Eastern Quoll
Eastern Quoll
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フクロネコ | |||
Character Data | |||
AKA | Eastern Native Cat
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Romaji | fukuroneko
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Debut | Kemono Friends 3 | ||
Animal Data | |||
Scientific Name | Dasyurus viverrinus
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Distribution | Tasmania, Australia (Extinct)
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Diet | Carnivore
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Avg. Lifespan | Up to 5 years
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Read More | Eastern Quoll
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Conservation | ![]() | ||
Eastern Quoll | KF3 | Gallery |
Eastern Quoll is a type of Friend that first appeared in the app version of Kemono Friends 3.
Appearance
Eastern Quoll wears a jacket and miniskirt with a black background with white spots and a thick white vertical line down the middle, and she has white arm covers and knee-high socks on her arms and legs. She has short, pale grey hair with a thin, short black line running down the top of her forehead.
Series Appearances
Media | Role | |
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2019 | Kemono Friends 3 | ↪ Minor character, playable character |
In Real Life

The Eastern Quoll (Dasyurus viverrinus) is a medium-sized carnivorous marsupial (dasyurid) in Australia. Eastern Quolls are about the size of a small Domestic Cat, with adult males measuring 53 to 66 cm (21 to 26 in) in total length, including the 20 to 28 cm (7.9 to 11.0 in) tail, and having an average weight of 1.1 kg (2.4 lb). Females are significantly smaller, measuring 48 to 58 cm (19 to 23 in), including a 17 to 24 cm (6.7 to 9.4 in) tail, and weighing around 0.7 kg (1.5 lb). They have a tapering snout, short legs, and erect ears. They can be distinguished from all other species of quoll by the presence of only four toes, rather than five, on the hind feet, lacking the hallux.
They have a thick coat covered by white spots, that can be either light fawn or near-black, with off-white underparts stretching from the chin to the underside of the tail. Both fawn and black individuals can be born in the same litter, although in surviving populations the former are about three times more common than the latter. The spots are 5 to 20 mm (0.20 to 0.79 in) in diameter, and are found across the upper body and flanks, from the top of the head to the rump, but, unlike some other species of quoll, do not extend onto the tail.