var arrayFacts = [

"<b>They Grow Up So Fast!</b><br><br>A quoll’s eyes open at 11 weeks old. Their trademark spots appear at 7 weeks, while their eyes are still tightly closed.<br><br>At 10 weeks old, they are too big for their pouch and are kept in the den.<br><br>At 18 weeks old, they have grown teeth and can begin to kill their own food.",

"<b>Six is Company, Seven's a Crowd...</b><br><br>At birth, baby quolls are about the size of a grain of rice. Quolls are only pregnant for about 3 weeks before their babies arrive.<br><br>The female produces up to 20 young in a litter, but only the first six to reach the pouch and attach to a nipple survive as the mother only has six milk teats.",

"<b>The Promised Land: </b><br><br>Eastern quolls were last seen on mainland Australia in 1966; Tasmania is considered their last refuge.<br><br> Unfortunately, one of the quoll's main predators is the Tasmanian devil",

"<b>What a Strange Looking Cat...</b><br><br>The average quoll is a similar size to a small cat.<br><br>They have pink nose and ears, a thick snout, a pointed muzzle, and very sharp teeth.",

"<b>About a Quoll:</b><br><br>The smallest of the quolls is the northern quoll. About the size of a large kitten, the northern quoll has gray-brown to brown fur with large white spots, and an unspotted tail.<br><br>It is the most tree-based of the four quolls, and lives on a diet of small mammals, reptiles, worms, ants, termites, moths, honey and soft fruit.",

"<b>Quoll on a Roll:</b><br><br>The spotted tail quoll is the world’s second largest marsupial carnivore.<br><br>They eat small animals, plants, lizards, birds, insects, fruit and carrion (dead animals).",

"<b>Quoll Compass:</b><br><br>There are four different species of quolls: the spotted tailed quoll, the western quoll, the eastern quoll and the northern quoll.<br><br>The eastern quoll is found only in Tasmania, the north quoll in tropical north Queensland, the western quoll in southern Western Australia and the spotted tailed quoll along the east coast of Australia.<br><br>The differences between these small marsupials are minimal, and related to their geographic habitat.",


];