Wallaby Common name
  • Not Sensitive
  • Local native
  • Non-invasive or negligible
  • Up to 1338.8m Recorded at altitude
  • 417 images trained Machine learning

Record quality

  • Images or audio
  • More than one media file
  • Verified by an expert moderator
  • Nearby sighting(s) of same species
  • GPS evidence of location
  • Description
  • Additional attributes
2,203,459 sightings of 20,917 species in 9,213 locations from 12,749 contributors
CCA 3.0 | privacy
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of this land and acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.