Australian Water Rat aka RakaliĀ (Hydromys chrysogaster), family Muridae, Canberra, Australia
Aquatic, predatory, and nocturnal rat, native to Australia.
photograph by Raw Shorty

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Australian Water Rat aka RakaliĀ (Hydromys chrysogaster), family Muridae, Canberra, Australia
Aquatic, predatory, and nocturnal rat, native to Australia.
photograph by Raw Shorty

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Rakali, Hydromys chrysogaster (1801) - Ferdinand Baue
Australian Water Rat aka RakaliĀ (Hydromys chrysogaster), family Muridae, Australia
Aquatic, predatory, and nocturnal rat, native to Australia.
photograph by Carolyn Hall
Australian Water Rat aka RakaliĀ (Hydromys chrysogaster), family Muridae, Canberra, Australia
Aquatic, predatory, and nocturnal rat, native to Australia.
photograph by Raw Shorty
Australian Water Rat aka RakaliĀ (Hydromys chrysogaster), family Muridae, Australia
Aquatic, predatory, and nocturnal rat, native to Australia.
photograph by Terry Genesen Becker

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'Rakali'. Etching and aquatint from two copper plates. A portrait of Hydromys chrysogaster, one of Australia's native rodents. You can sometimes see them in the rocks at St Kilda Pier. I drew this one at @melbournemuseum way back in 2010. Made at @portlandbaypress in February this year. It was SO good to be back in the studio after a year away.ā ā ā ā #printmaking #hydromys #waterrat #australianmammal #art #etching #intaglio #aquatint #nativeanimals #rakali #nofilter (at Raleigh Street Studios) https://www.instagram.com/p/COL16Q0BwnP/?igshid=4ace7187w4o4
Iāve been looking out for Rakali for a while now, ever since my wonderful assistant Matt foundĀ a yabby claw out on the creek bank while we were doing Ā water testing at Lizard Crossing. Ā I was told that water-rats (or rakali) like to take their food out onto the bank to eat.
Unfortunately, the first one I saw was dead. Ā So was the second one.
I was walking the dog at Yass Gorge, enjoying the restoration work thatās been done there in the last couple of years. Ā I noticed a couple of places where people had made paths down to the riverās edge, to swim or perhaps to fish.
On the way back, I saw two big dead furry things lying in the grass. Ā My mind thought āRats!ā and I jumped away, surprising the dog. Ā Then I looked more closely at the webbed feet and white tail, and realized that although they were rodents (like rats, rabbits and guinea-pigs) they were also the Australian native rakali.
Rakali (hydromys chrysogaster) eat fish and crustaceans and are more like the European otters than the sewer rats (rattus norvegicus) people often think they are. Ā In fact they will eat rattus for breakfast.
Using the name āRakaliā has been started as an attempt to break the mental connection with rats. Ā In Europe, their āwater ratā ours is named after is really a vegetarian vole, and the usage is changing to āwater voleā there.
Like platypus rakali are very shy, but are much less well known. Ā These two were probably drowned in an āOpera houseā shaped yabby trap, which are notorious for drowning platypus too. Ā Presumably the person who set it had no idea what they were or why they were in the yabby trap. Ā It should be illegal to sell the over-sized traps that cause such tragedies. Ā It is illegal to use them except in farm dams, yet Anglers Warehouse sells them online labelled āAustraliaās favourite net!ā
Horrible.
I looked at the beautiful new signage at the entry to Yass Gorge.
Nothing about rakali or how avoid trapping them and platypus. Ā I think it could be time for an information blitz at popular river fishing spots to let people know the truth. Ā Time to talk to the local council.
RAKALI SIGHTING I've been looking out for Rakali for a while now, ever since my wonderful assistant Matt foundĀ a yabby claw out on the creek bank while we were doing Ā