Danielle McCarthy
International Travel

Snap-happy quokka takes cute selfie on Rottnest Island

They have been described as the "world's happiest animal" and a photo of a Quokka snapping a selfie has proven why.

Around the size of a cat, with the tail of a rat, the nocturnal marsupials can only be found on Australia's Rottnest Island and a handful of smaller islands around the coast of Western Australia.

Part of the kangaroo and wallaby family, it has become something of a tourist attraction and visitors flock to the island to try snap a photo with the friendly quokka.

So when Campbell Jones was on a bike ride around the Rottnest, and spotted a cute quokka, he stopped for a picture.

"As I walked back to my bike, the quokka chased after me," Jones, 21, told Channel Seven.

"I put down the GoPro and it jumped at me as if to say come 'come back'."

"They (the quokkas) just walk up to you," he said.

"They are pretty friendly little things. We just went down to take photos of them and snagged (captured) a beauty, I suppose. It has been humbling that so many people wanted the photos."

Quokkas, famous for posing in selfies, are native to Rottnest Island where about 10,000 live a sheltered life free from predators or traffic.

They are classified as a vulnerable species and have been almost completely wiped out on the mainland.

Have you ever seen such a cute selfie?

First appeared on Stuff.co.nz. Image credit: Instagram / Campbell Jones

Tags:
australia, animal, travel, selfie, domestic, Quokka