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    Quoll Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Quoll? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Quoll from Animals and what is the personality traits.

    Quoll
    ISTP

    ISTP (6w7)

    Quoll personality type is ISTP, with a strong preference for lone wolfing it, and for taking on projects that they can see completing quickly. You’re a smart, quick-thinking type, and you can see things through quickly and efficiently. You’re not afraid to take risks, and you often feel like you’re in control. But sometimes it feels like you’re just running on fumes, and you dream of having a life full of deep connections and meaningful activities.

    Some quolls are more social than others, and some of them are downright social animals. Some quoll personalities may prefer to spend more time on their own, while others may be more sociable, and still others may be almost as social as a cat.

    The quoll is a very social animal. Many quolls like to interact with other animals, and some of them even like to hang out with humans. But they prefer to hang out with others of their own kind, and they’ll often choose to hang out with other types of animals, too.

    There are also quolls who like to hang out with humans, and who like hanging out with other people of their own sex.

    Quolls are carnivorous marsupials native to Australia and New Guinea. They are primarily nocturnal and spend most of the day in a den. Of the six species of quoll, four are found in Australia and two in New Guinea. Another two species are known from fossil remains in Pliocene and Pleistocene deposits in Queensland. Genetic evidence indicates that quolls evolved around 15 million years ago in the Miocene, and that the ancestors of the six species had all diverged by around four million years ago. The six species vary in weight and size, from 300 g to 7 kg. They have brown or black fur and pink noses. They are largely solitary, but come together for a few social interactions such as mating which occurs during the winter season. A female gives birth to up to 18 pups, of which only six survive because she only has six teats with which to feed them. Quolls eat smaller mammals, small birds, lizards, and insects. Their natural lifespan is between two and five years.

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